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#181
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In message , Mike Bristow
writes Oh give it a rest. The law is impotent if it doesn't have common consent and the majority ignore it. Are you going to take a similar view to bikes jumping red lights? If not, what's the difference? I agree that laws can only be used by common consent and as for jumping red lights, I have no problem with this providing, if the person lives after being thrown violently from their machine by whatever other vehicle hits them has no complaint. -- Clive |
#182
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![]() wrote Average speed cameras exist to raise revenue for the treasury. So reduce the fine so that it merely covers the cost of enforcement, but make it a 6 point offence to clear drivers who have little thought for other road users off the road more quickly. A major use of average speed cameras is through roadworks. Workers carrying out the roadworks are at serious danger from speeding motorists, that's why average speed cameras are used in these circumstances. The alternative may be to close a motorway completely while it's being widened, but that wouldn't be popular. Ob rail. The need for an adjacent track to be closed while one track is being worked on, so that, for example, if the Up Fast or Down Slow on the WCML is being worked on it is sometimes effectively necessary to impose a 4-track blockade. Peter |
#183
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On Mon, 2 Aug 2010 16:46:31 +0100
"Peter Masson" wrote: make it a 6 point offence to clear drivers who have little thought for other road users off the road more quickly. I'm not sure why you think making progress is having little though for other drivers. A major use of average speed cameras is through roadworks. Workers carrying out the roadworks are at serious danger from speeding motorists, that's why No doubt. Except that for the majority of a 24 hour day there generally isn't any bugger working on most roadworks. They should be renamed roadcan't-be-arsed-I'm-off-home. B2003 |
#184
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"Peter Masson" gurgled happily, sounding much
like they were saying: Average speed cameras exist to raise revenue for the treasury. So reduce the fine so that it merely covers the cost of enforcement, but make it a 6 point offence to clear drivers who have little thought for other road users off the road more quickly. I'm really not sure that the link between "exceeding the speed limit" and "drivers who have little thought for others" is anywhere _near_ that kind of clear-cut correlation... |
#185
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d wrote:
Have you ever accidently put a stamp on upside down but still posted the letter? Yes? Well in that case you've technically commited treason. Look it up. I did, and as ever you are talking rubbish. HMG say that it is not treason, and never has been. http://yourfreedom.hmg.gov.uk/repeal...son-and-stamps -- http://gallery120232.fotopic.net/p14486546.html (67 014 at Warrington Bank Quay, 21 Apr 2005) |
#186
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In message , at 16:46:31 on
Mon, 2 Aug 2010, Peter Masson remarked: wrote Average speed cameras exist to raise revenue for the treasury. So reduce the fine so that it merely covers the cost of enforcement, But even that doesn't work. One of the first average-speed camera installations in the country (Nottingham ring road) lost money because people unexpectedly became law-abiding (much to the disgust of the police and others it appeared!) A major use of average speed cameras is through roadworks. Workers carrying out the roadworks are at serious danger from speeding motorists, that's why average speed cameras are used in these circumstances. The alternative may be to close a motorway completely while it's being widened, but that wouldn't be popular. Another alternative would be to employ more than one man and a dog, with a bent teaspoon as their only tool, and get on and finish the work in under typically a year and a half. -- Roland Perry |
#188
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On Mon, 2 Aug 2010 16:46:31 +0100, "Peter Masson"
wrote: So reduce the fine so that it merely covers the cost of enforcement, but make it a 6 point offence to clear drivers who have little thought for other road users off the road more quickly. A minor infringement of the speed limit gets 3 points. A more serious infringement, which usually means exceeding the limit by over 15 mph, already gets the driver 6 points. |
#189
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Bruce gurgled happily, sounding much like they
were saying: So reduce the fine so that it merely covers the cost of enforcement, but make it a 6 point offence to clear drivers who have little thought for other road users off the road more quickly. A minor infringement of the speed limit gets 3 points. A more serious infringement, which usually means exceeding the limit by over 15 mph, already gets the driver 6 points. More accurate to say that it'll see the driver in court, rather than getting a fixed penalty, where he will get between 3 and 6 points, and a much more substantial fine. |
#190
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Chris Tolley wrote:
d wrote: Have you ever accidently put a stamp on upside down but still posted the letter? Yes? Well in that case you've technically commited treason. Look it up. I did, and as ever you are talking rubbish. HMG say that it is not treason, and never has been. http://yourfreedom.hmg.gov.uk/repeal...son-and-stamps Thanks for that address. Prime Minister's Petitions are reborn under another name and with a new gimmick! Charlie |
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