Steve wrote:
stevegarrod wrote:
Steve wrote:
Everyone speeds (don't try to deny that), many regularly, some constantly, yet "Exceeding speed limit was attributed to 3 per cent of cars involved in accidents," (RCGB2007)
What's the source for your claim that most speeding cases are 'mere infringements' please?
I've already given it.
People regularly speed, especially motorway drivers where conditions are good; there are no victims, there is no negative impact on others - a technical infringement.
stevegarrod wrote:
I've offered empirical evidence that speeding is anti-social
Yes, but not all speeding, only some cases of it (joyriders and boy racers). You've offered no evidence that the technical infringements are anti-social.
stevegarrod wrote:
RCGB2007 is a partial source and ignores fatalities.
WTF?
It's full of fatality data and the most comprehensive report there is! Have you even seen it?
stevegarrod wrote:
In fact the statistics are that speeding was a factor in 30% of fatal RTAs in 1998.
I'll go with the much more recent 2007 data thanks, especially those compiled from the Stats19 data.
stevegarrod wrote:
Breaking the speed limit or going too fast for conditions is a contributory factor in 26% of fatal crashes
No it isn't.......
"Excessive Speed Is A Factor In One Third Of All Fatal Crashes"
LinkWrong!. Watch this:
"Speed was a factor in 30 percent (12,477) of all traffic fatalities in 1998, second only to alcohol (39 percent) as a cause of fatal crashes."
Where did the word
excessive disappear to?
You see, what they did was mix other speed related contributory factors, such as "failure to judge the speed or path" into the group "speed is a factor", then misspoke (a la Hilary Clinton) the words to include 'excessive' - even though excessive speed (however it is defined) had nothing to do with these other factors.
stevegarrod wrote:
If you look at Fatalities you will find that in all studies excessive speed is a contributory factor in the majority of cases even
if not the principle one. ie if the vehicle wasn't speeding there would have been no fatality.
Prove it or retract it!
Shoe on other foot: we know there are an average of 2.5 contributory factors per fatality, take away non-'excessive speed' factor and many accidents still wouldn't happen.
stevegarrod wrote:
The point being made is that whilst there may be simple and easy labels to apply to casues of collisions, slowing traffic down in urban areas decreases the likelihood of an injudicious action
No it doesn't. Having lived in Portsmouth when the limits were reduced to 20mph, I was horrified to see so many people (including parents with children) rush into the road without looking - the pedestrians had applied risk compensation.
None of this topic drift detracts from the very wrong principle of robbing Peter to Pay Paul for Patrick's crime!Since drafting this, it seems a pi55ing contest has started and is in full swing, so I'm bowing out.
1/
Citing motorway speeding, where the interaction mentioned upthread is by definition limited, is disingenuous. The numbers of vulnerable road users negatively impacted by speeding on motorways is? The number of schoolchildren? Pensioners trying to cross? Do you see how dishonest that allusion is now?
2/
I have asked already for your source that only boy racers or car thieves negatively impact on residents' lives. You've made this claim twice. I've politely asked twice for you to back it up. How on earth does a resident know whether a speeding car is stolen or not? You're twisting in the wind my friend. Residents are annoyed, threatened and intimidated by speeding cars. Your claim that only stolen cars inflict this misery is truly bizarre. "Technical infringements' as you call them are , in fact, the number one anti-social activity cited by residents who says speeding drivers are a right royal pain in the ass:
http://www.reading.ac.uk/about/newsande ... PR3936.aspWhich antisocial behaviours are the British public most concerned about? University of Reading finds out
Release Date : 11 December 2006
Speeding is top of the league when it comes to antisocial behaviour, a University of Reading study has shown.
3/
The evidence on 20mph zones is straightforwardly clear- they reduce accidents with no displacement, see here:
In 1999, Hull saw a 21 per cent fall in all road casualties from the 1981-85 baseline (25 per cent reduction if trunk road casualties are removed). To put this into perspective, the Yorkshire & Humberside region experienced a 15 per cent increase over the similar period. In terms of child casualties, we have seen a 33 per cent drop since the mid 80's (compared to a similar national reduction of 16.5 per cent).
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/p ... 57ap80.htmHere:
The Commission for Integrated Transport did a study in 2001 looking at best practice in transport across Europe. It found that where cities have 20mph limits covering between 65% and 85% of the urban network, they are transformed "from being noisy, polluted places into vibrant, people-centred environments".
20mph is the speed at which drivers can have eye contact with other users of the street. It is the speed at which pedestrians feel more confident about crossing the road, children play outside their homes and it is quiet enough to hold a conversation.
The third big reason why we should make 20mph the default speed limit is the boost it gives to walking and cycling.
The Commission for Integrated Transport also found that area wide 20mph limits are "the one critical success factor underpinning best practice in promoting walking, cycling and public transport as alternatives to the private car".
http://www.livingstreets.org.uk/news_an ... php?id=361And here:
The first traffic calming scheme with road humps was introduced in Hull in 1993. Since then Hull City Council has achieved substantial reduction in road accident casualties.
http://www.dft.gov.uk/pgr/regional/buse ... 73?page=10Your 'source' is unsourced, anecdotal and backed up by not a shred of evidence. Poor, very.
4/
"No it isn't.......'
Wrong again, you need to refresh your stock answers:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/5387568.stmThe Department for Transport released contributory factors for the first time, showing drivers' failure to look properly featured in 32% of accidents.
But in fatal crashes, loss of control was most common, with 35%, and excessive speed was reported in 15% of all accidents and 26% of fatal crashes.
http://search2drive.com/once_driving.htmlThe article also mentions that exceeding the speed limit or going too fast for the conditions were reported as contributory factors in 26% of fatal crashes and in 35 % of fatal single-vehicle motorcycle crashes.
RoSPA said a new report published today into the contributory factors to road accidents reinforces the need to continue the fight against speeding drivers and to persuade more motorists to take refresher training.
The report, published by the Department for Transport alongside latest casualty figures, said that exceeding the speed limit or going too fast for the conditions was a contributory factor in 26 per cent of all fatal accidents. These accidents accounted for 28 per cent of all fatalities – 793 of the 3,201 people killed in crashes.
http://www.rospa.com/news/releases/2006 ... 6_road.htmYou have an opinion you can defend with conjecture, anecdote, unsourced claims and the blatant misrepresentation of official, impartial and independent research.
I have an opinion backed up with the above.
Now, rather than glibly repeat the glib phrases, dishonesty and misrepresentations you've posted above, can you admit the scintilla of doubt that citing the low rates of pedestrians threatened by speeding traffic on motorways is a bloody stupid thing to do?
