Garage_Doors
Originally the Swankers
- Thread starter
- #181
Speed cameras have to calibrated, but there are lots of cameras at traffic lights now. Motorists get taken to court for going through red lights too.
But not cyclists though?
Speed cameras have to calibrated, but there are lots of cameras at traffic lights now. Motorists get taken to court for going through red lights too.
(perhaps an audible alert on cycles)
But not cyclists though?
But not cyclists though?
A lack of a number plate makes that hard.
I wasn't saying it wasn't rigorous enough or that you need to do more, I was just saying that you wrote the result down incorrectly. You said
"between 18 and 22 percent of cyclists rode through red lights every week".
What you meant was
"between 18 and 22 percent of cyclists rode through each red light"
That's very different and much worse. The former means they'd only have to jump through one red light in the whole week. The latter means that people are jumping lights very regularly.
And for the fourth time, you've got it completely wrong. Those that you didn't see go through a light may have gone through another light on their journey. Or on their return journey. Or they may have gone through the same light or another light on a different day. You'd need to see the whole of every journey to be sure someone never jumped a light in during the week.I meant what I said originally - 18 to 22 percent of cyclists rode through red lights each weeK. And, for the third time, it's not scientifically rigorous: it was the same lights every time and it was always in the morning.
And for the fourth time, you've got it completely wrong. Those that you didn't see go through a light may have gone through another light on their journey. Or on their return journey. Or they may have gone through the same light or another light on a different day. You'd need to see the whole of every journey to be sure someone never jumped a light in during the week.
.
I know, but that's what you have (accidentally) done. That's what "18 to 22 percent of cyclists rode through red lights each week" means.That's completely irrelevant. I can only observe from one particular point, I can't draw any inferences about subsequent behaviour.
Agreed. And if you were watching 1 set of lights at a time, and you saw 18 to 22 percent of cyclist jump them. That's the same as saying "between 18 and 22 percent of cyclists rode through each red light", which is what I told you in post #174.It's quite a simple sum: let's say the officer pointed at 1000 cars and clocked 180 going over the speed limit. The police could simply say that 18% of the cars at the point were speeding and that would be a valid observation - it doesn't mean that the ones who didn't speed wouldn't speed at some point in their journey or ones who did wouldn't stick to the limits at the next speed trap.
Agreed. Again, that's not what you said (I realise it's what you meant to say).I was trying to get a snapshot at a particular point in time - if over a two-hour period, 100 cyclists approached a red light: 82 stopped and 18 didn't then it's a perfectly reasonable to say that. for that particular set of lights. 18% stopped.
I don't want to say that, it was your sentence saying what they did in a week that complicated things.I'm not sure why you want to complicate things by saying that it depends how they behave in future
After the 2nd time did you not think that you should go a bit slower and try to anticipate when pedestrians might be stepping out without looking?
Not guilty of manslaughter
Guilty of causing bodily harm.
For clarification
The offence is 'causing bodily harm by wanton and furious driving' - Offences Against the Person Act 1861
For clarification
The offence is 'causing bodily harm by wanton and furrrrrrrrious driving' - Offences Against the Person Act 1861
I've very probably missed this somewhere in the thread... but does this offence cover having an illegal bicycle, or is the conviction for the way/speed he was riding it?