Dondare wrote:
I disagree with the main thrust of your campaign, which is to oppose the use of speed cameras. These cameras are in many areas the only way of enforcing speed limits, so that you are effectively campaigning against the need to adhere to limits.
At no point has the Safe speed campaign lobbied against speed limits, Paul has re-iterated thousands of times that speed limits are a useful road safety tool if used effectively.
Dondare wrote:
This means that you are campaigning for the right to drive as fast as you want, and you are representing this as a road safety campaign.
Not at all, the point is that the speed someone drives at is just a symptom of their ability, style, consciousness and attitude etc. People need to recognise that it is just as possible to kill under the speed limit as it is above it, and all of the above have a much greater impact on the likelihood of hitting someone or something than the speed they were travelling at. The problem is that Speed and Physics have taken over as the only road safety tool in the box and that tool has very blunt edge and is woefully inadequate for the job.
Dondare wrote:
There is no emphasis on safer roads or driver responsibility, these things may get a mention in the small print
I think you are wrong, to me this is the very corner-stone of the campaign, let drivers take responsibility, empower them to do so, speed cameras do exactly the opposite they tell drivers that the speed limit is safe and nothing could be further from the truth.
Dondare wrote:
but your headlines scream "One third of road deaths caused by speed cameras!" and similar nonsense.
The 1/3rd figures were used to back up the need for speed cameras, if there is a “nonsense” I think you should point it out and tell us why it is nonsense.
Dondare wrote:
I'm here to debate, not to be a troll.
There is a problem with road safety in this country, generally it’s quite good but it is getting worse over time. It used to be that road death and injuries fell year on year, the rate of that decline started to slow before actually reversing.
Now it fell despite increasing numbers of cars on the roads, greater car ownership and road use. Of course all those things are still occurring and our roads and vehicles and medical treatment is also getting better, so what happened to the trend?
It started getting worse at about the time traffic police were being pulled and speed cameras introduced. There may have been other factors I don’t know but is it just coincidental?
The question for is, “Does the zealous automated enforcement of speed limits produce a positive result for road safety”, what do you think?