basingwerk wrote:
For instance, we tolerate cars zooming path school gates at 30 mph, yet if large heavy iron objects zoomed by through the bottom of our garden frequently but at irregular intervals, we would try to get it stopped because of the risk to our children.
Depends what you mean by "through the bottom of our garden"...
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It is only the context and meaning of large "heavy iron objects" that has changed, yet in one context, they are deemed safe, and in another, they would be deemed intolerably unsafe.
No, I think you've also changed the context regarding the placement of these heavy iron objects in relation to the children - when cars "zoom" past the school gates at 30mph, they're not doing so by driving on the pavement or through the school gates, are they. Yet by using the "through the bottom of our garden" context, you seem to imply that the heavy iron objects in this case would actually be INSIDE the garden boundary at some point. This is more akin to suggesting that the cars are, at some point, "zooming" through the school playground, or along the pavement, at 30mph, and yes that would be totally unacceptable. But also entirely unrepresentative of reality.
If, on the other hand, your garden context is rewritten to say:
"...yet if large heavy iron objects zoomed past the bottom of our garden frequently but at irregular intervals..."
then it'd be far more in line with reality, and far less likely to generate the "are you mad, that'd be totally unsafe and irresponsible" response you seem to be looking for.
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I think that George is showing how ridiculous it is to show where the monitors are.
Why? If, as the SCPs claim, they're only siting cameras at accident hotspots, then surely it's in the best interest of every road user to highlight the fact that this is a dangerous bit of road?
The argument against visible cameras only seems to be valid if you're in favour of forcing everyone to stick to/below the limit at all times - i.e. you're enforcing the law for the sake of enforcing the law, rather than enforcing it in those areas where it would actually provide some safety benefit.
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In doing so, we interfere with driving and get false information about speeding habits. From an information gathering point of view, it would be much better to have secret, movable cameras if we wish to avoid a Heisenberg scenario and get true information.
Umm, but now you're giving the cameras a new role. It may very well be the case that the cameras are already used to provide speed information, but that's just secondary to their main purpose in life. If you want to collect high quality speed information, then it'd be better to do so by way of a system that isn't linked to speed enforcement and doesn't risk incurring the wrath of millions of motorists who feel they're being constantly monitored and in danger of a 60 quid slap on the wrist for even a momentary blip on any road anywhere in the country regardless of whether or not that stretch of road actually needs to be targetted for speed enforcement.