Ernest Marsh wrote:
basingwerk wrote:
Look Ernest, it’s time to start sticking inside the limit.
Is that you urging ME to stick to the limit? You have no idea whether I drive within the limits or not, so it's a bold assumption on your part to urge me to obey the law!
It would have been even bolder if I had advised you not to obey the law! There are plenty here who think it’s clever to break the speed limit, so I’m happy if you are not among them. Good man – have you taken the pledge?
Ernest Marsh wrote:
Bad laws engender a lack of respect for the law - all laws. The means of enforcement with regard to speed limits only serves to multiply the level of disrespect. Your stance on this issue of obeying a law STRICTLY, which may not be a just law, lands you with the same lack of respect.
It was bold of me to ask you to obey the law, so perhaps you already do. But then you say, in a rather indirect way, that the law is bad. Can I now assume that you mean the speed limits are bad? Or do you mean that speed limits are OK, but they shouldn’t limit your speed? Or do you mean that laws enforcing speed limits are up the creek? Or are the levels of the speed limits wrong. Help me out here, Ernest – what do you mean?
Ernest Marsh wrote:
And all the while, you duck the issue of whether you apply your STRICT adherence to the law to other aspects of your everyday life - such as your TV ariel, or whether you would accede to a law requiring you to have elderly relatives done away with if required by law, or whether you would disobey the law while you campaigned to have it changed.
It's a rather bold assumption on your part to say I have an illegal TV ariel! But one thing at a time here. Good people should get behind the law and support it. The law is right - the people who break it are wrong. That is what we were taught.
You used Godwin’s law (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godwins_Law ) with your appeal about nazi’s (thanks peterE), and I concede that, in extremis, the situation changes. There is no “extreme situation” with speeders – I reckon they just break the law, straight and simple.
Ernest Marsh wrote:
Should I be frightened into obeying pointless speed limits such as the one at Ings, or should I be persuaded to respect the law, by only having decent laws and limits enacted? Which policy would achieve more sustainable results?
No – don’t be frightened. Think of it as a civic duty, like putting litter in your pocket ‘til you see a bin. I’m in favour of having proper speed limit levels. Once set, I’m in favour of enforcing them “warts and all” so to speak, and going after those who can’t be bothered to sort themselves out. That’s the best way to get safer roads.