Synobun
Deity
- Joined
- Nov 19, 2006
- Messages
- 24,884
How is it that people will accept wearing a seat belt, and drink driving laws, for their own, and others', protection but not a speed limit?
Going fast is cool, man.
How is it that people will accept wearing a seat belt, and drink driving laws, for their own, and others', protection but not a speed limit?
How is it that people will accept wearing a seat belt, and drink driving laws, for their own, and others', protection but not a speed limit?
I don't think drunk driving in and of itself is necessarily a problem.How is it that people will accept wearing a seat belt, and drink driving laws, for their own, and others', protection but not a speed limit?
By definition? Name the victim. If you can't, there is therefore no victim.
How is it that people will accept wearing a seat belt, and drink driving laws, for their own, and others', protection but not a speed limit?
Quite frankly, there's something perverse about the fact that the government uses lawbreaking for a profit. Either a given action has a victim, in which case any fine should go to the victim, or the action does not have a victim and then the government should ignore it.
It is.Synsensa said:Going fast is cool, man.
Ah yes, but only 18% of all road accidents have speed as a factor, iirc. So, the speed related costs are only a mere £3bn. That's much better. Well, less of a loss, anyway.
The people who don't accept speed limits don't accept seat belts either in my opinion. Drunk driving is probably where they all draw the line though.
I don't think drunk driving in and of itself is necessarily a problem.
UK figures.
Cost of road traffic accidents in 2011: £15.3 billion
Total of all speeding fines paid in 2011: £41 million
That's not a profit.
But that's a good thing, surely. It means you have to pay less tax.The government is still using speeding fines for revenue.
I don't know how many dollars are in a Euro but IIRC it was less than 3.
The government is still using speeding fines for revenue.
I don't know how many dollars are in a Euro but IIRC it was less than 3.
He's right though. It is less than 3.
We spend at least 700 billion dollars on national "defense" every year. We could cut at least half of that if we stuck to actually defending and not funding bases around the world.
Who me? I wouldn't dare (usually). I make mistakes all the time myself.Unless you're just poking fun at grammar, which isn't cool.