civil engineer wrote:
Basingwerk, you tell me why the best laws are specific and straightforward because you said But laws are abused when they are not specific and straight forward Therefore laws that are specific and straight forward are the best.
How have you drawn a line from “laws are abused when they are not specific” to “the best laws are specific”? Do you believe that only the good laws are never abused?!? I just don’t see the link, I’m sorry.
civil engineer wrote:
So I ask you again, given that the speed laws are specific and straightforward please tell me what primary metrics should we use to measure their success. or have I misunderstood your post?
The latter, I think. Laws can certainly be highly specific, and less open to abuse. The metrics to measure the success of certain laws is far more difficult, and depends on what
you mean by
success. Everybody has a different opinion on that. One could argue that a law is successful (at one level at least) if it is easy to tell if a person has broken it (!) – the speed laws are like that.
But I suspect that is not what you mean. I expect you mean ‘are the laws good for us all’. Now that is more subjective. As far as I am concerned, the speed laws are successful if they slow down traffic in my neighbourhood. You may have a different view. Such disagreement is what politics is for, I should have thought. I always recommended people to work politically on the issue, and obey the law meanwhile. Otherwise, we may as well use the law of the jungle!