PaulNN18 wrote:
I emphatically accept that I have no more of a 'right' to break the law than anyoney else.
I think we agree here
PaulNN18 wrote:
The thing is, Handy, the problem with this strict enforcement of speed limits is quite simply that the the retribution for infraction exceeds the damage done by the 'offence' to such an extent that it defies adequate description.
I draw a parallel with DUI. This site - and it is a good thing - is dead against DUI. But 25% of 2000 people in a survey earlier this week admitted to doing it, 10% said that it did not affect their driving! If I had 5 pints then decided to drive home, I may well get home safe. (Actually, I wouldn't, if I had 5 pints I wouldn't be able to find my car, remember my name or even be able to describe what 'home' was ... which is why I don't drink!). That drive home was a victimless crime. I could do it twice. Three times. Some drink drivers do it for years before they are caught (or worse, caught out by being in an accident). But DUI is accepted as a 'BAD' thing. The reason why it is a bad thing is that there is a statistical correlation between DUI and accidents. The reason for the penalty is the same - not for the 'crime' itself, which is a victimless crime in both counts - but for the potential to injure.
PaulNN18 wrote:
Yes, the limit and enforcement for exceeding the limit has to start somewhere... But to have been the victim of being fined £60 for 6mph over the posted limit, downhill, sunny day, dual carriageway....
you accept that you were speeding, albeit by 'only' 6mph. Where would you start the fines then? 25% over the limit? The some people would decide that driving at 25% over was then their right, and would complain at being ticketted for doing 26% over the limit.
The speed limits being incorrect is IMHO far worse than the cameras used to fine people who speed.
Get the limits correct - variable limits to allow for poor conditions and variable situations such as school letting out time - and then penalise people who break the law.
PaulNN18 wrote:
But when I read in my local papers that causing trouble at football grounds, mugging pensioners, etc, etc, etc goes unpunished because the State can't justify the manhours, etc I conclude that my previous amenable, friendly, general complicit state is not conducive to not being treated reasonably fairly by the authorities.
It's bad. Very bad. So we should take down speed cameras because of soccer hooligans? If we took down the speed cameras and increased the amount of police on traffic duty, wouldn't that reduce the amount of police at the football matches? No, we would increase the size of the police force. We'd have to raise taxes though.
PaulNN18 wrote:
I know you find it nauseous but if it walks like a duck, looks like a duck, waddles like a duck, goes "Quack" and has duck like appearances, it probably is a duck. I apply the same view to extorting money in fines and penalties from ordinary people on technical speeding offences where the law has been misapplied and mis-enforced. This is NOT about safety. They want our money.
Or do kids now play on the M4 too, for example???
I don't find it nauseous, really I don't. I find speeding essentially pointless, and I find people complaining about getting tickets quite amusing. I enjoy driving, most of the time I'm not on the M25 that is. I really can't understand, even though I have really tried, why it is so important to people?
Kids DO play on the motorways. I've had to swerve to avoid some chav teenagers playing dare on a blind bend of the M58. Scared me witless.
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COAST Not just somewhere to keep a beach.
A young loner on a crusade to champion the cause of the innocent, the helpless, the powerless, in a world of criminals who operate above the law.