In this case, I'd personally give more weight to people's liberty to not be endangered by large, fast-moving machines, if such machines could be rendered safer through proven technology.
I've never endangered anybody with my vehicles, because I'm a responsible driver. You must mean the
probability of endangerment. I got bad news for you. In your life, something will eventually endanger you. Squeezing every bit of freedom from your fellow man, for the sake of lowering your chance of getting hurt is still tyranny. In the broadest sense,
My hope of safety is less important than your freedom, & until everybody in the free world starts remembering that, we've got a big problem coming down the line
The fewer riders who wear helmets, the more likely they are to get injured, which clogs hospitals and puts more strain on our health care system. That's the bottom line, really.
Ahh, the strain on health care argument. So your idea of a free society is that people be mandated to live as safely as law making bodies decide. Forgive me, but that doesn't sound like liberty to me, at all. Quite the opposite. It doesn't even sound like I own myself anymore. It sounds like a dystopian nightmare, where I'm not allowed to eat a cookie, or drink a beer, drive a car, eat gluten, rock climb, refuse a flu shot, etc...
More helmets is less of a strain? Actually, less motorcycles is too, less cars, fast food, alcohol, drugs, sex. The list of ways to force people to behave "well" is endless
Rule #1, People get sick, people get hurt & people die. Rule #2, No law you make will stop rule #1. It's why I pay for health insurance. It's also why I don't expect the government to give it to me for free, because I'M in control of me, & I have every intention on keeping it as much that way as possible.
Your "right to life" is not a right to safety at everyone else's expense. It just means that life you got? No one can willfully take it from you, & we have that in writing, simply because that's what people use to do before we did
No but vehicles don't last forever.
Neither do people. I'm just banking on being dead in 35 years or so, & expect nothing too drastically infringing is able to be pushed through in that time, because y'all are seriously forgetting what it's all about imho.
Edit: Actually I know people with 70 year old cars. There's no doubt that on my death bed, hopefully a long time from now, many manual powered cars will still be used, no matter how things have changed