Re: Eating and drinking whilst driving doubles accident risk.
- From: "Rob" <rsvptorob-usenetREMOVE@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 22 Aug 2006 19:46:02 +0100
Uno-Hoo! wrote:
|| "Rob" <rsvptorob-usenetREMOVE@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
|| news:V_OdnRfdTKvbqHbZRVnyqA@xxxxxxxxx
||| Uno-Hoo! wrote:
|||||
||||| OK! I wouldn't want to give the impression that I agree with the
||||| officer's action in booking the woman (although I suspect the
||||| booking was probably as a result of her giving him a hard time
||||| when he tried to 'advise' her re eating an apple whilst driving).
||||| A few friendly words would have been more appropriate.
|||
||| You just can't admit that the officer was being an arse can you, it
||| must have been *her* attitude that wrong! If you recall he thought
||| she was holding a mobile - he was obviuosly pissed off when he
||| discovered she wasn't, so had to do her for something.
||
|| I speak from experience. I can think of any number of incidents
|| where I went to speak to a motorist with the intention of imparting
|| a few words of wisdom - but ended up issuing a ticket simply because
|| they were too obnoxious to deal with in a friendly manner.
I don't doubt it.
|| Yes, I know that people will disagree with that - but police
|| officers have the discretion to issue verbal cautions *if* they
|| consider the recipient is likely to respond positively to such an
|| approach. Many offending motorist are their own worst enemies when
|| being dealt with by police officers.
I don't doubt that either, but there is still nothing to suggest she did
anything to warrant the petty-minded booking that she got.
||||| Having said that, I do believe that trying to steer around corners
||||| whilst holding an apple in one hand, is not the most sensible of
||||| actions.
|||
||| Maybe not but it had no effect whatsoever on her driving.
||
|| You could say that about many instances of drink driving. It's not
|| what *did* happen - but what *could* have happened if she had been
|| required to respond suddenly to an emergency.
I don't think you can compare the two. Being under the influence of alcohol
is not something you can snap out of in an instant, whereas holding an apple
can be remedied in a millisecond.
||||| Although the woman may have been stationary when she was spoken to
||||| (couldn't have been otherwise really!), she had, I understand,
||||| driven a route with a number of corners whilst eating the apple!
|||
||| Then you understand wrong. She hadn't eaten the apple, she was
||| merely holding it.
||
|| And that makes a difference?
It does to the image you tried to portray of someone driving for a long
period whilst not concentrating.
The fact is Kev, each and every one of us whilst driving does something,
even if only momentarily, that could be construed as driving whilst not
being in full control, if a police officer wished it to be so.
The problem is not that we don't need the law - clearly we do, given some of
the other more ridiculous and dangerous things people do whilst they're
supposed to be concentrating on driving - but in the inappropriate
application of the law, which IMO was the case here.
--
Rob
.
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