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 Post subject: Re: Careless driving
PostPosted: Thu May 24, 2007 23:39 
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jr135 wrote:

Oh, okay then, let's just not enforce the law because some people don't like it...


Ah you mean like Capital Punishment perhaps or maybe transportation for stealing a loaf of bread...those kinds of "laws"???

You accuse me of missing the point but its you thats missed it and by a country mile, that point is that there IS no point to enforcing a law that penalises drivers for safe driving regardless of the measured speed, because the measured speed isnt any indicator on its own OF safe driving.
A trafpol on the other hand can make a judgement on that quite easily and HAS to report for the offence of speeding purely because "the law says so". Yet that dosnt mean its right and proper to prosecute for safe driving, now does it? Hence the opposition to it.


jr135 wrote:
My points weren't lacking in consideration or poorly executed. All you had to do was engage your brain.


My brain is always engaged, many thanks for your concern, but please, dont let me stop you from getting your point across.

jr135 wrote:

Er, if you're doing a combination of those things along with driving at high speeds, then you will get prosecuted for it, as at least this case shows!


No. All this shows is the lengths the states stazi will go to, to secure a pathetic conviction for someone effectively telling them to twat off.
This case isnt about speeding unless youd not noticed.


jr135 wrote:
Well actually, the £600 costs would suggest that they didn't have to put THAT much effort into catching him. Anyway, he was convicted of nine counts of careless driving - how many times do you think it should be before the police make an effort the catch the person?


Are you being deliberately obtuse or does it come naturally?
Do you really think it only cost £600 to persue this case? What about all the time taken to trace him, officers overtime etc? Or dont you factor that in?

jr135 wrote:
I wouldn't be too happy about it, as it just makes you look rather unintelligent. The point was that I was talking about his careless driving, not specifically his speeding.


It does no such thing, ive attempted to get through to you but you just dont seem capable or willing of understanding the situation that i and others have discussed here.
At what point do you think his driving suddenly became "careless"?

jr135 wrote:
And in what way am I malicious? It's you who is defending someone convicted of careless driving.


"One of your comrades in arms has been caught, ha ha ha"...or words to that effect. Sounds malicious to me and adds nothing positive to the debate.

Which bit of his driving was "careless"?

jr135 wrote:

And why shouldn't I be gleeful about it when no-one including you can bring yourselves to actually condemn this person?


How can we condemn him when we dont have all the facts, we wernt on the jury, remember? And neither were you yet you presume to judge him anyway.

jr135 wrote:
Perhaps by being gleeful I might actually get through to some of you that you need to be a bit more consistent if you want to be taken seriously. As in, if you think that it doesn't matter what speed you're driving at as long as it's a "safe" one, then you will actually condemn someone who is not driving safely.


That statement makes no sense whatsoever. Whats the point in condemning someone for safe driving even if theyre exceeding a speed limit? All such an attitude does is to drive a wedge between public and police.


jr135 wrote:
Perhaps you simply shouldn't be driving. After all, you hardly need to be that good a driver to glance down at your speedometre every now and again.


So a clean licence, not speeding fines or other endorsements (in spite of my speeding ) and i shouldnt be driving?
You missed entirely the point i made regarding the speedo too; its entirely an unecessary item to have in a car, i know as i drove without one for longer han i care to mention. Didnt have any crashes tho, or tickets....



jr135 wrote:
Well if you don't then you will just make yourself look like a desperate fool again. Sorry, but it's true.


Im hardly desperate and so far its you looking like a fool, sorry but its true.

jr135 wrote:
I do make a sensible approach to people. Do I take it that when you say "sensible", you actually mean that I should agree with everything you say? Because you do seem to get very upset when someone comes on this board with a different opinion from you.


Not at all, debate goes nowhere if people dont have different opinions, its the ones who dont see whats obvious that irritate me, but they never upset me. ;)

btw can you use the quote function correctly?

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 Post subject: Re: Careless driving
PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2007 00:16 
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jr135 wrote:
And why shouldn't I be gleeful about it when no-one including you can bring yourselves to actually condemn this person?

This sounds suspiciously like another trollish-type comment. Would you care to explain it please?

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 Post subject: Re: Careless driving
PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2007 00:30 
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jr135 wrote:

Oh, okay then, let's just not enforce the law because some people don't like it...


"Ah you mean like Capital Punishment perhaps or maybe transportation for stealing a loaf of bread...those kinds of "laws"???"

Eh?

"You accuse me of missing the point but its you thats missed it and by a country mile, "

Here we go again, your arrogance is bouncing out of your head.

"that point is that there IS no point to enforcing a law that penalises drivers for safe driving regardless of the measured speed, because the measured speed isnt any indicator on its own OF safe driving."

Yes, I have ACCEPTED that argument for the sake of this thread!!! For goodness sake, wake up!

"A trafpol on the other hand can make a judgement on that quite easily and HAS to report for the offence of speeding purely because "the law says so". Yet that dosnt mean its right and proper to prosecute for safe driving, now does it? Hence the opposition to it. "

How many times do I have to say this, I'm not talking about his breaking the speed limit, but his convictions for careless driving.


jr135 wrote:
My points weren't lacking in consideration or poorly executed. All you had to do was engage your brain.


"My brain is always engaged, many thanks for your concern, but please, dont let me stop you from getting your point across."

Whatever.

jr135 wrote:

Er, if you're doing a combination of those things along with driving at high speeds, then you will get prosecuted for it, as at least this case shows!


"No. All this shows is the lengths the states stazi will go to, to secure a pathetic conviction for someone effectively telling them to twat off.
This case isnt about speeding unless youd not noticed."

You're right, really it's about careless driving unless you'd not noticed.


jr135 wrote:
Well actually, the £600 costs would suggest that they didn't have to put THAT much effort into catching him. Anyway, he was convicted of nine counts of careless driving - how many times do you think it should be before the police make an effort the catch the person?


"Are you being deliberately obtuse or does it come naturally?"

Oh do fuck off with these lame and pathetic comments of yours.

"Do you really think it only cost £600 to persue this case? What about all the time taken to trace him, officers overtime etc? Or dont you factor that in?"

So what if it cost more, he was convicted of careless driving nine times. I think that it was right for the police to do this; you obviously don't.

jr135 wrote:
I wouldn't be too happy about it, as it just makes you look rather unintelligent. The point was that I was talking about his careless driving, not specifically his speeding.


"It does no such thing, ive attempted to get through to you but you just dont seem capable or willing of understanding the situation that i and others have discussed here."

Bullshit. It's you who doesn't seem capable or willing of understanding the situation here.

At what point do you think his driving suddenly became "careless"?

I don't know, I WASN'T AT THE TRIAL! But nor were you! The jury found him guilty of careless driving. What evidence do YOU have that makes you think that they were wrong?


jr135 wrote:
And in what way am I malicious? It's you who is defending someone convicted of careless driving.


"One of your comrades in arms has been caught, ha ha ha"...or words to that effect. Sounds malicious to me and adds nothing positive to the debate.

The point was to get across to everyone, including you, who wasn't willing to condemn him, that if you don't, then other people might well feel inclined to do so perhaps more strongly.

"Which bit of his driving was "careless"?"

Which bit of "I wasn't at his trial" do you not understand?

jr135 wrote:

And why shouldn't I be gleeful about it when no-one including you can bring yourselves to actually condemn this person?


"How can we condemn him when we dont have all the facts, we wernt on the jury, remember? And neither were you yet you presume to judge him anyway."

You moron, the jury found him guilty.

jr135 wrote:
Perhaps by being gleeful I might actually get through to some of you that you need to be a bit more consistent if you want to be taken seriously. As in, if you think that it doesn't matter what speed you're driving at as long as it's a "safe" one, then you will actually condemn someone who is not driving safely.


"That statement makes no sense whatsoever. Whats the point in condemning someone for safe driving even if theyre exceeding a speed limit?"

Because I'm NOT condemning people on this thread for driving safely! I'm saying that you need to condemn people who don't drive safely. Yes?

"btw can you use the quote function correctly?"

It's hardly worth bothering with things like that when I'm responding to abusive messages from people like you. And yes, I know I said "fuck off" but (a) it was justified as I'm just responding to your abuse, and (b) you can put the word abusive in quotation marks all you want, but it doesn't change the fact that you have been abusive.


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2007 00:36 
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ONCE AGAIN

jr135, do you ride a motorcycle?

EDIT: please do make an effort to use stacked quotes properly, it makes for much easier thread reading for everyone.


Last edited by RobinXe on Fri May 25, 2007 00:38, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2007 00:37 
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Steady on, gents, please.

There are some points worthy of debate in here, but please try not to sling mud at one another. Points scored in that way just turn the rest of us right off and dilute the argments.


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PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2007 00:44 
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Roger wrote:
Steady on, gents, please.

There are some points worthy of debate in here, but please try not to sling mud at one another. Points scored in that way just turn the rest of us right off and dilute the argments.


Ha! I just came back to this thread to post just such a message, and you've beaten me to it. Thanks.

And the overriding point is that insults and mud slinging do not win debates or resolve differences. They just cheapen all of us, which is why they are against the forum rules.

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PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2007 01:03 
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jr135 wrote:
I know what a straw man argument is. But if you don't like what I said then let me say something different. What if this motorist didn't like the police either, and every time he saw a police officer he looked and waved at them. Should we get rid of the police as well?

"Are you having a laugh? You’ve done it again!"

Alright, let me try this. What if we didn't have any laws on speed but we did on other motoring issues such as using a mobile phone whilst driving. He used his phone regularly but when he saw the police he then started waving it about and looking at them rather than concentrating on the road. Should we get rid of the police in that situation?

By the way, if that's not a valid question then do me a favour and just delete it.

jr135 wrote:
Er, I'm not quite sure of the point you're making here. He was convicted on nine counts of careless driving. Or in other words that his standard of driving fell below what you say.


"Nope. The prosecution managed to convince the members of that particular jury that the driving fell below the expected standard, nothing more. **"

Um, right, so basically you're saying in effect that you're not willing to condemn anyone no matter how they drive?

jr135 wrote:
Well the jury was convinced! Why do you think that you know better than people that were actually at the trial?

"Because this is Safespeed! :D
Seriously though, many here have a wealth of knowledge, experience and wisdom significantly above the typical cross-section of the population – this is a ‘single issue’ [safe transport] website after all!"

So by reading a short article and seeing just one or two photos you can ascertain whether someone is driving carefully or not can you?

jr135 wrote:
As for the argument, from what I know from that short article, it seems like it was a combination of things: looking at the camera, holding your hand in the air, and driving too fast. A combination of things which meant that he wasn't giving serious attention to the road.

"All at the same time? I say again, I’ve seen no photo of the biker appearing to look at the camera with his arm raised. Even if he was, I ask again: is exceeding the speed limit, looking at a road sign and changing gear considered as ‘careless driving’? If not then what is the difference?"

Well what DO you consider 'careless driving'?

As an additional point, this driver has been called dim by someone else on here - perhaps the jury decided that someone of his intelligence simply didn't have the ability to look at a camera, raise his arm, and drive at speeds of up to 105mph carefully.

jr135 wrote:
Let's face it, neither of us were at the trial, so this is only speculation.

[next post]

Er, I really don't know what point you're trying to make.


"It means that you cannot possibly justify your opinion of condemnation of the biker (over the trust you place in the judgement of others) – as demonstrated by your lack of ‘arms waving/eyes wandering’ argument."

Now I genuinely don't understand what you're saying. There wasn't a lack of arms waving as we know from the photo. In another photo I saw he was looking up at the camera. Perhaps you're trying to say that I have a low opinion of him but a high opinion of the jury... Well, they had as long as they needed to discuss and evaluate the evidence, plus there would have been 12 of them. They decided, based on the evidence in front of them (which may have included their own thoughts on this driver's intelligence), that he wasn't paying serious attention to the road.

jr135 wrote:
He was convicted for careless driving, so why not condemn him for careless driving?

"** These things are subjective, open to interpretation, subject to politics and open for reversal. Say we capitulate so accepting that the guy was careless, then he appealed and was acquitted, must we then all change our minds accordingly? Please!"

No it's a case of accepting that a jury found this guy's driving was careless. If he appealed then there must have been something that wasn't accounted for before, in which case it is fair enough for you to accept whatever new verdict comes out. I say again that you weren't on the jury so haven't seen all of the evidence, so really, what choice does someone have but to accept a jury's judgement in a case like this?

jr135 wrote:
If someone was convicted of murder, would you really not condemn them for it?

There’s usually no subjectivity when assessing the deadness of a corpse :)

I certainly accept that but there is subjectivity as to whether, say, the person you can see on a CCTV tape is the same person that is standing in front of you. Anyway...

"Go and Google ‘murder acquittal’. I will never place my complete faith in trials by jury."

But what you are then saying is that you are always going to make a judgement on whether someone is guilty based on newspaper articles and the odd photo or two.

jr135 previously wrote:
you lot are basically defending this person

"which is not true, nor can ‘we’ condemn him."

Well at least some people were defending him.


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PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2007 01:23 
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RobinXe wrote:
ONCE AGAIN

jr135, do you ride a motorcycle?

EDIT: please do make an effort to use stacked quotes properly, it makes for much easier thread reading for everyone.


I was reluctant to answer this question as I could foresee more unnecessary comments thrown at me from a certain poster.

No, I don't ride a motorcycle. However, all along I haven't been going on what I thought might be careless, but the fact that a jury found him guilty. And no doubt not everybody on the jury rode a motorcycle, but I'm sure that both prosecution and defence would have mentioned the relevant issues.


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PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2007 08:16 
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jr135 wrote:
RobinXe wrote:
ONCE AGAIN

jr135, do you ride a motorcycle?

EDIT: please do make an effort to use stacked quotes properly, it makes for much easier thread reading for everyone.


I was reluctant to answer this question as I could foresee more unnecessary comments thrown at me from a certain poster.

No, I don't ride a motorcycle. However, all along I haven't been going on what I thought might be careless, but the fact that a jury found him guilty. And no doubt not everybody on the jury rode a motorcycle, but I'm sure that both prosecution and defence would have mentioned the relevant issues.


Ill ignore the usage of inappropriate language by "jr" to ask this question:

He says a jury found the rider guilty. Didnt a jury also find the Birmingham six the Bridgewater four and the Guildford four guilty too?

The fact is that juries get it wrong when evidence isnt right and in the case of the rider of this bike, i think they got it wrong again.
We dont know just exactly what it was that made his riding "careless" because the authorities havent said so, lets face it, theyve got nothing else to go on except a dammed scamera photo, and whats that tell us about safe driving? Obviously theyre just out to make an example of someone who treats their "best" efforts at road safety with contempt...as they should be.

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PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2007 12:16 
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jr135 wrote:
[...]it seemed it me that no-one had actually condemned this person for careless driving. So I was doing so. Perhaps you and others would now like to actually condemn this person for careless driving.

Not me. When I'm riding down the M40, I sometimes sit up and rest my left hand on the tank for a while. That's not dangerous driving, is it?

Sometimes I look at my watch when I'm driving - that's not dangerous driving, is it?

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PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2007 12:21 
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BottyBurp wrote:
jr135 wrote:
[...]it seemed it me that no-one had actually condemned this person for careless driving. So I was doing so. Perhaps you and others would now like to actually condemn this person for careless driving.

Not me. When I'm riding down the M40, I sometimes sit up and rest my left hand on the tank for a while. That's not dangerous driving, is it?

Sometimes I look at my watch when I'm driving - that's not dangerous driving, is it?


I find my shoulders get sore on long rides, so I've been known to rest my left arm across the tank and lean on it...

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PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2007 13:04 
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jr135 wrote:
What if we didn't have any laws on speed but we did on other motoring issues such as using a mobile phone whilst driving. He used his phone regularly but when he saw the police he then started waving it about and looking at them rather than concentrating on the road. Should we get rid of the police in that situation?

“Strike three and you’re out!”

jr135 wrote:
smeggy wrote:
Nope. The prosecution managed to convince the members of that particular jury that the driving fell below the expected standard, nothing more. **

Um, right, so basically you're saying in effect that you're not willing to condemn anyone no matter how they drive?

How on earth did you come to that conclusion?
From the information given (due to the nature of the evidence I strongly suspect there isn’t any more) there is not enough to convince ‘us’ that the bikers actions were careless.

jr135 wrote:
So by reading a short article and seeing just one or two photos you can ascertain whether someone is driving carefully or not can you?

I refer you to the end of my last post – the part that you conveniently didn’t quote!
I suspect some disingenuous behaviour on your part.

jr135 wrote:
smeggy wrote:
"All at the same time? I say again, I’ve seen no photo of the biker appearing to look at the camera with his arm raised. Even if he was, I ask again: is exceeding the speed limit, looking at a road sign and changing gear considered as ‘careless driving’? If not then what is the difference?"

Well what DO you consider 'careless driving'?

Irrelevant. We are discussing the reported actions of the biker.
You are trying to evade my (very relevant) questions.
I suspect that had you been on the jury, you would not have been able to convict that biker of careless driving without application of some personal bias.

jr135 wrote:
perhaps the jury decided that someone of his intelligence simply didn't have the ability to look at a camera, raise his arm, and drive at speeds of up to 105mph carefully.

I ask yet again - "All at the same time?” You’re now manipulating the facts.
Since when were IQ’s factored into a prosecution?

jr135 wrote:
Now I genuinely don't understand what you're saying.

You wish everyone to accept subjective judgement as irrefutable fact.

jr135 wrote:
I say again that you weren't on the jury so haven't seen all of the evidence, so really, what choice does someone have but to accept a jury's judgement in a case like this?

Have we really not seen all of the evidence? I suspect we have! If we haven’t (what else could there be?) then we cannot possibly be in the position to agree with the verdict.

What do the last 3 posters above me have in common? It’s quite obvious!
(hint: it is something that I would wager that you have none of)

jr135 wrote:
I certainly accept that but there is subjectivity as to whether, say, the person you can see on a CCTV tape is the same person that is standing in front of you.

Investigators put just a little bit more effort into a murder investigation than a victimless technical driving offence.

jr135 wrote:
smeggy wrote:
"Go and Google ‘murder acquittal’. I will never place my complete faith in trials by jury."

But what you are then saying is that you are always going to make a judgement on whether someone is guilty based on newspaper articles and the odd photo or two.

My what logical disconnect you have! I have made my position clear - remember that part you conveniently didn’t quote?


jr135 previously wrote:
you lot are basically defending this person

[next post]

Well at least some people were defending him.

You’re backpedalling!
Now you’ve been given a chance to argue the case for the charge of careless driving, failing miserably in the process, I have to tend towards believing the biker really wasn't being careless!

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PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2007 13:30 
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Well, having forced myself to read through this thread I'll say this much.

jr135 - you expect 'us' to condem this man's careless actions when many of us don't actually agree that his actions WERE ACTUALLY CARELESS. (based upon the evidence available)

Now personally I couldn't care less what the jury thought because I don't allow other people's opinions to affect my own. If there was more evidence at the trial then fine, but other than maybe CCTV recordings of the event or a past history of poor driving I can't see how there can be. Therefore based on my own experience and knowledge and the evidence that I have seen I cannot see that he is guilty of careless driving.

I've riden at speeds in excess of 105mph and was in full control and perfectly safe. I've riden at speeds in excess of 70mph whilst giving hand signals before changing lanes etc and was in full control and perfectly safe. And guess what, I've looked at roadside furnature whilst travelling at speed and still been in full control and perfectly safe.

Now PLEASE learn how to stack quotes because your posts simply do not scan.

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I'll ask it again as it seems to have been ignored by jr135.

R1Nut wrote:
jr135 wrote:
Perhaps, with your obviously superiour knowledge, you'd like to tell us all how it is driving safely when you're waving at a camera?


How is this any different to you waving to someone you know as you drive down the street?

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PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2007 14:10 
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I was told he PLEADED guilty. If that is so the jury didn't have to find him guilty and, similarly, no precedent is set.

Does anyone know if I'm right here with regard to the plea?

Of course if he pleaded guilty he has no right of appeal unless the plea was under duress


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PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2007 14:48 
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Roger wrote:
I was told he PLEADED guilty. If that is so the jury didn't have to find him guilty and, similarly, no precedent is set.

Does anyone know if I'm right here with regard to the plea?

Of course if he pleaded guilty he has no right of appeal unless the plea was under duress

Roger,
various news reports state: "The jury cleared him of dangerous driving but convicted him of nine counts of careless driving. He then pleaded guilty to a further nine charges of speeding."


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PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2007 16:57 
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R1Nut wrote:
I'll ask it again as it seems to have been ignored by jr135.

R1Nut wrote:
jr135 wrote:
Perhaps, with your obviously superiour knowledge, you'd like to tell us all how it is driving safely when you're waving at a camera?


How is this any different to you waving to someone you know as you drive down the street?

Allow me to answer for JR...

JR Backpedalling wrote:
Actually, you're right. There is absolutely no difference. I just hadn't thought it through properly and now need to back out of this discussion without losing too much face...

Am I right? :yesyes: :hehe:

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PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2007 19:08 
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DeltaF wrote:
jr135 wrote:
RobinXe wrote:
ONCE AGAIN

jr135, do you ride a motorcycle?

EDIT: please do make an effort to use stacked quotes properly, it makes for much easier thread reading for everyone.


I was reluctant to answer this question as I could foresee more unnecessary comments thrown at me from a certain poster.

No, I don't ride a motorcycle. However, all along I haven't been going on what I thought might be careless, but the fact that a jury found him guilty. And no doubt not everybody on the jury rode a motorcycle, but I'm sure that both prosecution and defence would have mentioned the relevant issues.


DeltaF wrote:
Ill ignore the usage of inappropriate language by "jr" to ask this question:


Okay, I shall ignore your earlier usage of insults.

DeltaF wrote:
He says a jury found the rider guilty. Didnt a jury also find the Birmingham six the Bridgewater four and the Guildford four guilty too?


Yes, and I've already addressed this point in effect. Let's take someone well known: Ian Huntley. Now would you condemn him for the murder of those two girls? Or would you assume, based on having read a short article and seen a photo, that he was innocent? Or perhaps you would assume that, because he could appeal at some point in the future, that it was best to say nothing?

DeltaF wrote:
The fact is that juries get it wrong when evidence isnt right and in the case of the rider of this bike, i think they got it wrong again.


Now if you and others had simply got on and said that, in pleasant calm language, then I would have accepted it. But you didn't...

DeltaF wrote:
We dont know just exactly what it was that made his riding "careless" because the authorities havent said so, lets face it, theyve got nothing else to go on except a dammed scamera photo, and whats that tell us about safe driving? Obviously theyre just out to make an example of someone who treats their "best" efforts at road safety with contempt...as they should be.


Obviously?


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PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2007 19:13 
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BottyBurp wrote:
R1Nut wrote:
I'll ask it again as it seems to have been ignored by jr135.

R1Nut wrote:
jr135 wrote:
Perhaps, with your obviously superiour knowledge, you'd like to tell us all how it is driving safely when you're waving at a camera?


How is this any different to you waving to someone you know as you drive down the street?

Allow me to answer for JR...

JR Backpedalling wrote:
Actually, you're right. There is absolutely no difference. I just hadn't thought it through properly and now need to back out of this discussion without losing too much face...

Am I right? :yesyes: :hehe:



Oh dear, BottyBurp, like most other people, you really haven't actually been reading what I write. I have never argued on what I PERSONALLY thought was careless (although I have made suggestions). What I have been saying is that this driver was convicted by a jury on nine counts of careless driving. Perhaps you should ask the jury to backpedal?


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PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2007 19:42 
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Joined: Fri Feb 09, 2007 20:40
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smeggy wrote:
jr135 wrote:
What if we didn't have any laws on speed but we did on other motoring issues such as using a mobile phone whilst driving. He used his phone regularly but when he saw the police he then started waving it about and looking at them rather than concentrating on the road. Should we get rid of the police in that situation?

“Strike three and you’re out!”


Why not just answer the question?

Actually this is a pretty stupid argument. This driver apparently couldn't drive carefully with speed cameras about, and what the courts have done is removed HIM from the roads.

jr135 wrote:
smeggy wrote:
Nope. The prosecution managed to convince the members of that particular jury that the driving fell below the expected standard, nothing more. **

Um, right, so basically you're saying in effect that you're not willing to condemn anyone no matter how they drive?


smeggy wrote:
How on earth did you come to that conclusion?
From the information given (due to the nature of the evidence I strongly suspect there isn’t any more) there is not enough to convince ‘us’ that the bikers actions were careless.


Okay, let me ask you a simple question: would you generally condemn someone who had been found guilty of careless driving by the courts?


jr135 wrote:
So by reading a short article and seeing just one or two photos you can ascertain whether someone is driving carefully or not can you?

smeggy wrote:
I refer you to the end of my last post – the part that you conveniently didn’t quote!
I suspect some disingenuous behaviour on your part.


You suspect wrong. Perhaps you would like to quote it again.

jr135 wrote:
smeggy wrote:
"All at the same time? I say again, I’ve seen no photo of the biker appearing to look at the camera with his arm raised. Even if he was, I ask again: is exceeding the speed limit, looking at a road sign and changing gear considered as ‘careless driving’? If not then what is the difference?"

Well what DO you consider 'careless driving'?

smeggy wrote:
Irrelevant. We are discussing the reported actions of the biker.


No we're NOT! I keep saying that we shouldn't try to take the place of the jury on this, who would have seen all the evidence. So what evidence do you actually have that the jury were wrong on this? Anymore, for the record, please answer my question.

smeggy wrote:
You are trying to evade my (very relevant) questions.


I am NOT trying to evade any questions; however, I have repeatedly said that I'm not going to speculate on what evidence the jury did or didn't see.

smeggy wrote:
I suspect that had you been on the jury, you would not have been able to convict that biker of careless driving without application of some personal bias.


Um, and that would have been different from everyone else because?



jr135 wrote:
perhaps the jury decided that someone of his intelligence simply didn't have the ability to look at a camera, raise his arm, and drive at speeds of up to 105mph carefully.

smeggy wrote:
I ask yet again - "All at the same time?” You’re now manipulating the facts.


I am not manipulating the facts. The fact is that we don't actually know all of the evidence anyway. I have only been suggesting what the jury might have been told.

smeggy wrote:
Since when were IQ’s factored into a prosecution?


I didn't specifically say they were.


jr135 wrote:
Now I genuinely don't understand what you're saying.

smeggy wrote:
You wish everyone to accept subjective judgement as irrefutable fact.


In what way?

jr135 wrote:
I say again that you weren't on the jury so haven't seen all of the evidence, so really, what choice does someone have but to accept a jury's judgement in a case like this?

smeggy wrote:
Have we really not seen all of the evidence?


I would suggest not but I really don't know. Nor do you.

smeggy wrote:
I suspect we have! If we haven’t (what else could there be?) then we cannot possibly be in the position to agree with the verdict.


Well there could be more photos for a start. What you are doing is arrogantly assuming that you know better than the 12 members of the jury.



smeggy wrote:
What do the last 3 posters above me have in common? It’s quite obvious!
(hint: it is something that I would wager that you have none of)


I don't know but I strongly suspect that it's completely irrelevant to the actual argument that I've been taking. You may wish to have a think about that before you reply.


jr135 wrote:
I certainly accept that but there is subjectivity as to whether, say, the person you can see on a CCTV tape is the same person that is standing in front of you.

smeggy wrote:
Investigators put just a little bit more effort into a murder investigation than a victimless technical driving offence.


Okay, now do I have your permission to delete this bit, or will you say that I'm deliberatedly trying to get out of answering some vitally important point?

jr135 wrote:
smeggy wrote:
"Go and Google ‘murder acquittal’. I will never place my complete faith in trials by jury."

But what you are then saying is that you are always going to make a judgement on whether someone is guilty based on newspaper articles and the odd photo or two.

smeggy wrote:
My what logical disconnect you have! I have made my position clear - remember that part you conveniently didn’t quote?


No, I really don't. I didn't conveniently not quote anything. Why not just get on and quote it again?


jr135 previously wrote:
you lot are basically defending this person

[next post]

Well at least some people were defending him.

smeggy wrote:
You’re backpedalling!


Now that's an interesting side-stepping argument from you... You said that no-one was defending him, remember? (And yes, I realise that I've done the same thing here, but it's only in response.)


smeggy wrote:
Now you’ve been given a chance to argue the case for the charge of careless driving, failing miserably in the process, I have to tend towards believing the biker really wasn't being careless!


I have NOT failed miserably in the process, because I have NEVER sought to argue for the charge of careless driving!!! My god, do you and others really read anything that I say???

WAKE UP.


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