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#241
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![]() "Adrian" wrote in message ... If it's not a silly question, why did you stop in a position where he could pull up alongside? You can't actually prevent it. I have been in the situation where I have stopped for a children's crossing patrol and because I turn right immediately after the crossing, I am toward the right side of the lane. A car pulls up alongside me on the right and stops, straddling the centre line. I could only guess that she was using the cyclist as a kerb marker :-( |
#242
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"Dave Larrington" gurgled happily, sounding
much like they were saying: If it's not a silly question, why did you stop in a position where he could pull up alongside? Because preventing a vehicle from overtaking is something one should never ever do ;-) cough And where would he have been overtaking too...? |
#243
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On Thu, 16 Apr 2009 09:57:43 +0100, "J. Chisholm"
wrote: snip What we really really need are 'advance' cycle lights such as used in other Northern European Countries. No chance - insufficient numbers of cyclists to make the cost even a serious consideration. -- "Primary position" the middle of a traffic lane. To take the "primary position" : to ride a bike in the middle of the lane in order to obstruct other road vehicles from overtaking. A term invented by and used by psycholists and not recognised in the Highway Code. |
#244
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On Apr 16, 9:47*am, wrote:
On Thu, 16 Apr 2009 09:59:17 +0100 David Hansen wrote: On Thu, 16 Apr 2009 00:51:23 +0100 someone who may be Derek wrote this:- While laws governing Scotland are passed in England Scotland cannot be a country. * Laws governing Greenland are passed in Denmark. The same used to be true ofIceland. Iceland had it´s own legal system most of the time Iceland was governed from Denmark. Some of the laws passed in Iceland were the same ones as passed in Denmark but it was a seperate legal system. If, for the sake of argument, one accepts the claim that the UK is a country then by the argument above it cannot be a country. While laws governing the UK are passed in Belgium the UK cannot be a country. Scotland is a country, wales and NI are provinces. Scotland had its own monarchy until james wandered south in the 17th century and its own self governing parliament up until the 18th century. Wales was never anything more than an area of tribal feifdoms living around some mountains who happened to speak the same language. Even their so called princes never controlled the whole region and since the 13th century its effectively been part of england anyway. Ireland like wales was just a mishmash of tribes and could never really be called a country other than by definition of its coastline. B2003- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
#246
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On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 07:25:29AM -0500, wrote:
In article , (David Cantrell) wrote: very few car drivers jump red lights, fewer do it deliberately, and fewer still do it regularly. Which is really rather different from cyclists, at least in London. You are joking! I will concede that cyclists ignore lights more often than motorists do but otherwise you are deluded. Would care to join me for an exciting evening of traffic counting? -- David Cantrell | top google result for "internet beard fetish club" Computer Science is about lofty design goals and careful algorithmic optimisation. Sysadminning is about cleaning up the resulting mess. |
#247
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On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 01:28:51PM +0100, Brimstone wrote:
Adrian wrote: Funny. I thought both were definitely in the United Kingdom. They are, but Sotland and England are different countries. The clue is in the the fact that they have different names and different legal structures. By that argument, Texas and Louisiana are different countries. You lose. -- David Cantrell | Official London Perl Mongers Bad Influence |
#248
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On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 02:32:39PM +0100, Mortimer wrote:
Why not make it simple and say *all* pedestrian lights have a flashing phase and *no* vehicle-junction lights have a flashing phase? Because when you have a vehicle junction and pedestrian crossing at the same place, the universe would implode, perhaps? -- David Cantrell | Official London Perl Mongers Bad Influence I'm in retox |
#249
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On 16 Apr 2009 09:32:19 GMT someone who may be Adrian
wrote this:- If, for the sake of argument, one accepts the claim that the UK is a country then by the argument above it cannot be a country. While laws governing the UK are passed in Belgium the UK cannot be a country. Just as well they aren't, eh? EU directives are approved and passed into UK law by Westminster. Yes, UK law. England, Wales, NI _and_ Scotland. Nice try. However, I already knew the details. It is not politically correct to call laws made by the EU laws, it upsets the little Englanders (and there are the equivalent of little Englanders in most parts of the EU). So the laws are called Directives and there is a pretence that they are optional. Must try better. 1/10. -- David Hansen, Edinburgh I will *always* explain revoked encryption keys, unless RIP prevents me http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/00023--e.htm#54 |
#250
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David Hansen wrote:
On 16 Apr 2009 09:32:19 GMT someone who may be Adrian wrote this:- If, for the sake of argument, one accepts the claim that the UK is a country then by the argument above it cannot be a country. While laws governing the UK are passed in Belgium the UK cannot be a country. Just as well they aren't, eh? EU directives are approved and passed into UK law by Westminster. Yes, UK law. England, Wales, NI _and_ Scotland. Nice try. However, I already knew the details. It is not politically correct to call laws made by the EU laws, it upsets the little Englanders (and there are the equivalent of little Englanders in most parts of the EU). So the laws are called Directives and there is a pretence that they are optional. Must try better. 1/10. More homework required? ;-) Bod |
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