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Opinions/Editorials Title: What Speed Limits Aren’t . . . But Should Be The main problem with speed limits is theyre not. In a legal sense yes. You are not legally allowed to drive faster than whatever the number on the sign is. But as a speed limit, the concept is idiotic. Airplanes have speed limits. If you operate beyond the limits of the airframe, the plane will begin to physically disintegrate, stall or some other catastrophic thing. These are speed limits which must be obeyed for actual safety as opposed to keeping oneself safe from the predations of armed government workers (who will themselves speed in order to catch you in order to ticket you proving that speeding isnt unsafe, merely illegal
well, for us). Because speed limits are mere legalisms, understood by all to be such almost everyone drives at least as fast as the speed limit luminous evidence that it is not a limit in the physical/mechanical or safety sense. They are merely rules which almost everyone ignores. People get angry when they fall in behind a driver who is only going the speed limit. Almost everyone drives a little bit faster than whatever the posted limit is as much as they think they can get away with. As a practical matter, speed limits are the minimum speeds of travel on most roads. This of course renders the term a species of illiteracy unsurprising given the source. The same source that characterizes as customers people who are forced to hand over money for services they neither asked for nor use. It is also ironically unsafe. As in actually dangerous. Because a speed limit which conveys no information to the driver about speeds beyond which it is probably not safe to drive leaves him with no way to gauge the speed beyond which it is probably not safe to drive or which at least gives him some frame of reference. This is easily demonstrated. Most highways on the East Coast of the U.S. have posted speed limits of 65-70 MPH. If you drive that slowly, you risk being run over by a tractor trailer and will have other cars running up your tailpipe. So you kick it up to 75 or so which is illegal speeding but is actually the safe speed you need to drive to avoid being run over by traffic. But how much faster than 75 or so is the safe limit? How would you know? There is no one-size-fits-all answer, of course. Variables include the skill of the driver as well as the capabilities of the car. But paying attention to whatever the sign says is as value-less as heeding the warning label on mattresses about it being a high crime to tear it off. The sleepworthiness of the mattress is not affected by the presence or absence of that label. Just as the safety of your driving bears almost no relationship to your obedience to speed limits and actually becomes dangerous when you do obey them (as on the highway but not just there). Speed limits would be useful as information as opposed to pretexts for mulcting if they served some genuine advisory purpose such that ignoring them actually did risk real danger and not just the kind that is visited upon us by armed government workers. They could and should work like signs warning drivers about deer crossing the road, to be on the lookout for fallings rocks, that the surface of a bridge tends to ice up before the rest of the road does. Like stop signs. Only a fool or someone actually reckless doesnt at least almost stop at a stop sign. And irrespective of the fear of being mulcted by an armed government worker. Because to ignore that sign is to risk something much worse than extortion. It is dangerous to ignore a stop sign which is why most people do not ignore them. Speed limits could and should work that way, if people knew that ignoring them entailed a real chance of similar consequences. But speed limits are universally ignored precisely because the only real consequence of ignoring them is a roadside mulcting by an armed government worker. The government would, of course, not reap as much revenue if speed limits actually were something other than legalisms, pretexts for separating safe drivers from their hard-earned money. But the roads would be a lot safer if drivers respected speed limits because those limits actually meant something other than being a pretext for separating them from their hard-earned money. . . . Subscribe to *Cars and Automotive* Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Deckard (#0)
The only thing informative about this article is that I was exposed to a word I had never heard of -- "mulcting". Other than that it's simply a whining screed, serving no useful purpose, and a waste of my time.
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