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#51
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So, who will fund the proposed bicycle license?
Cyclists? What counts as a bicycle? A non-motorised vehicle with one or more wheel(s) making contact with the ground. Where would you put such a license plate so it can be read? In the same places as required on a motorcycle. Especially at the top end, bikes are more a fluid collection of parts than a static assembly. The same could be said of certain motor vehicles. At the low end, any cost of licensing could almost double the cost of the bike. I doubt it, but in any event, so what? And what good would it do? You don't know who was riding any particular bike, even less so than you do with a car (and it is hard enough getting anything done even when there has been injury and witnesses). The system works reasonably well for cars etc: the registered keeper must nominate the driver (cyclist) or else it is assumed that he is the driver (cyclist). So in response to the original poster, there is the UseNet 'there, there!', cup of tea and sympathy. We don't so that sort of thing and don't condone it either but your proposed 'solution' is ill thought out, unworkable and disproportionate. That's your opinion, and not necessarily a matter of fact. Marc. |
#52
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On 16 Oct 2004, Silas Denyer wrote:
I think [...] Damn! The subject made me think this thread was going to be about Critical Mass ... tom -- I hate to advocate drugs, alcohol, violence, or insanity to anyone, but they've always worked for me. -- Hunter S. Thompson. |
#53
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#54
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![]() --- Jon Senior said: A (possibly) better one; You have a high-power rifle. Running towards you are a hungry looking lion and a small domestic cat. Given enough time and some bad luck on your part the small cat could kill you. The lion definately will. Which one do you try and shoot? Once again, why is this an "Either/Or" situation? Why can't I use the cat as bait to trap the lion, killing them both at once? Two birds with one stone, that sort of thing. This is the question that I've been asking since my very first post in this thread. And it's the one question that the cyclists have been refusing to answer each time I ask it. If I don't get an answer this time, I'm just gonna killfile this whole thread, because there's no point even trying to discuss things sensibly with people who aren't even prepared to answer a simple question. |
#55
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On 16 Oct 2004 17:31:31 GMT, Adrian wrote:
Ian Smith ) gurgled happily, sounding much like they were saying : And how many would you consider acceptable? How many pedestrians per annum do you think are expendable? Well, society believes about 11 per day, since it doesn't cause any outcry. Can we at least get the numbers right? 11 x 365 = roughly the total number of road deaths. Try 774 ped deaths last year - of which around 60% were over the legal blood-alcohol level for driving. In other words - around 11 sober pedestrians killed on the roads *per fortnight*... What the hell has sobriety got to do with it? Fortunately this isn't America or Saudi Arabia and you're perfectly within your rights to walk home drunk as a lord and not get run over. |
#56
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On 16 Oct 2004 17:31:31 GMT, Adrian wrote:
Ian Smith ) gurgled happily, sounding much like they were saying : And how many would you consider acceptable? How many pedestrians per annum do you think are expendable? Well, society believes about 11 per day, since it doesn't cause any outcry. Can we at least get the numbers right? Can we indicate where we specified 11 a day was sober pedestrians? Society clearly thinks 11 fatalities a day is acceptable. regards, Ian SMith -- |\ /| no .sig |o o| |/ \| |
#57
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On 16 Oct 2004 17:32:42 GMT, Adrian wrote:
davek ) gurgled happily, sounding much like they were saying : How many pedestrians die annually from being hit by cyclists? How many die from being hit by cars? How wide is a car? How wide is a bicycle? Much more than one two-hundredth as wide. Is this line of questioning going anywhere? regards, Ian SMith -- |\ /| no .sig |o o| |/ \| |
#58
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Tony Raven wrote:
ningi wrote: Well, cars don't jump red lights with anything like the frequency that bikes do in London, so perhaps it does. Only because the first driver who stops for the red light blocks all those behind him, who would if they could, from jumping the light. Even then and with very few traffic lights equipped with cameras, ~10,000 motorists a months are being caught in London by red light cameras. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/3723726.stm Tony Well, my experience of cycling from Waterloo to Bank several times a week is that at least 75% of cyclists go straight through red lights. If the same numbers applied to cars, then 75% of the time, a car arriving at a red light should jump it. This isn't even remotely the case. I can't actually remember when I last saw a car jump a red, whereas I find it a rarity when I see a cyclist, other than me, who stopped for one. Pete |
#59
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On 16 Oct 2004 05:58:53 -0700, (Silas Denyer)
wrote in message : I think there will shortly be a significant backlash against cyclists, from *all* sections of the community. LOL! Been living in a hole the last few years, have you? Guy -- May contain traces of irony. Contents liable to settle after posting. http://www.chapmancentral.co.uk 88% of helmet statistics are made up, 65% of them at Washington University |
#60
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On Sat, 16 Oct 2004 15:28:53 +0100, "Solar Penguin"
wrote in message : Anyway what is the right word? Where you start by solving the problems that you *are* able to solve instead of wasting your time trying to solve the ones that can't be solved until later? Whatever it's called, that's what I was thinking of. Er, "cop-out?" "victimisation?" "scapegoating?" Every example I can think of from Pareto analysis down to ACPO guidelines focuses on the highest risk and greatest potential for lifesaving first. Cyclists are not even on the radar. Hence the official Government guidance to Plod not even to use fixed penalty notices unless the cyclist is behaving recklessly. This is mainly a recognition that most pavement cycling is more a response motorist behaviour than a deliberate and flagrant act of lawlessness. Guy -- May contain traces of irony. Contents liable to settle after posting. http://www.chapmancentral.co.uk 88% of helmet statistics are made up, 65% of them at Washington University |
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