Sea Skimmer wrote:
You’ve already got a computer in the car that can do the recording, and you’ve already got a digital speed signal from the ECU to the vehicles own speedometer. All that you need is a program to make a graph of that input and a wire to connect the two. That’s tens of dollars per vehicle for wire, irrelevant compared to the amount of money police spend on gas. I have seen police dash cam videos which had the cars own speed as one of the bits of display data, so clearly someone has already thought of and implemented this, it’s just not standard.
Okay. Now do the supervisors have time to review these tapes to make sure they aren't speeding in a specific zone. The answer is they don't. I wouldn't be against this idea if it weren't impossible to monitor.
Sounds like an admission that speed cameras are unfair then
What? How is something that records you breaking the law, unfair? If they're issuing tickets to people only going 5 over then I agree with you, but that doesn't seem to be the case.
Actually I’ve seen law enforcement officers say exactly that and more then once. I’ve even read an interview with a state trooper pilot who flies a Cesena for highway patrol and he said he prioritizes tailgating over speeding, because it’s more likely to cause trouble, yet harder for his fellow officers on the ground to spot.
Then those officers are idiots. It's the limitations of human perception and reaction time that make speeding the biggest contributor to accidents. Yes, following too close can be a cause, but usually speed is the biggest contributor especially in fatal accidents.
If he didn't pass going 50% faster then me, I might have been able to get his number to do just that. I have reported my local police for fucking repeatedly driving the wrong up a one way street near my house. Course these same wonderful people are now busily dealing with a lawsuit steaming from one of them having hit and almost killed a pedestrian crossing legally at a corner, and then attempting to pin everything on the victim despite numerous eyewitnesses.
Good for you. I don't see how this makes speeding cameras wrong though?
You know, I don’t hate cops, I know the job is extremely difficult any day of the week, but some days I see them doing shit that really makes it hard to keep that mindset. I’d have to say my biggest button is the issue of ‘smart guns’ which are used by no police department in the world (despite the fact that a cop is quite likely to have his gun stolen in a struggle) and yet countless police have testified to the media that we’d all be much safer if the general public was forced to use them.
From what I understand smart gun technology isn't reliable right now, and that's why it isn't being used.
Sorry I don’t have the last three years of local papers locked away for reference, but it pretty much stems from the huge murder wave the city has been suffering, which is becoming so well known that tourist revenue has been significantly reduced. The cities solution to that has been to advertise more, rather then hiring more cops. Just this September the cities police commissioner made a more then slightly dubious decision in the absence of more funding, this murder wave should be tackled by forming a 10,000 strong vigilante unit to actually foot patrol the streets. Thankfully its not on the job just yet.
That makes a bit more sense. At first it seemed like you were implying that they had a policy not to assist, and not that they were just too busy to assist.
In any case, the location this cop was at and his direction of travel would have meant he was putting at least four other police departments between the Philadelphia city limits and any crimes scene he could have been heading too. I don’t fucking buy the legitimate mission excuse for an instant, and it’s not like this is the only time I’ve ever seen cops flying along on the highway with no apparent purpose.
Again, the purpose isn't always apparent. These complaints of yours aren't good reasons for your dislike of a speed limit, or speeding cameras.