(Wasn't happy with the original version, I read a few things wrong)
I must say Dondare, I am confused about your comments.
Dondare wrote:
If two pedestrians collide very little harm is done. If a motorist and a pedestrian collide, death or serious injury is a likely result. The danger comes from the car, the driver is responsible for the presence of that danger.
First you seem to suggest that the motorists are responsible for pedestrians with little distinction for whether the pedestrian is to blame in any event due to their own irresponsible behaviour.
I actually think that's a good question to ask, if a motorist runs down a pedestrian because a pedestrian (and lets for the sake of argument, lets say they were totally obscured by street furniture, and there are no other indications that anybody is going to cross the road, who is to blame?
You then go on to say
Dondare wrote:
For instance, a gunman isn't dangerous if there's no-one to shoot. But if a potential victim appears, then the victim is as much to blame as the gunman.
I am confused as to whether you're comparing murderers and drivers? A murderer who's intention it is to kill someone and commit a crime and someone who has a law abiding and perfectly safe hobby?
Or perhaps you're talking about a gunman on a "shooting range" or something, and if a madman breaks in and runs in front of a gun just as it is being fired, perhaps you're saying the shooter is as much to blame as the victim?
Dondare wrote:
Also people get killed or injured in motor vehicle related accidents all the time. But the laws for gun ownership and use and for car ownership and use are designed to protect us, and work upon the principle that guns and cars are dangerous and the operator bears the greatest burden of responsibility for ensuring the safety of others.
I think everyone here takes on the personal responsibility necessary to operate dangerous equipment. But, say in the case of a fruitcake even running in front of you at the bowling lanes and getting a ten pin bowling ball in the groin, your apportion of responsibility and blame seems a little skewed.
In these cases, the victim surely is responsible for their own careless behaviour and must therefore be attributed with the blame.
We all take the audible, visual and behavioural cues to minimise risks and avoid danger in all areas of our life. Just as in life, we adjust our driving according to the conditions at the time. Many people seem to propose that as motorists, we should be responsible for other peoples actions, or that, and I like this phrase, that motorists should be "able to stop on a sixpence". I've heard people suggest that motorists should quite literally, expect the unexpected, the illogical, incompetent, irrational and moronic.
If a kid is hiding behind a skip and decides to run across the road at the last second, then people like to blame the motorist.
All this means that a driver no longer needs to think. The cues we take to adjust our driving and behaviour are negated. Pedestrians are not liable to do anything that can be accounted for. So what speed is the right speed to avoid such unexpected accidents? 5 mph?
Sadly it seems to be the case in society that we're happier blaming someone else.
Pedestrians no longer need to think as they have been absolved of all responsibility.
Cya
Simon