Abercrombie wrote:
But with the flood of data nowadays, people know that politics is just about collectively making up our minds. And there will always be winners are losers - that's how it goes. If you want to pay for safer roads, you loose something else. What should it be – the NHS or the BBC? Fine if you like Rupert Murdoch, and if you never need a hip operation. Or perhaps we should close our Physics Labs, or our museums and galleries?
We could instead focus on the non-essentials, like the lavish spending on criminal holiday resorts (aka prisons), much of social services, EU subsidies, subsidising illegal occupations of other countries,
direct benefit payouts, the glut of well-paid civil servants.... I'm sure there are more examples.
So are motorists are subsidising society? If so how then by how much? (depending on the divvied portions, some could reasonably view it as 'being screwed'). Shouldn't we be looking after groups who are heavily subsidising others?
However, it seems we have indeed lost something valuable: pedestrian safety.
There are significantly more KSIs arising from the single 'pedestrian error' factor of "pedestrians failed to look properly" [3487] than all drivers exceeding the speed limit [1993] [source, table 4b, RCGB2007, fatal and serious injury accidents summed).
How can this been allowed to happen even though pedestrians aren't KSIed when walking into each other pedestrians or trees?
TBH, I think a lot can be gained simply by disbanding the SCPs (which aren't free) and replacing them with trafpol (which can also cost recover).
Abercrombie wrote:
On the other hand, we could just drive a bit more carefully (and slowly?), and save money that way. It just makes sense.
Who is to say motorists aren't already? Where should the line be drawn? Is there a ever a lower limit of 'slower'?
Why don't we put as much focus on other road user groups too? Won't that also save money, perhaps more of it, as well as being fairer?