Until helmets can address the basic physics of inertia and rapid 
deceleration of the soft tissue brain inside the hard nut case, and the 
resulting biology of the brain sheering neural connections because of the 
coup countrecoup sloshing about like jello in a dropped bowl, helmets will 
do very little to mitigate brain injury and a lot to make people think they 
accomplish something. To avoid brain injury, avoid the impact. 

With abandon,
Patrick

On Tuesday, September 13, 2016 at 10:42:32 AM UTC-6, Clementine59 wrote:
>
> It's interesting how MIPS is promoted and accepted by users in the 
> apparent absence of evidence supporting its effectiveness. If it works, 
> show me the data! 
>
> On Tuesday, September 13, 2016 at 11:31:21 AM UTC-4, Clayton wrote:
>>
>> Marketing is amazing. It is used to squeeze as much money as possible 
>> from my wallet, using as many psychological tricks as they can.  In my 
>> humble opinion, MIPS is marketing bullshirt'. From the brief research I 
>> have done and the scalp injuries I have seen as a Paramedic, I have come to 
>> see MIPs as snake oil.  The 'slippage' or movement that the helmets market, 
>> is very small, usually just a few millimeters. 
>>
>

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