Agreed Dusty, but to borrow from my work in the NHS if I may...
When something/anything is not about profiteering but simply good quality of service it becomes open to abuse too, in my experience, and a black hole for as much money as the tax payer is (not) prepared to plough into it.
As the NHS service moves towards a Foundation Trust, privatisation if you like, I am already seeing the bad effects which I can tell you are of great concern to me and others. So I can see it going from one extreme to the other.
If or when they wise-up that keeping people on the roads is more profitable I’m sure we will start to see a U-turn in the speed kills argument which gets us banned and, ultimately, claiming benefit since we all have to be mobile and let’s face it public transport sucks!
Here’s how I see it...
Someone works hard but gets banned from driving. He or she can either: -
A) Flout the law and keep driving in order to keep job, house and family together
B) End of career, can’t pay mortgage, family falls apart etc. etc.
The Government catches option A and adds another to the ‘crimes solved’ stats which should not have happened in the first place if they had an ounce of integrity or common sense and puts both the family through hardship and burdens the tax payer further.
The Government pays out for option B and his or her family effectively turning a perfectly respectable hard-working person into someone who now needs to seek out alternative means of income through endless courses and training for which he/she may not be best suited, experienced or qualified to do at reduced income or simply no work for however long etc.
Yeah, I think I know partly where our society is breaking down.
