33,696 men drivers and 20,156 women drivers were involved in the traffic fatalities of 41,967 American citizens in 1997.
28,538 of these fatalities were men.
Being a woman driver increases the probability of an injury or fatal accident by between 33% and 56%.
At worst, a man who drinks and drives increases his probability of an injury or fatal accident by 4%.
Traffic accidents would decrease between 15% to 22% if only men drove, saving up to 9,159 lives per year and up to 330,000 lives over the next 30 years.
Crash repair costs would be between $30 to 44 billion/year lower.
Between 4,823 to 6,266 additional men die in traffic accidents each year because of the dramatic differences between men and women in hand/eye coordination.
There would be between 12,053 to 23,879 more traffic fatalities/year if only women drove, which means that safer men drivers save between 4,248 to 7,674 women's lives each year.
Consistent with women drivers, women pilots have a crash rate four times higher than men pilots.
Various reports from the Department of Transportation show that women drive between 30% and 35% of the 1,478 billion miles traveled by passenger cars in the US. This means that women drivers are between 33% and 56% more likely than men per mile driven to have an accident.
Poster Comment:
Women should not be allowed to drive!