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Re: Road Traffic Act
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The simple fact is that the driver can control his speed and the lower it is the less chance of an accident or if there is one, the less severe the injuries may be. |
Re: Road Traffic Act
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It is quite obviously not a good way of exemplifying the point you are trying to make. This really isn't hard to grapple with. If you are travelling at greater speed you have less time to respond and will cause greater damage if you collide with something or some one. That is undeniably logical. Your argument that you can kill anyone at nearly any speed is frankly stupid. Presumably you also think water is a dangerous toxin because if you drink enough of it, it will kill you. To address the response time/collision impact scenarios highway planners devise maximum limits at which you may legally travel, based on the local conditions. This is a logical response. Speed limits cannot be arbitrary or they will not be enforceable in law so they are set at, 30, 40, 50 etc according to the risk. Break those limits and you will be prosecuted and, unless the evidence is deficient, you can have nothing to complain about. |
Re: Gatso camera case
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Re: Road Traffic Act
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I have no argument with the facts about faster speeds killing more people, but surely that argument misses the root cause of the problem. ie: the pedestrian walking out in front of the vehicle to start with! I would hate to be the cause of running someone over and killing them, I never drink and drive and have never had a speeding ticket in my 22 years driving. If however someone walked out in front of my car and got killed, it would not only be my own guilt/feelings that perhaps if I'd stayed at home etc it wouldn't of happened, but you also have to consider that as a driver you are the target to blame by Joe public should such a disaster happen. Summing it up, I think it's hard enough to live with that, without automatically getting the blame from Joe public. Apart from drink driving and joy riders it's very rare to hear of people being mowed down whilst walking on the pavement. |
Re: Road Traffic Act
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Re: Road Traffic Act
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I'm not even going to try and count the number of times I've gone to cross a road at the appropiate place with the green man lit and the red light against traffic only to have to jump back on the pavement when someone decides that 100 yards just isn't enough distance to react in :dozey: |
Re: Road Traffic Act
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I cannot see how anyone can justify breaking the law particularly when any accident, for whatever reason, that involves that driver speeding can have more serious consequences than if he was driving within the law. Can anyone give a valid reason why they should be breaking the speed limit? |
Re: Road Traffic Act
Thers a couple of points I'ld like to make.
1) The Speedometer in any car is mass produced and not accurate (i.e. it could say your are going 30mph, but in fact could be +/- 5 mph), if its + 5mph you could get a speeding ticket, bit unfair. 2) on the subject of speed cameras, a work college of mine was sent a speeding ticket. Now he ask to see all infomation an the cameras calibrations dates, and that of the equipment used to calibrate it, it was out of date and the case thrown out of court, had he not bothered he would have been fined. (by the way his car could go the speed they claimed its a heap.:D ) |
Re: Road Traffic Act
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How is that stupid? It's a fact. Quote:
http://www.dft.gov.uk/stellent/group...ads_505174.pdf Notice point 9 where it says that the 85th percentile should be taken into account, and that its pointless to set too low a speed limit. (unless of course you want to make money out of a speed camera...) With regards to pedestrian safety, there does appear to have been a shift of responsibility from the pedestrian to the motorist rather than educating both. The hedgehog adverts are usually only on in the early hours of the morning (along with the "don't play with matches" ads) when kids aren't likely to be watching TV. |
Re: Gatso camera case
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That means that there is a 35 foot zone where the 30 mph car could hit and kill or injure a pedestrian but the 20 mph car would have stopped before entering. What would your view of speeding be if you hit and killed a pedestrian in that 35 foot zone? Would your view change if your child, partner or parent was killed in that zone? How about if you hit and killed your own child, partner or parent in that zone? Would you put on their gravestone Here lies the body of my son He died but hey, I wasn't speeding so I'm obviously not a bad driver Speeding does not equal death/injury/accident, bad driving does. |
Re: Gatso camera case
Here is a point to ponder,the Durham county area does not have speed cameras, the Chief Constable is against them. One other little known detail, this same area has the lowest vehicle accident rate per head of population in the country.:)
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Re: Gatso camera case
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Re: Gatso camera case
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Re: Gatso camera case
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No, speeding does not equal death/injury/accident. However, it can mean that injuries (when accidents do occur) are more serious, and possibly life-threatening. It can also increase the impact of minor accidents whatever their cause (e.g. bad driving, or some sort of mechanical failure). As an example I was nearly hit by a car last week because a car was speeding and overshot a red light by nearly 4 metres (I was crossing a pelican crossing and the green man was showing). I happened to be crossing the road, and the only reason I wasn't hit is I was able to leap onto the island in the middle of the road. Now, you could argue that was bad driving, and you'd be right. However, I heard (and saw) the skid start. I think that had he been obeying the 30 limit on that road, he should have stopped before the lights. I actually agree, speeding itself is not the problem. It's merely a symptom of bad driving (not that I am saying all people who speed are bad drivers - I have friends who speed whom I consider to be very good drivers), but I think the police are in a no wine situation. They have to be seen to be doing something, but to have an effect on bad driving, they would need to put far more officers on the road. This would lead to people complaing that the police should be going out to capture murderers and serious criminals, not victimising the motorist. Speeding (and overshooting red lights which is something else some Gatsos monitor) is relatively easy to monitor automatically with little outlay. But the fact remains that whether or not speeding causes accidents, it can increase the chance of serious injury or death in the event of an accident. After all, you can be the best driver in the world, but if you doing >90 mph on a dual carriageway and some tw*t doing 50 doesn't notice you and enters your lane 40 feet in front of you, you won't have an awful lot of time to react, and assuming you hit him, you will probably cause at least one serious injury. |
Re: Gatso camera case
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I understand the point you're making. But Durham et al do not have the concentration of the kind of urban roads upon which most deaths occur that other areas have. The comparison is not like for like even when it's looking at per head of pop. |
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