I don't know how 'baked' this idea is, but I want to understand how we have speed limits set at deadly levels.
What do I mean?
Take the Joksch rule of thumb affecting the probability of death of car drivers. Joksch suggests that the probability of death is approximately 1.0 at 70mph crash delta V. In other words if we hit something hard at 70mph we're pretty much certain to die. See
this page for details on the Joksch equation. So why do we have 70mph as a national speed limit?
Then there's the 30mph limit in town. We're told that it's set to protect pedestrians - yet if we hit them at 30mph many of them die. Depending on which research you prefer it's between 1 in 5 and 1 in 25. So 30mph is a deadly speed. See
this page for a discussion on '30mph is a deadly speed'.
Isn't the entire concept of speed limits undermined if we set them at a deadly level? What's wrong with this picture?