Scott_F
MB Enthusiast
- Joined
- Mar 12, 2010
- Messages
- 4,288
Great. So speed cameras are not a revenue raising exercise. Glad someone else besides me thinks so. And it's not a punishment you get. Once an offence has been committed, punishment of past events is in itself pointless, it's intended to be a process of education and a deterrent for the future.
Enforcement cameras are a revenue-raising exercise. There is no question about this.
The last time I received a NIP it was for doing 38mph where the limit was 30mph. This was on a long stretch of busy urban road and the camera van was parked at the bottom of a very steep hill where you had to hold the car on the brake for quite some way in order to stay anywhere near the speed limit. They knew exactly which stretch of the road to target.
Nearby is a long road through a residential area where the traffic is usually relatively light. I would regularly see idiots flying through there at 60+mph but never once did I see the camera van. They would much rather catch 200 people a day doing 38mph than catch 3 or 4 maniacs doing more than twice the speed limit and who pose a real danger.
Further, the average traffic cop doesn't give a sh*t about alienating the "more-or-less law-abiding" public. When they've seen their first few dead people, especially children, they become aware how futile law-breaking on the highway is, whether it's to save a few seconds on a journey, or to have "a minor bit of fun on the M40" (quote from a previous thread).
Well they should give one - they really should.
Regardless of what they may or may not have seen elsewhere, the best form of policing is policing by consent. When you are not exactly the most popular or respected group in society, the quickest way to alienate the public still further is to devote huge resources to catching them when guilty of a minor traffic infringement whilst doing nothing (perhaps not even turning up) when their houses and cars are broken into.