itschampionman wrote:
Gatsobait wrote:
I doubt the thought of drunk drivers getting away with their stupidity makes you more comfortable, itschampionman, so why are you so supportive of a policy that in effect allows many of them to do this?
Exactly how does it do that?
This is a completely nonsensical statement. Why does a safety camera system allow drink drivers to get away with it. It does not there is no link. Are you saying that there are less drink drivers detected because there are less road traffic police. Again nonsense. The safety camera system will surely free up the police time to address these things.
First off, let's cut the crap and stop calling them safety cameras. They cannot detect unsafe behaviour, they can only detect speed. They are speed cameras. If you've got a camera design that can detect unsafe behaviour, great, we'll all call it a safety camera. You'll make a fortune, and deservedly so as it'll be a damn sight more useful than speed cameras. But all we have now are speed camers, no more, no less. Don't get me wrong, they are very good at detecting illegal speed, and sometimes that means unsafe behaviour as well. But what good are they when you don't get punished right away? If I misbehaved at school (

mm, yeah, did happen a bit) they didn't hang around for a couple of weeks and then give me a detention. It happened right away so no-one had any doubt over it. I knew what it was for, my classmates knew what it was for, and my long-suffering house master knew what it was for (sorry Dai, no hard feelings). Out on the road I notice that people tend to behave themselves for a while after seeing someone else being nicked, possibly because they think plod might finish up quickly and be after them soon. Cameras just make people slow down for a short distance and then speed up again. Plus, as I said before, if you set one off because you're sloshed then the camera can't punish you for that at all. Now, if you really think that getting a £60 fine and some points a fortnight after driving while tanked up is adequate punishment then we'll have to agree to disagree.
itschampionman wrote:
Again nonsense. The safety camera system will surely free up the police time to address these things.
Not nonsense, I'm afraid. Cameras have not freed up any police time. First, traffic police numbers have been so heavily reduced it's hard to see how they could possibly have more time on their hands than in the pre-camera days. Secondly, the police still have to stop speeding drivers when they see them, yes? So the cameras haven't actually taken that part of the workload away. Just as well, really. You are clearly anti-speeding, and I am anti-bad driving, in which I would include excessive speed. We must surely agree on this point - if PC Bloggs happens to see a car whacking through a residential area at an excessive speed, he should do something about it rather than say "oh well, he's bound to trip one of the 5000 or so cameras sooner or later, that saves me from having to nick him myself. I'll wait and see what else comes along". A ridiculous scenario to be sure, but if we expect the cameras to do all the work of the police when it comes to speeding then it would effectively become the reality.
Now, if you want a clear example of how the combination of cameras and lack of police make it possible to drink drive without being caught, try this. I haven't seen a traffic patrol locally in years. Still see a few on the motorways of course, often with the LIDAR out

, but naff all on the surrounding A roads. The nearest police station is several miles away, so panda cars are almost as rare as their namesakes. It's perfectly possible to go have a few drinks in town and drive back without seeing a police car, and if they ain't there they simply can't stop you. Contrast this with the police presence when I'd just passed my test about 15 years ago. I got stopped three times in as many years. (Two blown bulbs, which I changed on the spot since I've always carried a kit, and one noisy exhaust which got me a bollocking, er I mean the lecture in
that tone of voice that InGear's always banging on about. I also had a wait in the rain while they checked the car for other defects, plus a producer and orders to go get a new exhaust. Served me right fot buying such a crappy old car! I was even breathalysed for one of the bulbs, btw. Got a little

light of course. That's
real road policing.) But now if you don't actually have an accident you're pretty unlikely to get any police attention no matter how bad your driving is unless you trip a camera. For a drunk that's good news - you're still getting away with it as 3 points and a 60 quid fine is much less severe than being banned for a year or more and being lightened by several hundred.
Now I don't know what the situation is in your area. Perhaps there still are plenty of patrols around, in which case lucky you! Here there is over reliance on cameras, and to a lesser extent, traffic calming. Neither of those does anything to stop any form of bad driving apart from speeding, and even then it's open to question.