Did anyone else read the rest of the article? My favourite ideas include:
Why is 50% of my Australian made car's speedo dedicated to a speed that I am not allowed to do??
Take kids in commodores out of our statistics and you'll find our road toll is pretty low.
Revenue raising just clouds the true picture of what is really happening on our roads.
Btw if you say 1 in 80 die from speeding you must clarify by saying 1 in 80 deaths are from auto accidents. Stop making statistics fit your bias.
Slow drivers are like cholesterol. They block our major arteries and stop the flow of traffic/blood.
They also cause frustrated drivers to make dangerous passing maneuvres.
Slow drivers should be flushed out of the system and if that means fining them, then so be it.
Somehow I can’t see it happening because it would be expensive to monitor and not provide the steady flow of revenue that speed cameras supply.
If we compare Australia to a greater pool of nations, we are ranked 11th. Nations performing better than Australia (8 road deaths per 100,000 population in 2005) were:
Netherlands (4.6)
Norway (4.9)
Sweden (4.9)
Great Britain (5.5)
Switzerland (5.5)
Denmark (6.1)
Japan (6.2)
Iceland (6.3)
Germany (6.5)
Finland (7.2)
Here a Norwegian driving "fast"
Snarl, you're on nanny camera: a cynical lurk to drive us crazy
April 1, 2010
Comments 130
Don't Melbourne police have worse people to arrest than the formula one driver Lewis Hamilton? His "crime" was to smoke his tyres while doing a bit of a fishtail as he left the grand prix circuit at Albert Park.
A stiff talking-to might have been in order, or perhaps an offer he couldn't refuse - to appear in a road safety ad. But detaining him? Impounding his Mercedes C63? Charging him with "improper use of a motor vehicle" by "deliberately losing traction"? What a joke.
Hamilton is one of the safest, most skilled drivers in the world.
If we had more motorists with a fraction of his ability our roads would be safer than they are with all the cameras and rules and signs and speed limits and penalties dreamed up by car-hating bureaucrats and money-hungry politicians.
But Victoria took Hamilton's harmless Friday night show so seriously, the Roads Minister even called him a "dickhead" on radio.
So now, instead of a handful of onlookers seeing Hamilton's antics, the whole world knows, vastly increasing the number of copycat admirers, if that's the concern. You may as well arrest the entire cast of Top Gear. No wonder the homegrown driver Mark Webber came to Hamilton's defence this week, blasting Australia as a "nanny state".
''I think we've got to read an instruction book when we get out of bed - what we can do and what we can't do,'' he said. ''It's certainly changed since I left here. It pisses me off coming back here to be honest. It's a great country but we've got to be responsible for our actions and it's certainly a bloody nanny state when it comes to what we can do.''
NSW is almost as bad as Victoria. Despite all the promises last year from the Roads Minister, Michael Daly, of a new age of commonsense for drivers, it seems the lunatics are back in control of policy.
The latest attempt to hammer NSW's beleaguered drivers into submission is the introduction in July of mobile speed cameras operated by the Roads and Traffic Authority with the usual ruthless efficiency government instrumentalities reserve solely for revenue raising.
The Premier, Kristina Keneally, doesn't want us to be the wowser state, when it comes to acting on the sensible concerns of a coalition of health and emergency workers about drunken violence outside all-night pubs. But she's quite happy for us to be the nanny state with speed cameras. As one newspaper letter-writer, Joan Moss, of Malabar, wrote: ''Rolling out more speed cameras will only raise revenue from ordinary safe-driving mums and dads travelling a few kilometres over the speed limit … The real culprits - car thieves, drunk drivers, sections of irresponsible testosterone charged youths - most of whom have little or nothing to lose, are let loose with a bit of a reprimand from our legal system to do the same thing again and again."
We are heading into another double-demerit Easter in which driving 11km/h over the speed limit or not wearing a seatbelt will lose you six points a piece. Do both at once and you've lost your licence.
Yet, despite this punitive regime, and the growing number of speed cameras, the road toll is getting worse, not better, with a 25 per cent increase in fatalities last year.
The response of authorities is to do more of the same that hasn't been working. It's time for new thinking.
Replacing flesh-and-blood police in highly visible patrol cars with cameras has been a flop. The more draconian the speed limits, fines, penalties and the more ubiquitous the cameras, the worse the road toll. The 5 per cent of really dangerous drivers speed with impunity, knowing where the cameras are and adjusting their behaviour accordingly.
As Michael Lane, spokesman for the lobby group the National Motorists Association of Australia, points out, despite the increasingly harsh restrictions on drivers, the road toll has increased, especially in Victoria, the state with the most vigorous camera regime. ''So much for the alleged benefit of speed cameras.''
In Germany, where autobahns have no speed limits, the road toll has dropped significantly over 20 years. In NSW, the RTA keeps pushing its mantra of "speed kills", and when the road toll is going the wrong way, it just redoubles its efforts, like any good ideologue incapable of change. Yet the people who are the most dangerous on the roads are good at avoiding speed cameras, or working the system to avoid losing demerit points.
In December, the RTA even dropped the speed limit on the Newell Highway from 110km/h in places to 100km/h, prompting the NRMA's regional director, Graham Blight, to claim it was part of a hidden agenda to drop the limit across NSW to 90km/h. Driving so slowly would mean you would spend more time driving to your destination, thus increasing the likelihood of crashes caused by fatigue, not to mention boredom and inattention when you are forced to travel at a speed below comfort level.
Police have been largely cut out of traffic enforcement by technology and have lost any discretion to apply the sort of commonsense which makes our roads safe - the sort of discretion which would have given Lewis Hamilton a slap on the wrist rather than create an international incident.
In Queensland, the Police Union has openly scoffed at the latest rollout of speed cameras, saying: ''There has been a big increase in the money collected by speed cameras in recent years, but there has been little discernible positive impact on the road toll. It's time the focus moved more towards increasing traffic enforcement by officers … who are capable of detecting drink-driving, unlicensed or dangerous driving and unroadworthy vehicles.''
Amen to that.
Of course, as we get into our cars this Easter we need to take road safety seriously, especially on slippery roads. But driving safely means being competent behind the wheel, and paying attention to the road conditions, not making the speedometer your priority.
[email protected]
She makes a good point.
In Britain, increasing punishments to mandatory imprisonment and transportation for minor crimes, increasing rapidly to the death penalty, did nothing to reduce the crime rate. Although it did help to establish this nation.
Seems we've learned nothing from history.
Mad Devine said
"In Germany, where autobahns have no speed limits, the road toll has dropped significantly over 20 years. In NSW, the RTA keeps pushing its mantra of "speed kills", ......
In December, the RTA even dropped the speed limit on the Newell Highway from 110km/h in places to 100km/h, prompting the NRMA's regional director, Graham Blight, to claim it was part of a hidden agenda to drop the limit across NSW to 90km/h. Driving so slowly would mean you would spend more time driving to your destination, thus increasing the likelihood of crashes caused by fatigue, not to mention boredom and inattention when you are forced to travel at a speed below comfort level."
What Bulldust
-
1. comparitive assesments (to other nations) are (at best) poor as the roads are not comparable -
2. If you use the logic of the last sentence, then accidents in built up traffic areas would be far higher than present levels, due to Ms Devines ordained "comfort level" (whatever that is) not being reached.
Whilst not being in favour of speed reduction on freeways in the NSW network - there is some justification for speed changes on some elements of the regional network where traffic volumes and ratios (i.e never designed for the volume of heavy vehicles using the roadway) have increased significantly - ie the Newell, Golden, New England - leading to degradation of the network as capital and maintainence expenditure remains (relatively) stagnant (personal view - not researched at time of writing)
My view is that many posters on this thread see the road as a fixed asset - unfortunatly they are not - not only do weather conditions change, but so does the road condition and hence, unfortunatly, speed limits have to take into account future usuage beyond when the asset was in good condition (which rod_ bunny referred to as the lowest common denominator) - hence the reduction by the RTA on the Newell
BT
I look at ghost riders stuff and get angry....then i look at (Australia's own) Cam McDonald doing Isle of Man and think legend. Whilst I acknowledge GR's skill his consideration for others is zero.
If i am standing trackside at IOM (I wish) pint in hand and get cleaned up by an errant rider (not our Cam, he's a legend)- its my fault - i knew the risk of standing at that spot
If GR takes himself out + me on the road....
So what you're saying, Ben, is that reducing speed limits is crap, they should fix the roads? I'm with you there! But that'd cost money.
Easier for 'em to bump up the fines. ![]()
Not quite Maxm - i was simply trying to show up Divine madness' lack of journalistic effort (did she bother to ring the RTA to discuss why they had reduced the speed limit) and give some (albeit poor - I am not a traffic engineer) background to how and why speedlimits are determined.
Yes - roads should be upgraded ....but bumping up fines wont pay for road upgrades though as all the revenue gets consolidated
Reducing speeds is not crap though - it is risk minimisation (cue a raft of people saying where in a nanny state)
I rack up 60-70000km's each year I haven't had a speeding ticket in 15 years and I can assure you there are a hell of a lot of people behind the wheel who aren't switched on to whats going on around them and that's not just the people doddering along, that also includes those who think they are good enough to speed everywhere.
If motorists are that good and can be trusted to do the right thing
Then explain
Why we have over 100 people killed on the roads in WA each year
Why we have tens on thousands (or multiples thereof) each year with various serious injuries
If we were all gun drivers who drove as good as we thought then we wouldn't need all these rules as none of these accidents would happen.
The term "Car accident" is misleading, an accident is a branch falling from a tree onto a car, because 99.?% of car crashes are generally someones fault they are not accidents.
If you are aware of what is going on around you, radar traps are easy to spot, Laser traps 1-2km away are a bit harder.
If you don't want a ticket don't speed, you only have yourself to blame
elmo: men under the age of 45 are TWICE as likely to die from suicide than from a motor vehicle accident.
I saw 2081 (short movie) yesterday and it reminded me of our government (both "parties").
And while your talking about statistics 1 in 95 deaths due to car accidents and 4 times more people die of smoking are such great things to quote, they have no relevance to anything.
A different number of people live, drive and smoke
of the 95 people who die, 1 is in a car accident, how many of the 95 drive ?
how many of the 1 are the driver ? how many of the 1 are passengers in motor vehicles ?
What percentage of people who have speed at some point have also crashed while speeding ?
What percentgae of people who have never sped, have crashed ?
Compare deaths in motor accidents per head of population is OK, so long as an exactly the same percentage of people in each country drive for exactly the same period of time.
I bet far more people take public transport in the Netherlands than they do in central Queensland.
If you are going to quote figures on this then this go google 'deaths per hour driven', not deaths per number of people who may or may not be actually driving.
Statistics, got to love them
The universe runs on probability not statictics. There is a big difference.
But in answer to the first question - yes you are stupid.
A) you watch Kochie and co. present gutter sensationalist journalism designed soley to maximise viewer ratings but causing you to react in a 'I am disgusted manner'
B) you reacted to it, so you got sucked in - I didn't ... ... bollocks just realised I did.