weepej wrote:
Steve wrote:
If everyone checked properly with 100% compliance that no one could cycle into their car door which they are about to open and the KSIs dropped, isn't everybody that opens a car door in some part responsible for the extra KSIs?
(Reductio ad absurdum)
Well, yes.
It can't believe you didn't see this coming.....
Are those who already do check properly with 100% compliance also in some part responsible for the extra KSIs? (don't give us BS about statistical behaviour, let's consider that ideal driver, afterall we have people who claim they never exceed a speed limit).
This is your problem, you have mixed an unsafe behaviour with an unsafe one, then call both of them bad; see below.
weepej wrote:
It's illegal to open a car door into the path of an oncoming vehicle, the more people do it the more dooring incidents there will be, so participating with the fling the door open brigade
There it is!
Everyone doesn't "fling" open their car door, only
some do. Again you mix the safe with the dangerous: those who open carefully with those who "fling", then call them all bad.
You need to answer the following two questions (which I've already asked) to understand this:
Are commuters on motorways really no different from joyriders in residential areas? Should these two really be grouped together?
If A is a subset of Y and B is a subset of Y, and B results with Z, does A necessarily result with Z?
weepej wrote:
Same with speed, the faster you travel along any given road the more potential you have to whack somebody else/more damage you will cause if you do whack somebody else. You might not whack somebody else in a million years, but you have increased your potential to do so, and hence played your part in the system that is overall more hazourdous.
Circular argument. You've completely missed what I said (and my question to you) about arousal in my prior post. You can't continue with this sub-thread without addressing it; do you want to answer that question?
I also can't help but noticed you changed 'exceed the speed limit' with 'faster'; your fundamental issue isn't with the limit, but the absolute speed.
Do drivers suddenly become more dangerous if they maintain the same speed, but one which just became illegal because the speed limit was dropped, say a motorway limit from 70 to 60 (all else equal) ?