double_entendre
Well-known member
Gee, that's so hard to believe. We're so rational and willing to take responsibility for our actions here in the good ol' USA..... :glare: I mean, yeah, it's McDonald's responsibility if you spill coffee in your lap and all that, but other than that.....There are several european helments that they intentionally do NOT get DOT approved for the SOLE reason that the company no longer wishes to expose themselves to the liability culture prevalent in the US. Before I bought the Schuberth, I had looked at several other very innovative designs (mostly German) and was repeatedly bummed when the company came back and confirmed "no, we're not doing a DOT-certified part number version because we do not feel the liability exposure justifies the market participation, but thank you for your interest in our product."
You are far braver than I am, my friend. I know they say it's not a third world toilet anymore, and my opinions were formed before I was 21 and could legally drink up here, but it seems to me that I never read of anything sane going on down there. A particularly amusing quote from the LA Times (cite: LA Times "A Crackdown on Baja Bribes)I couldn't even beg a UK-based shop to turn a blind eye and ship one to a US address, understandably, for the same reason. Now that I live in San Diego and have a border nearby, I suppose I *could* try taking the risk of having it shipped to a Tiajuana address, but I haven't even begun to look into how expensive or risky it is to trust a business in Mexico (no offense to any nationals reading, I only have horror stories and stereotypes to work from). All I know is if I get pulled over every 15 miles for a "tip" while driving there with US plates, I can just IMAGINE how ugly it might be actually trying to receive something down there that was worth $$$.
TIJUANA — Baja California sees a lucrative future in the luxury residential towers sprouting up along its coast, and officials are hoping developments by the likes of Donald Trump will bring Southern California prosperity south of the border.
But there's a problem: The 5-mile highway from the border to the beaches is notorious for police who pull tourists' cars over in search of bribes.
Now Tijuana police say they're cleaning up the route and targeting corruption elsewhere in an effort to make the border area more inviting.
They're installing cameras to catch extortion attempts, publicizing that people can pay tickets with credit cards and transferring corrupt cops. They've deployed a squad of female traffic officers to offer courteous help to tourists. They've even declared the stretch of road a "no-ticket" highway.
I particularly loved how they're transferring corrupt cops. WTF?!?!?!? They take their discipline cues from the Catholic church or what? "Shame on you. Off you go somewhere else where they don't know you. Yet." But that kind of crap keeps me out of Mexico.
FWIW, our friends over at UKRM occasionally look for leftpondians to ship them stuff that isn't readily available locally. Presumably someone there might be willing to ship you one of these helmets if you asked nicely. Do get a feel for the flavor of that group before you go barging in, though. Hell, that's a cool enough helmet that I might do that.
Hey, can you get 'em in Canada? I've got friends up there. We've got Pesky Canadians on the Forum, don't we?
Natch. I do so hate those damned things. Constitution be damned, we're stopping everyone.Oh, and to answer Rancho's question, yes, actually, I had a San Diego local, oddly enough, ask to see it at a sobriety checkpoint along the beach (it's black on black and wasn't noticeable at first in the dark).
h34r:
Rancho