mike65 wrote: ....but this subject has been beaten to death many times over. Mike.
The Atheist wrote: Any stats available within that 399 figure? As in how many can be attributed to drink, speed, tiredness etc. or just plain stupidity? And how many of us are willing to have speed limitors or ignition-connected breathalysers put in our cars? That would surly prevent most deaths.
boardy wrote: .... but what we need is an inherent 'fear' of breaking traffic laws.
Kevin Irving wrote: Thats exactly what we need, huge fines for speeding (government subsidised speed limitors would be nice too), really drunk drivers should have their picture displayed on tv ads along with famailies of people killed by drunken drives.:eek:
The Atheist wrote: Any stats available within that 399 figure? As in how many can be attributed to drink, speed, tiredness etc. or just plain stupidity?
The Atheist wrote: And how many of us are willing to have speed limitors or ignition-connected breathalysers put in our cars? That would surly prevent most deaths.
Dman_15 wrote: You dont even need figures. You can bet the majority were saturday and sunday mornings between 12 midnight and 6am. Mostly males ages 18-25. Therein lies the problem
jimbling wrote: The only solution that i can see, is as said - change the campaign a bit. And START TEACHING PEOPLE HOW TO DRIVE. The current system is a shambles - and I am sure you will find that that is the main reason we have so much deaths on the road. Its peoples carefree mindset.
The Atheist wrote: Driving, like singing, chess, or golf is something that not everyone can be good at. No matter how much training. Everyone has different levels of spacial ability, concentration, confidence etc. I still think what needs to be tackled are people who flaunt the speed/drink limits.
jimbling wrote: But catching people doing 45 in a 40 zone that should probably be 60 anyway is not going to help this.
Sleepy wrote: I don't think Ads will ever make a significant change to our driving behaviour, boardy. We need to tackle this problem from a number of angles: 1. Ensuring people have adequate driving skills .... 2. Ensuring that people have safe roads to drive on ....... 3. Finally enforcement, ......... personally, I love BigCon's idea of a random town or village being thoroughly checked every weekend (though some level of monitoring would need to be kept up in other towns across the country too).
JackieChan wrote: I see that today a man in Cork and another in Kerry have died in seperate accidents. Are these the first of 2006?
Dman_15 wrote: A pedestrians chance of survival is twice as good, being hit at 30mph as opposed to 35mph
boardy wrote: Why are the guards not using random breathalyzer tests? I understand that they are considering it. In the States, it is second nature to expect to be breathalyzed while driving.
boardy wrote: To me, this is manslaughter at the very least.
jimbling wrote: At the very least? you reckon it could be called murder?
Sleepy wrote: Even if they only account for 20% of the deaths?
Sleepy wrote: Proper instruction in anything will ensure that the student is better at that task than poor instruction. In Ireland at present there is total absence of licensing, legislation or even guidelines for driving instructors. You don't even need a full driving licenece to set up a school of motoring!
jimbling wrote: They try and ignore the fact that it is the stupidity and naivity of people that cause the accidents (speeding and drink are two of the stupidities - but there are others)
boardy wrote: In some countries, it can be classified as 2nd or 3rd degree murder. If a person gets into a car and drives 5 miles to a pub and then kills someone on the way home while drunk, and they admit that they knew they were drunk getting into the car, then there is a certain level of premeditation involved. Hence, a 2nd/3rd degree murder charge.
The Atheist wrote: The point is I believe they are the only causes that can be realistically tackled. Where did that 20% spring from BTW? Speed doesn't necessarily mean doing 110mph - it just means fast enough that you can't react. Virtually any situation can be avoided if you go slow enough. I'm dubious that 80% of road deaths had nothing to do with how fast the vehicle was travelling.
You can raise the bar for the test as high as you like and keep some people off the road - but I don't suspect they are especially the ones that cause road deaths. Retesting everybody every 10 years might solve some problems but this is never going to happen. Will a stricter test slow down the large %'age of young adults who fly around the roads in the middle of the night?
You can't legislate against stupidity. You can train people how to drive better, but it's not going to prevent them doing stupid things on the road. Once a test is passed people believe they can drive, and will continue to do so whether tired, or distracted by something within or without the car.
At worst, that information is complete rubbish, at best it is bad law on the part of whoever proposed it. There is no premeditation to murder someone unless it is your intent to go out and run someone over.