Hi Paul,
I think you have opened a can of worms here regarding personal liberties and personal responsibility.
Making an actual law to force seatbelts is a violation of personal liberties. No one should be forced to use protective equipment if they don't want to. At the same time, they should be held personally responsible for the consequences of not using said safety equipment, and not try to place the blame on everyone but themselves.
Consider this, wearing a helmet while driving a car is safer than not wearing one. Yet I bet you:
1) Don't drive with a helmet
2) Don't want laws forcing you to wear a helmet when driving.
3) Probably will choose to wear a helmet when doing riskier activities like racing a car on a racetrack.
People have the ability to weigh up risks and decide what level of risk they are personally comfortable with. Taking a paternalistic attitude to law making leads to nanny states like the one I'm living in now (where rebreather diving on charter boats is so regulated as to be functionally outlawed).
Laws that I would support, however, are those that would give legal backing to personal responsibility when carrying out activities that are dangerous only to oneself. Thus if you do something at your own risk and things go wrong, the courts put the blame squarely on you and nobody else.
So informing people to use a FFM or gag strap is all well and good as long as it stays as informing and does not develop into enforcing.
-Marek