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Under what circumstances exactly does exceeding a speed limit, rather than travelling too fast for the conditions, get listed as a possible contributory factor for an accident?
If the driver was travelling too fast for the conditions, and exceeding the speed limit, do both factors get listed, or just one? Shouldn't it just be the former? If the latter is listed, doesn't that mean that the more unreasonably low a speed limit, the more chance there is of speeding being listed as a cause (when the cause was actually travelling too fast and the driver just happened to be exceeding the arbitrary limit at the time)?
Surely to be strictly accurate, exceeding the speed limit should only be listed when the driver was over the speed limit, and the accident could have been avoided if (and only if) the driver was within the speed limit. But that strikes me as being an incredibly unlikely set of circumstances, much less than 5% likely. Maybe, since we're talking about possible contributory factors, they only have to calculate that the speed above which the driver would have crashed was within (say) 20% of the limit for speeding to be listed.
But putting aside guessing for a moment and looking at what actually happens, the number of accidents where going at the speed limit + 1mph would have resulted in an accident, but going at the speed limit wouldn't have resulted in one, must be incredibly small. And if you work to several decimal places, say 30.000000mph = no accident but 30.000001mph = accident, then the number of accidents like that must be effectively zero. In other words, the number of accidents caused by speeding per se is ridiculously small, probably zero, and it would have been very hard for them to have got current policy as wrong as they have done.
Perhaps someone could let me know what's what. If I haven't made myself clear then let me know and I'll try again....
_________________ Paul Smith: a legend. "The freedom provided by the motor vehicle is not universally applauded, however: there are those who resent the loss of state control over individual choice that the car represents. Such people rarely admit their prejudices openly; instead, they make false or exaggerated claims about the adverse effects of road transport in order to justify calls for higher taxation or restrictions on mobility." ( Conservative Way Forward: Stop The War Against Drivers)
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