Jack Tatum wrote:
If they did ban them, would this not contravene Human Rights 'freedom of use of possessions'?
I don't know about this one...
Jack Tatum wrote:
Wouldn't they have to prove there was a benefit to public safety to get round this law?
Exactly. According to European law (which is above Dutch law), we have freedom of information gathering. But one section says that a gouvernment has the right to tighten up freedoms, for the benefit of public safety.
So who do you think is going to give the answer to this "public safety" question? Yes indeed, we have our own TRL, which have put out a press release, claiming that radar detectors are bad for traffic safety.
Although their story is completely underproven. The press release says "Radar detectors are bad for traffic safety", the story says "we
expect radar detectors to be bad for traffic safety".
Ofcourse, they use the old Finch report for their arguments, and many other reports which have a gray beard.
The Finch argument is interesting. We had a report in Holland, evaluating the effects of "traffic control" - including speed control. The conclusion was, that it is not statistically significant clear that speed control has had very positive effects. The same reports states that the whole Finch investigation does not apply in the real world. Only 4 days later, they argue the evilness of radardetectors using that same Finch argument.
Later, they republished the radar detector story, but the cut out the Finch part, as I criticized on our website that they're not taking their own investigation serious!
Anyway, Finch is dead in Holland. If they reclaim the argument, they're in big problems now!