SafeSpeed wrote:
I'm inclined to rile at anyone who claims ownership of something that isn't theirs - even when it's on behalf of another party.
OK, back on track.
There is a pschology going on here that is quite deep and I don't confess to understanding it at all. I don't believe anyone is laying claim to anything tangible and physical when they say "this is
our village", I see it as more of a plea, one which is often enforced with the addition of: "how would you like it if we sped past your homes?"
Basingwerk quite rightly points to stakeholders but of course there is a natural fluidity in the structure. Assuming the village is not some Edgar Allan Poe esque community where nobody leaves, the villagers themselves are also drivers going through other peoples village and perhaps even speeding; who knows, it could be the village of the people who are speeding through their own abode.
I'm categorically not saying that this applies to
dpratt but there is an unfortunate tendency for cases like this to founded in hypocrisy i.e. it's not
my speeding thats the problems, its
everyone else's.
Earnest Marsh wrote:
The drivers obviously do not respect the limit - why is that? Perhaps it's like the 20 mph limit at Ambleside, which is widely disregarded by all, because it is so ludicrous?
It could be that the road presents as a clearway straight through; such is the case in the village where my mother-in-law lives. There is little to persuade drivers that it might be an idea to slow down (except the speed limit signs), perhaps changing the way the road looks might help.
And then there is the question of respect, or lack of it which is endemic in our society. I firmly believe that there are genuinely times and places when drivers should just do what is being asked of them and observe the speed limit. It isn't actually all that difficult, it demonstrates respect for the law/residents/workforce and doesn't as some would appear to believe, reveal the obeyant individual to be weak willed, lacking in indivdual thought or some dithering buffoon who is clinging to the speed limit as their only reference. By the same token, ignoring the instruction doesn't infer the opposite, i.e. that the individual is strong of character, decisive of mind etc etc - they could just be bloody arrogant
I also recognise that this is a complex issue which is muddied by unintentional hypocrisy, but I stand by my point.