Interesting thread. I think Kary and the others have summed it up just about right: To each his/her own. If CR seems too dangerous for you,
please stay home. I certainly do not want to try overtaking someone who is more concerned about saving their fenders than being consistent and predictable.
To Dan C. I say "Bull honkery!" PCA and POC CR is NOT about who has more cajones to go deeper, later, and take more risks. In fact I would argue the exact opposite. TT is all about cajones, "What line can I take into T1 and T2 to keep my foot in the gas?" "How late can I go into T9 and still keep the car balanced." Etc, etc... Anyone who has been TTing for more than a year knows the techniques. After that it's all about how big are you cajones, to go faster, brake later, carry more speed, and on, and on.
However, on the less ballsy, more technical side is CR. When I'm racing into T1 I don't necessarily find the "fast" line. I look ahead and identify who I am going to pass (dang gum slow-in-the-turns-911's

) and figure out where I need to start my turn in order to be where I need to be when I overtake that pokey 911. Same for T9, and all the others. Who am I going to be overtaking there and where can I get the car in order to make the pass. It is my opinion that Club Racing takes more thought, technical ability, and more awareness than Time Trialing by a very large margin.
Heck the only time I had any sort of close call was with a X car (a very experienced TTer, but brand spanking new CRer) who was obviously still thinking he was Time Trialing and not as aware as he should have been. In fact I notice the lack of awareness far more in TT's than in CR's. Which is expected in the lower groups, but I see it quite a bit in the Red group as well. And lack of awareness is what causes more incidents than large cajones at any event!
But as I said earlier, if you think CR is more dangerous and
just all about your cajones. Then by all means keep the car in the paddock and enjoy the view.
When you drive your car competitively you and your car are at risk. We've seen it happen in AX, TT, and CR.
Now, in regards to the original message. I do not agree at all. If you have the talent, drive, and motivation you can get into the top levels of Motorsports. If that Milk Truck driver really
wanted to race, he could! There is
NO sport or profession in the world where a Milk Truck driver could seriously expect to have someone stop him on his route and say "Hey, you handle this truck really well, why don't you come drive my Porsche Spyder RS at the next ALMS race?"
In fact I would maintain that it's probably easier for someone with
just talent to get into a good career in racing than any other professional sports. There are
so many paths to get from Hobby to Amateur to Semi-Pro to Pro paths in racing it's ridiculous. However, in Football, Baseball, Golf, Tennis, Hockey, yadda, yadda, yadda, there is usually only one path: High School to College to Semi-Pro to Pro.
I guess would have to say "Bull Honkery!" to that as well.