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PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 13:53 
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SafeSpeed wrote:
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Looks like a scheme to force people to obey the law.


Gasp ... a scheme to make people obey the law! What on earth will they resort to next?


Have you read A Clockwork Orange?


Yes - I can read Nadsat. Speeders could be lashed upside down to the front of lorries and terrorised into becoming pace car drivers!

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PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 13:59 
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civil engineer wrote:
What is the point in a law?


The point of laws is that they change things. What things? Imagine the world entirely without laws, as (presumably) it once was, then compare it. Which world would you prefer to live in?

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PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 14:00 
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So a law should have a desired outcome?

like a process?


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PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 14:07 
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basingwerk wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
basingwerk wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
Looks like a scheme to force people to obey the law.


Gasp ... a scheme to make people obey the law! What on earth will they resort to next?


Have you read A Clockwork Orange?


Yes - I can read Nadsat.


I've forgotten much of it. But I did take the trouble to learn it to read the book.

basingwerk wrote:
Speeders could be lashed upside down to the front of lorries and terrorised into becoming pace car drivers!


What?

But of course the point is that the law isn't about compliance alone. Indeed, being 'forced to comply' means serious losses to our very humanity.

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PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 14:32 
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civil engineer wrote:
So a law should have a desired outcome?

like a process?


IMO Yes - a condition in a process. Laws are a way that power is applied. They both communicate what the condition is, and they set testable metrics for society to determine if a person has violated it. Society itself decides what the law should be at the ballot box. The desired outcome varies. Indeed, there is no requirement that a law must give a desired outcome, because that is subjective and varies from voter to voter. I hope they do. I think they sometimes do. Do they always give a desired outcome? Clearly not, or you would love every law!

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PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 14:40 
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What would the testable metrics be for the speed laws? Lets expand this to the whole suite of speed laws ranging from the limits themselves to the laws that enable SCP's and so on.


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PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 14:43 
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basingwerk wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
basingwerk wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
Looks like a scheme to force people to obey the law.


Gasp ... a scheme to make people obey the law! What on earth will they resort to next?


Have you read A Clockwork Orange?


Yes - I can read Nadsat. Speeders could be lashed upside down to the front of lorries and terrorised into becoming pace car drivers!

Why stop there, when you could go all the way and give them a horrorshow tolchocking, the grahzny bratchnies! (sp?) :lol:

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PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 15:26 
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SafeSpeed wrote:
But of course the point is that the law isn't about compliance alone. Indeed, being 'forced to comply' means serious losses to our very humanity.


Yes, we don't need 100% compliance for the law to do it’s work. But laws are abused when they are not specific and straight forward, due to that ‘communication’ thing. So there is a grey zone between the law and the usual practise. Unfair things can happen when you are operating in that zone, but complaint is seen as whining when you are formally ‘in the wrong’ anyway!

I deal with it by staying out of the grey zone. By driving gently, I save a bit on petrol and wear and tear, as well, and I help give drivers a good name, which they need right now.

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PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 18:05 
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So if the best laws are specific and straight forward by what metric would you measure the effectiveness of the speeding laws?


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PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 19:02 
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basingwerk wrote:
... Society itself decides what the law should be at the ballot box...

Interesting. On the basis that not one of the major (ie electable) parties has ever given the electorate any choice concerning speed limit legislation and that in every survey done it's shown that the vast majority of motorists are exceeding speed limits; could it be suggested that, by its "proxy ballot" actions, the public is making a decision on what the law should be?

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PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 19:08 
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To civil engineer, I would say that one key diference between the 'speeding'laws and the others is that if you break the other laws the prosecution must prove intent, (called Mens Rea). Accidentaly breaking laws is a mitigation not afforded to the motorist. With our speeding laws, any speed over the limit is automatically assumed to be intentional, which is quite absurd as any drivert knows.

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PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 19:57 
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:gatso2: A few further thoughts about this ridiculous scheme.

Whoever thought this scheme up hasn't taken into consideration that there's more to safe, sensible driving than observing speed limits. I'm sure that every aspect of the practice of sensible driving has often been discussed on these forums.

Aside from the points that Paul's made, I think what we have is a very worrying aspect of the Doncaster Dumbos propopsals is that any pace car convoy could become a safe haven for drink-drivers. After all, if you have to crawl in a pace driver convoy, doing 20-25mph, could you spot a driver who's under the influence and whose reactions are affected? Especially if they slow down and drive cautiously.

Not only that, we could see sensible drivers throw caution to the wind and attempt u-turns in the middle of main roads, just to avoid tailing one of these self-righteous numpties. I think we can take it as read that these "volunteers" would be obliged to snitch on anyone for the slightest fault.

I shudder to think what truck drivers would make of this crappy scheme.

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PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 20:21 
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civil engineer wrote:
So if the best laws are specific and straight forward by what metric would you measure the effectiveness of the speeding laws?


Please explain what you mean when you say the "best" laws are specific and straightforward? How do you know one law is “better” than another? Is there any way to directly compare different laws, like you propose? I should have thought simply comparing the law on electrical wiring with the law on speeding, would be difficult. They solve different problems, so they are different laws.

But a law that is specific and straightforward is more likely to be understood by both potential offenders and enforcers, so perhaps a specific and straightforward law is “better” in that respect. Is that what you mean? In general, it may be more difficult to abuse such a law, because perhaps it is easier to determine abuse of a law with well-defined criteria rather than a law with ill-defined criteria. Anyway, let me know what you mean by “best”.

The metric I would use to measure the effectiveness of the speeding laws is this. I’d ask a reputable academic body to run long-term on-going statistical studies on the matter and publish their findings. Luckily, this has been done, and you can read some of the their findings (specifically on cameras) here - http://www.dft.gov.uk/stellent/groups/d ... 610816.pdf

I hope that helps.

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PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 20:29 
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pogo wrote:
basingwerk wrote:
... Society itself decides what the law should be at the ballot box...

Interesting. On the basis that not one of the major (ie electable) parties has ever given the electorate any choice concerning speed limit legislation and that in every survey done it's shown that the vast majority of motorists are exceeding speed limits; could it be suggested that, by its "proxy ballot" actions, the public is making a decision on what the law should be?


Yeah, how hypocritical can you get. The very people who do the speeding vote to keep the laws as they are, or even fail to put up a candidate to speak for them! Imagine that - you could call yourselves the Abolitionists!

Joking aside, it’s a really poor show, isn’t it? Perhaps people don’t care. After all, we also hate litter bugs and other forms of petty, anti-social slobbery, but we don’t vote parties in or out on the basis of it, do we?

I’d vote for PR, pogo, if I was you, but the Lib Dems have gone into “Jeremy Thorpe” mode!

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PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 20:31 
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A nice "independant report" - commissioned by DFT, paid for by DFT, from what i can see the "facts " used are those provided by DFT ---

Like asking Rothmans to prove that tobacco don't harm you or telling us that 25mph in a "playstreet" filled with kids is safe because we're not breaking the speed limit

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PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 20:44 
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malcolmw wrote:
So, C.O. are you pleased that you have succeeded in slowing down the traffic (not in the way you may have first thought) or disappointed that you have been prevented from getting a few overspeed hits? I thought that you were all about slowing down the speeders. :)


do you think i actualy care if i go to a site and report no one, the tape is sent in with a big ZERO on it, ok maybe one or two of the the drivers might be biting their nails for the next fortnight

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basingwerk wrote:
civil engineer wrote:
So if the best laws are specific and straight forward by what metric would you measure the effectiveness of the speeding laws?


Please explain what you mean when you say the "best" laws are specific and straightforward? How do you know one law is “better” than another? Is there any way to directly compare different laws, like you propose?


I guess the fundamental characteristic of a good law is that it differentiates well between desireable and undesireable behaviours.

* To 'differentiate well' it will need to be readily understood.

* It will need to be broadly respected because we have more people than policemen.

So that's speed limits on the scrap heap then is it?

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PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 21:03 
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SafeSpeed wrote:
It will need to be broadly respected because we have more people than policemen.


Yeah, that's the British mentality nowadays –only obey laws that benefit us personally, while laws the benefit anybody else get trashed, you know? We are close to rock bottom, at least as far a mutual understanding and respect goes.

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botach wrote:
Like ... telling us that 25mph in a "playstreet" filled with kids is safe because we're not breaking the speed limit


Slow down, botach ... you've got more posts than I have now!

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basingwerk wrote:
After all, we also hate litter bugs and other forms of petty, anti-social slobbery, but we don’t vote parties in or out on the basis of it, do we?

Indeed true... But we don't criminalise some 2 million people a year for being petty or snobbish either.

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