RichInSpirit
Registered User
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- 1,196
It will be hard enough for the , honest or good, drivers . It will make no difference to the usual idiots who don't seem to care ... unfortunately.In my opinion the soon to be introduced new speed limits will make it very uncomfortable to drive very far on most roads other than motorways.
Driving at 60kmph on roads that just a few years ago had limits of 100kmph will be a nightmare.
If you try and stick to the 60kmph speed limit you will soon have 5 or 6 hummers or SUV's tailgating you, trying to drive you off the road.
Plus no ICE vehicle is designed to be driven at 60kmph so the greenhouse gases will increase.
Plus the increased commuting time will make for more tired drivers and reduce productivity.
And people who drive all day for a living will be driven demented.
Feb 1st.what's the expected entry date ?
I agree with all points. I walk every evening on our secondary road with my son who works indoors all day and likes to get out for a walk and because of some uncaring idiots it has become more dangerous. This particular road 80 km , used to be relatively quiet but since J5 service station arrived, which is very close to where I live , the traffic has become heavier and some not obeying the speed limits. He is closer to the town but walking there is not a great idea because of heavy traffic.Allow me to nail my colours to the mast. I’m in favour of the new speeding laws for the following reasons:-
1. Outside of cycling lanes/greenways no cyclist can feel safe because of speeding/uncaring motorists.
2. Walkers in rural areas have essentially been removed by speeding/uncaring motorists.
3. The conduct of many motorists has become increasingly dangerous.
4. The blame for all these dangerous is largely on the shoulders of speeding/uncaring motorists.
5. And for two marks what’s the common denominator?
I don't think that's https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095756424000709 (true), ICE engines produce significantly more emissions per distance travelled at higher speeds. Driving at 60km/h would reduce all the accelaration / decelaration on many of these roads.Plus no ICE vehicle is designed to be driven at 60kmph so the greenhouse gases will increase
In the mid 1970's, when there were 3 million people in the country and around a half a million cars on the road there were around 600 road deaths a year.Will the rest of us be frustrated as a result of this, absolutely but given the nearly 180 people killed last year, perhaps we should remember that speed is the number 1 killer.
You can't compare like with like. Back in the 70s, before seatbelts were compulsory (or even the culture), before there were safety bags in cars, where the advice on drink driving was not to take the 5th pint, it was a different world.In the mid 1970's, when there were 3 million people in the country and around a half a million cars on the road there were around 600 road deaths a year.
We now have over 2 million cars on the road, a population of over 5 million and less than one third of the road deaths. In terms of deaths per kilometre travelled the road death rate is about one tenth of what it was 50 years ago. Every one is a tragedy but lets not catastrophise things.
They are, and we should be concerned, but they have reduced massively over the last could of decades.You can't compare like with like. Back in the 70s, before seatbelts were compulsory (or even the culture), before there were safety bags in cars, where the advice on drink driving was not to take the 5th pint, it was a different world.
What we have right now is clear issues with
I agree it is far better then back in the 70's, but the numbers are going in the wrong direction.
- People not having the skill set to drive powerful cars and the driving licenece/testing regime not reflecting that
- speed, back in the 70s, cars could simply not do the speeds/acceleration that is there now
- drug driving
- far more cars on the road, far greater and more powerful lorries
If we enforced the current speed limits that would do the job. Lowering the speed limits to stupidly slow levels and then not enforcing those limits either will, as I said, make the law as ass.It's enforcement that is the issue. We don't take traffic laws seriously. If they are enforced we complain it's not fair. If we want to change the driving culture we need to take the rules seriously.
We only like to make rules so we can say something was done, speed limits signs are just roadside decorations to most people. we don't like or aren't able to sufficiently enforce rules. If we were really serious about reducing speed, we'd have hidden speed traps. Would never be accepted here.If we enforced the current speed limits that would do the job. Lowering the speed limits to stupidly slow levels and then not enforcing those limits either will, as I said, make the law as ass.
Just be careful about suggesting policy should only be decided on a cost benefit basis as this would see a lot of healthcare options, particularly for the elderly eliminated.With those numbers a cost benefit analysis might well suggest that trying to reduce them further would be a waste as in it would be better to spend that effort elsewhere.
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