basingwerk wrote:
Gatsobait wrote:
Imagine there were no speed limits
it's easy if you try
no cameras there to ping us
above us only sky
Nice one mate. A couple more verses and we could be Xmas number one with that.
basingwerk wrote:
In the legal assessment of the risk, it is done mechanically because a) there is no other way that is indisputable and b) it is cheap, so my taxes stay down.
Er... you talking about automated enforcement again? That wasn't what I was on about. Methods of detection don't enter into it, as just for a change

I'm not actually having a go about the cameras. It doesn't matter whether the speed offence is detected by a Gatso or plod. The point is that the offence of speeding cannot lead to a crash. A speed which is dangerous might and sometimes that will also be an illegal speed, but that's not the same thing.
basingwerk wrote:
Now, of course I realise that a full investigation by a judge and jury and a team of forensic scientists might get a better fix on the real risk caused by certain activity, but that would be very dear. Sensible speed limits may act as a rough guide to what speed is usually safe, but they also act as an absolute limit above which the system wil judge you to have been at too high a legal risk. That is different fromt the actual risk. Such is life, the system seems to work OK.
Still not exactly where I was going. On the face of it the system seems to sacrifice justice for expediency, but in pratcice I can't see how the resources could ever be put in place to judge everything on it's merits in a court. A practical alternative is to let the plod do it by discretionary enforcement (plod are still cheaper than lawyers, but then what isn't?

). You know my argument for that, so I won't go over old ground. Besides, it just takes us further away from whether it is possible for to cause an accident by speeding alone.
basingwerk wrote:
...the dog poo thing... It is almost as anti-social as speeding, although no one has been killed by stepping in dog poo, as far as I know.
Try jogging along Beachy Head half an hour after a dog with dysentery has been there.

Seriously, I was only thinking about dog bites, which happen anyway licensing or no licensing. As for the health implications of, er, doggy excess products, isn't there some parasite in dog turds that can cause blindness in children? Cat turds too IIRC. I seem to remember advice about not letting pregnant women change the kitty litter. I expect Mad Moggie will correct me if I've got that wrong. Anyhow, back on topic!
basingwerk wrote:
We can say that speeding causes accidents because it does sometimes. Even the most ardent SafeSpeeder surely knows that?
Sorta kinda. A crash caused by driving at a dangerously high speed may qualify for a speeding fine on top of anything else, but it is not the speeding itself that causes the crash. I think you've identified that yourself already by separating the concepts of legal risk and physical risk. It's associative rather than causative. The original question could be rephrased: in what situation does physical risk increase because of the legal risk, rather than just at the same time as the legal risk?
basingwerk wrote:
I saw a bloke driving through last week at around 75 in the 30 zone, even though it was still only Coronation Street time. It's just not on, you know, Gatsobait.
Assuming it's a sane 30 limit (I'll take your word for it, and FWIW I think the majority are in residential areas) then 75 is taking the piss. I hope he gets what's coming to him without anyone getting in his way.