Read post 250
Read post 250
Winding up drongos, foil hat wearers and over sensitive KBers for over 14,000 posts...........![]()
" Life is not a rehearsal, it's as happy or miserable as you want to make it"
It would be better to consult a lawyer and be able to ask further questions for clarification or read all the posts as the answer is in this threadOriginally Posted by Alan Wilkinson
No, it boils down to ...Originally Posted by Paul in NZ
Here's the data, look at it and interpret it any way you want but you can't just ignore it if you want to be taken seriously.
Alan Wilkinson (www.fastandsafe.org)
Sorry, you beat me to it. I had missed that one first time thru then edited my post.Originally Posted by scumdog
Alan Wilkinson (www.fastandsafe.org)
Rats, so we are meant to take "I want the right to drive as I see fit" seriously?Originally Posted by Alan Wilkinson
Which, as I said earlier, is what you are promoting ammounts to as I doubt you consider yourself in the bottom 1/4 of driver skills, right?
my interpretation of this is that if a person is under arrest/in custody, then they are afforded the right to silence, that is, they would have to be cautioned before being asked questions, so they cannot be charged with refusing to give those details, as they have that right to silence. if they are not under arrest/custody/identified as an offender, then they do not have to be cautioned before questioning, and should they refuse those details, they can be charged (if appropriate).Originally Posted by Clockwork
so yes, an arrested person can be asked the question, they just can't be charged (with the refusing details offence) if they refused to answer it. they can still be charged with whatever other offence they were arrested for (like party to an offence)
I want the right to drive (and to live) as I wish so long as what I do does not significantly adversely affect the lives, freedom or property of anyone else.Originally Posted by Mongoose
I am happy for that to be testable in court. I am not happy for the government to arbitrarily set limits on our freedoms - it should always be testable against solid evidence as to what limits are necessary.
There is a serious question as to whether speed limits have a beneficial or adverse affect on safety. There is no clear-cut scientific agreement currently on either that question or on the secondary question of how to set them. I have presented the NZ data. You can argue from it, or you can argue from whatever bunch of prejudices you might have.
J J Leeming said 30 years ago, "It doesn't matter what people think causes accidents. What matters is what does cause them." Only careful studies can find that out.
Alan Wilkinson (www.fastandsafe.org)
the person being asked about the driver though, has a legislative requirement to give the information, so cannot simply say 'i'm not telling, i'm invoking my right to silence'.
well they can, but they run the risk of being charged with that offence.
Human error would be one of the bigger causes, how do you propose to eliminate that?Originally Posted by Alan Wilkinson
I get to pay for you to pick up the pieces, and to pay for your mates to issue hundreds of thousands of speeding tickets which have failed to make any detectable improvement in the road toll trend line.Originally Posted by scumdog
I also get to pay for George Hawkins to lie to Parliament and to the public that the highway patrol has reduced fatalities when the data clearly shows the reverse.
Alan Wilkinson (www.fastandsafe.org)
yup... another coupla trillion dollars to people who plot graphs and nothing known for 20 years ....Originally Posted by Alan Wilkinson
not looking for a job are you?
(pt)
Yeah... the fact that there are more people on the road and none are doing any courses in better driving has nothing to do with it... just data to you, aye?Originally Posted by Alan Wilkinson
1. so go and live in northern territoryOriginally Posted by Alan Wilkinson
2. it has been tested in court. many, many times.
3. question for you maybe, but for those of us who have seen it 1st hand, lower speed limits and hard general road safety enforcment saves lives
4. eliminate all the factors that cause accidents and you'll be living in a bubble. i'm sure the govt et.al doesn't give a shit how many crashes happen, just how much trauma occurs in those crashes, and if they can reduce the trauma by one or two significant indicators (speed, alcohol, seat belts spring to mind) then they will go for it, as they are fiscally driven. crashes don't cost the govt. money - the trauma following does. would you be prepared to reduce your tax contribution by the amount you contribute to the health budget, and if involved in a crash pay for it out of your pocket? insurance wouldn't pay if you were speeding, eba etc. before you say "hell yeah" - do some research on a weeks stay in ITU, or 6 months in the Otara spinal unit.
not the "i pay your wages" line. now we KNOW you know what you're talking about.Originally Posted by Alan Wilkinson
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We have to spend more money on finding out why drivers make particular errors and then do something about it.Originally Posted by Mongoose
Firstly, there should be an independent investigative agency for serious crashes that is not linked to enforcement in any way. That is how airline safety works and it has the best record for passenger safety per distance travelled. Its reports should be public so the public can put pressure on for proper fixes when causes are known.
Secondly, as I have said, safety regulations should be testable in court. The expert evidence given will help inform and educate about what really is safe and what is not.
Thirdly, we need to allow competitive private enterprise to run road services. They will be more innovative and sensitive to reality than bureaucratic organisations which are always politically-driven.
Finally, there are already ways we know work. Motorways are the safest roads - we need more of them, certainly SH1. Head-protecting side airbags halve side impact fatalities. In Northland, simply improve the roads enormously and get people off benefits, drugs and alchohol and into jobs. Better roads up here mean more jobs and more money.
Alan Wilkinson (www.fastandsafe.org)
Firstly, there should be an independent investigative agency for serious crashes that is not linked to enforcement in any way. That is how airline safety works and it has the best record for passenger safety per distance travelled. Its reports should be public so the public can put pressure on for proper fixes when causes are known.
The causes are human, what are the fixes?
Airlines also cover the most distance with no other humans to cock up, remember its not just your cock up, its the other persons too.
Secondly, as I have said, safety regulations should be testable in court. The expert evidence given will help inform and educate about what really is safe and what is not.
They are, have a prang and you get to prove what you did was safe, although after a prang you might have trouble getting people to listen seriously to your arguement.
You post seems like a piece of Political Electioneering, what other policies are you standing on?
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