Thursday 13 March 2008

Speeding

Being “bad” gives you a sense of power. A thrill, a sense of exhilaration and excitement that you are not conforming to what the masses are saying is the norm, the rules, the law.
Like all rules or laws, they are put in place for a reason. Speeding is against the law. Why?


In 2006/07 there were 5,615 road traffic collisions that resulted in injuries. 9,232 of these injuries were casualties, just under 11% of them were children under 16. The most common cause of injury collisions was inattention (977 collisions) with excessive speeding having 612 collisions.
Travelling at 30mph the stopping distance is 23m 75ft which is roughly equivalent to 6 cars. Travelling at 40mph the distance to stop is an extra 13m at 36m 120ft so roughly about 10 cars! For 10mph that is quite a difference. So if a child runs out in front of your car when you’re doing 30mph you may have a chance at missing them, but if your doing 40 there’s a much slimmer chance! If you’re doing 70mph you probably wont even see the child until you feel a bump on your windscreen. At 70mph it takes 96m 315ft to stop and that’s the length of 26 cars.


Why do people find it so difficult to stick to the speed limit?
Do speeders think that they’re bigger, better and cleverer than the rest of society? That someone wont step out in front of their car. They they’re such good drivers they can navigate through built up areas full of houses, shops and people at 50mph and not cause any damage?

Why does this sense of “being bad" appeal to so many even though the consequences are so terrible? Speeding fines, points on your license, a tarred record, higher insurance premiums, the guilt of injuring someone from speeding on your conscience, the fear of driving again after an accident, perhaps even the guilt of someone’s death to bear. None of these are things we want. So why are we still speeding?









Take a look at the “injury road traffic collisions and casualties report 2007” for some more information and some informative graphs on speeding and road collisions. All statistics were taken from this site also. http://www.psni.police.uk/5._injury_road_traffic_collisions_and_casualties.pdf

1 comment:

Becky said...

I found this part of your entry very interesting:

Why do people find it so difficult to stick to the speed limit? Do speeders think that they’re bigger, better and cleverer than the rest of society? That someone wont step out in front of their car. They they’re such good drivers they can navigate through built up areas full of houses, shops and people at 50mph and not cause any damage?



It's quite difficult to say why some people speed. I'm a driver myself and I rarely go one or two mph over the speed limit (sometimes it is difficult not to - there's a fine line between just going over the limit and actually holding up traffic). However I have friends who do speed a lot, and as a passenger it makes me not want to travel with them because it's a bit scary. I know how easy it can be to lose control - your reactions are not as fast as you think they are!

Aside from speed demons, and the various reasons you might have for speeding, the one I find the most frustrating as a road-user myself are (forgive the stereotyping here), the middle aged men in mercedes and BMWs, who think that getting home that 20 seconds earlier is a just cause for breaking the law. I have a tiny car, and I don't look very imposing either, and so these men most often take advantage and do ridiculous things like overtake you on corners, or overtake on exit sliproads. I understand overtaking on the entry sliproad to the motorway - if it's a busy day then you can make a lot of progress by getting ahead of slower traffic - but not the other way around - it does not save any time at all, and causes a lot of traffic to slam on the breaks due to their speeding to overtake successfully.

Speeding is selfish and dangerous. It affects all other road-users as well as pedestrians. (As a college student I once used a zebra crossing only to find a pensioner ACCELERATE to force me out of his way). I think it is one of the worst things you can do as a motorists, and it leads to aggressive driving and road-rage.

I very much liked your post. You have made me think a lot about speeding as 'bad behaviour'.