this post was submitted on 01 Jun 2024
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But per mile measurement for flying implies that every mile of a flight is equally dangerous, but the truth I'd that it is most dangerous to start or land, which is a per trip occurrence. The take off and landing is equally dangerous whether you travel a long or short distance in between.
It's still a terrible metric to compare the safety of modes of transport and the Wiki article just below the table explains it well:
If people made similar trips with cars as they do with airplanes, cars would lose in the per journey metric big time.
Of course cars would loose if you tried to use it to travel across the Atlantic...
If you are traveling across the Atlantic to get from Los Angeles to New York i would argue that you are traveling the wrong way...
Yes, and?
The point of distance is to take it into aggregate, for both modes of transport.
This is in fact the exact point i am making.
Per trip measurement implies that every trip (regardles of time or distance traveled) has equal danger.