Rigpig wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
So why bother?
Standby
Right, sorry got sidetracked and had to log off to check something.
The word 'appropriate' is like the word 'attitude', neither works on its own. We don't have a bad attitude, we have a bad attitude
towards something, similarly wearing a tuxedo may be appropriate if we include reference to a dinner/dance.
So, in the context of the speed we set as we drive along we have two references to appropriatness namely:
Is it safe to do go at our current speed with respect to our surroundings and..
Is it legal to do so.
This forum creates an inordinate amount of internal heat trying to prove that the speed limit is irrelevant and that you can drive safely above the limit and dangerously below it. That may be true, well it is true in the right circumstances, but its either not legal or not safe - we can't have it both ways. So, in either case we don't tick both boxes and therefore we are failing one of the appropriatness tests.
And it is utterly foolish to try to pretend that the speed limit doesn't exist in a given scenario; it does exist and no government is going to abolish it or change its stance towards it - except by removing digital enforcement which traps people trying to comply with the law but slipping a few mph over. Thus, if we are looking at realistic and do-able ways of improving driver standards and appropriatness of driving behaviour we have to include reference to the annoying rules such as the speed limits.
And theres another facet to this as well. Why for example do I, mpaton2004, handy and BW believe that obeying the law is a good thing? Why do others (in various previous missives on the subject) believe it to be a sign of weak will, meekness or some other pejorative descriptor of our personal traits. Well, to examine that we are into ad-hominem territory aren't we?
SafeSpeed wrote:
We have zillions of 20mph bends on 60mph roads (think: 'country lanes'). What's going to happen if people start to drive as it the legal limit was the best reason for chosing a speed?
Why on earth should this happen? If drivers are the normal repsonsible and intelligent people we believe them to be they will listen to the messages about safe and appropriate speeds within the posted limit and act accordingly. Why would they become so dumb as to throw themselves off the road, the argument that drivers are responsible and this postulation simply don't go together.
Ultimately, it boils down to personal opinion, some think we can drive safely and stick to the limit, others think one compromises the other. However, if we assert that drivers can't do both together (obey the rules and drive safely), how do the Germans manage it in their highly regulated environment?