T2006 wrote:
I don't know about that - i think the public would find it quite satisfying to know that the tailgaiter, driving 3ft from the rear bumper, with his fog lights on (in the absence of fog), driving a 15 year old BMW, with aftermarket alloy wheels and an altered exhaust note, while smoking and using a mobile phone simultaneosly at 70mph was likely to face rebuke in the form of a heafty fine/ban /points on licence.
I wasn't resident in the UK when speed cameras first appeared en-masse but I would imagine that the public might have initially perceived them to be a good idea to catch those maniacs who speed through their village. Of course, many drivers now realise that those 'maniacs' are in fact just as likely to be themselves as anyone else. Indeed, much current support for speed cameras stems from the mistaken belief that they punish bad drivers.
Tailgating isn't just about having that brainless moron purposefully trying to bully you out of the way in the situation such as you describe above. Drivers mindlessly tailgate the car ahead of them with no real intent on getting them to move over. They will also tailgate because of (their own) poor lane discipline; i.e. the queue of vehicles in L3 will close up to prevent someone undertaking them all and then joining L3 as they approach to pass the obstructing vehicle in L2.
So whilst intially there might be support for tailgating cameras, once everyone begins to realise that they are tailgaters (as well as speeders) themselves as the cameras begin flashing, I predict that there would be an outcry.
The traffic system is a finely balanced mechanism which relies heavily on the willingness of drivers to co-operate and work within it. Attempts to interfere and force compliant behaviour where it currently doesn't exist appears doomed to failure. It is with respect to this one observation alone that I felt it necessary to concede that Paul Smith is actually quite right in his analysis of the effect speed cameras are having on our roads.