basingwerk wrote:
Your license to drive is a privilege, not a right, and to keep it, you have to hold your end of the bargain, i.e. drive properly.
And what about the lawmakers keeping to their end of the bargain and not reducing the limits when there's no clear justification for doing so? If you want drivers to respect the limits, the limit setting process has to be seen to be worthy of respect.
basingwerk wrote:
Twister wrote:
Consider the motorway limit. Set in an age when the average car would struggle to reach a 3-figure speed, and which had braking abilities that were, to put it mildly, pretty dismal.
And where traffic density was must lower than today, and when drivers behaved properly.
Ooh, so does that mean you'd support a higher limit when motorway traffic density was on a par with that of the 60's? Many's the time I've driven home from London along the M4 around midnight without there being more than a handful of vehicles visible ahead of me or in my mirrors behind me - there are even numerous times when there are NO other vehicles visible on my side of the central reservation.
For sure, I'd not suggest attempting 80-90MPH along the same stretch of road during peak traffic flow periods would be wise, or even practical, but there are plenty of times when the traffic density IS low enough to support higher than NSL speeds.
basingwerk wrote:
So let us campaign for that, not on the idea that if we don't enforce the limits, things will go back to normal.
But that's not really what Paul, myself, or many of his other supporters, are campaigning for. Sure, I'd be happy enough to see the police turning a blind eye to infringments of some current limits, where those limits are insanely low for the road in question, but I'm not advocating a general abolition of speed enforcement. Enforce limits that are sensible, and do so taking the conditions of each case into account - don't just tar every single driver who steps, however momentarily, over the line with the same brush.
So, basically, scrap the speed cameras that offer no real safety improvement to the stretch of road in question, bring traffic police numbers back up to at least the level they were at pre-decline, and start doing something about ALL aspects of road safety instead of picking off the easy targets who aren't necessarily even the unsafe drivers.
In the last month I can't recall a single incident where my safety bubble was threatened by another speeding driver. I DO recall several incidents where other drivers have drifted into my lane without looking, or pulled out of a side road straight into my path despite them having clear line of sight with my car. If I'd been less alert in all cases, or driving a car with poorer braking ability in some, these could have turned into accidents. Yet none of these other drivers actions would be picked up by the forests of "safety" cameras. Meanwhile, if I take my eyes off the speedo for a few seconds whilst heading south on the A1 through Archway, I know I'll be collecting 3 points and be 60 quid worse off - it's a 30MPH limit which is impossible to stick to unless I keep my foot on the brake all the way down the hill past the camera. So the way to improve safety at this spot is to encourage drivers to take their eyes off the road for a prolonged period (the road markings associated with the camera stretch for quite a way) whilst they're heading straight towards a traffic-light controlled junction... excuse me if I fail to see how a setup like this could earn the respect of any sensible driver. And I notice with no small amount of cynicism that, whilst this camera site is bi-directional, every time I've passed it the camera has always been facing downhill where it stands a better chance of snapping someone who's been caught out by the steepness of the hill.
If that were the only example of poor camera siting combined with a lower-than-would-seem-appropriate limit across the entire country then fair enough, it wouldn't be a cause for complaint. But it's not. It's just one of many. Too many.