This thread hits the nail on the head. It is this Country's speed limits themselves that are the problem, not the enforcement. If the urban speed limit was 50mph rather than 30, very few people would mind if the roads were blanketed in speed cameras and a 6-point / £200 penalty applied for breaching the limit. Those that get prosecuted would deserve their punishment, fair cop, no questions asked.
A good analogy I thought of is this - The rev LIMIT on a typical petrol car engine is abut 6800RPM - this is a limit enforced for the safety of the engine.
It is sufficiently high that, in normal driving, it doesn't get in the way. Most driving is done in the 1000-5000RPM range, quite safely.
So why not set the rev limit to 4500RPM? You'd get a worthwhile improvement in engine safety (in theory) and it would only inconvenience some of the people, some of the time.
The trouble is, many frustrated people would remove their 4500RPM rev limiter when they realised that the engine could safely rev much higher. With the rev limiter removed, drivers would have to enforce their own limit. When would they back off? 7000RPM? 8000RPM? 9000RPM? Would we find that as a result of the lower "enforced" limit, the average number of engine blow-ups would actually increase?
Any limit is worthless if it is not respected. It doesn't matter if the reasons behind it are theoretically sound or not.
Interestingly enough, the "inexperienced drivers" situation has a parallel here too. Anyone who's bought a new car will know that an advisory 4000RPM rev limit applies during the "running in" period. This limit is not enforced by a limiter, but you don't exceed it anyway because it is not in your interests to do so.
So it should be for new drivers. The threat of having to retake their driving test, or maybe even having an 1100cc engine size limit imposed on them for 5 years (as opposed to 2 years otherwise) would be sufficient to keep new drivers compliant.
At the end of the day, limits have to be set somewhere and we live in a "one size fits all" Democracy. When we get to the voting booth, we come over all idealistic. It's like the "age of consent" being set to 16. Any opinion poll would show a huge majority in favour of this limit, but how many of us actually waited until we were 16?
Philosophy aside, the facts remain:
- National Speed limits have not kept up with the improvements in vehicle technology and safety and are overdue for a review.
- One speed limit (on a given road) for all times of day and all conditions is too high under some circumstances, too low under others.
- Speed limits are often set for political reasons, not safety reasons.
- The technology required to implement automated policing of a proper, effective road safety policy is still decades away. So they have chosen to simplify the definition of road safety rather than admit the technology we have isn't up to the job. This is potentially disasterous.