Rigpig wrote:
JT wrote:
Quick as a flash, this formed the following parable in my mind...
Some scaffolding is erected in the street, with a pipe sticking out at eye level. Now of the passers by, all the "advanced walkers" see it in good time and react without it being any more than a minor distraction. Now walkers displaying only average levels of observation and anticipation only see it at the last minute and have to react in a bit of a hurry. Still not really a problem, though they impede other walkers a bit and cause a bit of congestion.
But now someone not paying full attention walks clean into it and has a major accident, which wouldn't have occurred at all if the damned thing hadn't been there in the first place.
As he staggers away with the remnants of his right eye hanging from it's socket, the "Scaffolding Erection Partnership" poke fun at him for his lack of observation - it never occurs to them that they are the ones actually causing the problem.
Then someone from "SafeWalk"

comes along and points out the error of their ways, but still there is no remorse. Now they fall back on to their reason for being there, which is that the potentially dangerous roof needed mending. So even though their operation posed more of a hazard than the danger they were there to address in the first place, this is perfectly justifiable because they can now place the blame onto the victim, for
not looking where he was going!
JT mate, you can dream up any amount of ' x wasn't there, y wouldn't have happened' scenarios you like, you won't convince me one iota. I understand perfectly the point you are trying to make, but I don't accept it as a reason for the van not being there.
This is a chicken and egg scenario, of course the individual who was shocked to see a speed camera van over-reacted and crashed his car - had the van not been there to be seen, he wouldn't have crashed. But had
he not had a sudden surge of guilt/awareness he wouldn't have
needed to react. Thus, as an argument against speed cameras its one of the more feeble.
As said in my previous post - we've always had the odd one who panic brakes as they wish to avoid a fine

. and points and ensuing extra insurance premiums. However, on aggregate ... would say very many (if not majority) slow down gradually on seeing us as they've realised we 've copped 'em at it anyway.
Said on many occasions - depends on what has been observed and the attitude as to actual outcome.
Would say from what I observed on a jaunt to Cambs this weekend - that people bubbling at or just below the speed limit were still stamping on brakes for the remaining Truvelos (is it me - or are there less this year - some of the ones we noted last time are [i] not [/] there but the road markings are

) on the A14 towards Cambridge. I do not see or hear of this occurring on our patch for either the van or our lads out on patrol.
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Let me offer a scenario - much as though I loathe scenario building - of my own.
A burgler breaks into a mans house and threatens his wife and kids. The man reacts by attacking the burgler with a golf club and suceeeds in driving him away. Unfortunately the burglar is a vindictive individual and returns at a later date with a gun and shoots the man dead. We could argue that if the man had done nothing in the first place, the burglar would have got away with a few valuables, but the man would still be alive. Do we then campaign to prevent people from fighting back against burglars for fear of how burglars might react?
I never know how the person I am about to arrest will react to the handcuffs. You never know if the person you are arresting or the burglar you disturbed in your home is a paranoid schizophrenic - out and about on a "care in the community" order.
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Speed cameras, like burglars, may be loathesome things, but arguing against their use based on fears of how people might and do react is not a winner IMHO.
But Riggers - the speed camera (like the identity card and other measures to combat potential threat is based on fears and nightmare politics.
The speed camera argument is based to "preventing the accident and death waiting to happne on the roads" and the identity card and other anti-terrorism laws are supoposed to protect us against the act of terrror that someone may be plotting against us.
These measures actually do very little in preventing any of these occurrences. Good police and military intelligence may sniff out the latter - and only education, engineering and enforcement by genuine police officers is going to resolve the former.
Suspect practical measures may be a better vote winner than deceiving Joe Public by spinning twisted yarns.
But would you vote for the party who wants to tax you more to pay me my wages?
