r11co wrote:
Most of the proponents of speed cameras (including our own residents Basingwerk, Plod, Painter etc.) have argued that reduced speeds, if nothing else, are a positive thing as they will mitigate the effects of collisions, and that 'drivers aren't as good as they think they are at handling speed'.
You only have to spend an half an hour on any main road to see how poorly some drivers are at driving in general, including poor handling of speed. Indeed, many of the opponents of speed cameras recognise the 'thumb in bum' attitudes which are prevalent.
Others have tried before to stress that speed is just one of many equivalent parameters, but that is false. Speed differs in at least two important respects from any other parameter. First, it is possible to measure it remotely by instruments, and you can't do that with tyre pressures (yet). One would expect that because it can be measured, it will be measured, such is life. You can argue with what is done with the measurement information.
Second, speed 'on it's own' is inherently
capable of being unsafe because it generates force which must be controlled, whereas low tyre pressures and other mechanical issues need (at least some) speed to be unsafe. There is a difference, and speed is special, although I accept that there is also a matter of degree in these arguments, and one must try to stay in the practical world, rather than the physics of the matter.
If you drive a car with poor tyre pressure, that is unsafe. I check my tyre pressures regularly and it is right that we should all do that. If people do not, it is certainly true that it would be better to slow such people down, but that is second best, of course.
Its the patient logic which sets you apart from those who foam at the mouth at the (individually speaking) statistically unlikely carnage Mr Werk. I think we all respect that to some extent. But here's a thing. How about old age? Research (even the Dept of Transport's) shows that old age slows cognitive ability. In fact a range of abilities are degraded. This theoretical "menace" is remotely measurable via the DVLA's records. So do we ban drivers as soon as they reach old age (election loser). Do we suspect that road safety policy has stronger political root than a logical one?