weepej wrote:
I spent my youth doing some ridiculously dangerous things, including jumping off the highest thing we dare (which ended up with running jumps off the "garages"), following rivers and brooks to the sea and doing some ridiculous high jumps on the cycle. Strangly I never did manage to break anything, but I do carry marks.
weepej and ingear,
OK, the items on my list were examples of a different and lost world, and some people may prefer the constraints we have today, but the point is that our rule bound culture has been going in one direction for 50 years, and that is - more rules!
We might start off at the heavy end, ie banning shotguns and then end up putting safety helmets on kids when they walk to the playground or going through their lunchboxes for signs of jam.
However, there is a strong counter culture, which may have something to do with our prohibition mentality. Drugs are plentiful among the young, including hard drugs, graffiti and small crime is everywhere, kids in our town drive rodded cars and don't give a toss about speedcams.
My thesis is that over prohibiting has an effect on group consciousness in the long term, and it's never a good effect. Dionysus reemerges.
Getting back to speed limits. Why are there more powerful cars and bikes on the roads than ever before? Because people like the feeling of power and release. They want the dance.
C.
PS - Street running (free running) is all the rage now. Last Xmas two young guys ran the length of our lane, never touching the ground. They dented every single car bonnet and roof, including ours. Why did they do it? - because they could.