TJ Day liked riding his bike to and from work at Walgreens. It helped him stay fit and gave him time to wind down in the evening.

He wore a reflective vest, helmet and added lights to the front and back of his bike for safety. He did everything right, said his sister Kelli Day.

Still, TJ was hit by a car on his way home from work on Feb. 18.

Another driver who found him in a snowbank on Lovers Lane near Stryker Way after the hit-and-run. That driver stayed in contact, and later offered to buy TJ a new bike. But in the meantime, supporters of TJ had already raised more than $20,000 to buy him a car.

As of Thursday, March 6, a GoFundMe Kelli organized has raised $23,427, with a goal of $28,000.

TJ has always been apprehensive about driving, but now he’s more nervous of biking, Kelli said. The generosity of his community will help him get a safe and reliable car.

    • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I mean…I feel like you’re asking hypothetical what if questions to lead towards the outcome you want. All the while neglecting the fact that those what-ifs are so far from reality that it may as well be moved from hypothetical to fiction.

      IF it were true that humans were mentally incapable of driving cars, then I think cars would be banned. Now circle back to the word IF.

      This isn’t a story of a mentally incompatant man hitting someone while having no control of their ability to control the car.

      This is a story of a hit and run. Now even if the hit was a true accident, you stay with the injured and don’t run. But they DID run. The moment they ran, this goes from potential accident to assault.