weepej wrote:
Steve wrote:
Are they making the same mistake that you
made over and
over again?
You mean saying that somebody who is tailgating is travelling too fast for the conditions they find themselves in because they are not driving at a speed which means they can stop in the distance they can know to be clear? And what of the person in front that crashes off first causing the tailgater to also fall off the road?
Which of these are risky:
- A motorway driver doing 80mph and leaving a 3 second gap

- A motorway driver doing 40mph and leaving a 3 second gap

- A motorway driver doing 80mph and leaving a 0.5 second gap

- A motorway driver doing 40mph and leaving a 0.5 second gap

Does the risk follow the speed, or the gap?
Do you still not understand the difference between 'too fast for the conditions' and 'too close for the conditions', or for you is it really all about ‘speed’ and absolutely nothing else?
weepej wrote:
And we all know what 99% of tailgaters are trying to communicate to the person in front; "You're going too slow for my liking, I think you should go faster or at least get out of my way". I.e. it's speed related.
Again you miss the obvious alternatives, such as 'inappropriate lane use'.
weepej wrote:
Steve wrote:
Do you tire of me showing your attempted repeats of your previously failed arguments?
I certainly tire of you putting up some random links and making out that you won the argument each time without context! A very sly tactic.

Very funny!
I will let the reader decide what points have been relevant and countered appropriately, and which have been evaded over and over again. The links to previously failed arguments will continue (they form part of a growing list).
Speaking of
repeated evasion:
Clearly motorways are the fastest roads. They're also the safest.
Does this not show that other factors besides 'speed' are at play, and that these other factors are dominant?Are we better off making roads safer, or slower?Do you understand how I have was not “implicitly asserting … safest because fastest”?Also, are you going to support the claim you made earlier as I have four times (there is nothing after thrice) requested, or evade yet again, again?
“The faster people go the more risk there is of crashes. People exceeding the speed limit are participating in the increased rate,”
Per unit distance driven, are those who go faster represented more in crashes than those who go slower? Remember, this was the nub that started off the last half of this thread.
Of course, you could always retort that those were taken "without context" – what a "sly tactic"!

Do you think you have you "consensus" there too?
