Answer:
More damage is done and more life is endangered in a head-on collision of two cars, each traveling at 30 mph, than in a car crashing into a brick wall at 30 mph because the relative velocities of the head-on collision are the sum of the two velocities.
Step-by-step explanation:
Car crashing to a brick wall at 30 mph is less dangerous than two cars travelling in opposite direction at 30 mph each.
This is because, for one car, the other is at a relative speed of 30+30 = 60 mph.