• Chainweasel
    link
    fedilink
    English
    47
    edit-2
    5 months ago

    I saw a video yesterday of cars fleeing the 2011 tsunami in Japan, I’m willing to bet those people exceeded 10mph over the posted speed limit trying to get away from the water.
    Limiting the speed of the vehicles isn’t going to improve driving skills or eliminate distractions. It isn’t going to make people drive safer, just slower. I’m sure any situation where people need to go 10+ miles over the speed limit is going to be exceedingly rare and limited to things like fleeing forest fires or tsunamis, but limiting the speed isn’t going to have a huge impact on accidents.
    It could decrease fuel consumption and emissions though 🤷‍♂️.
    But it still seems like a problem that could be solved with better enforcement.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      225 months ago

      There are reasons other than natural disasters that happen all the time. Health emergencies are a fine example of this. Yes, ideally you’d wait for an ambulance but oft times that’s just not viable.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        85 months ago

        I’ll risk bleeding out in the highway trying to get to the hospital on my own than pay $15k for a five minute ride in the wee woo wagon

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          35 months ago

          Haha, as someone currently in the states, I agree whole heartedly. I’d rather drive myself to the hospital with a stab wound than deal with an ambulance bill.

        • @pantyhosewimp
          link
          35 months ago

          Here is something weird in my town. It’s about why I won’t call an ambulance again.

          It’s about $800 in my town for a 5 minute slow ride. I’ve only taken it because I don’t want to pass out driving and endanger others. I’ve called an ambulance 2 times in 10 years. I didn’t know what was going on & if it’s serious then I gotta figure out how to get my car back home after I’m released also.

          So anyway, twice now, one of the EMT guys was an absolute aggressive asshole. He kept accusing me of lying or making shit up or being high on cocaine the whole ride in. Imagine being constantly verbally berated the entire time you’re in a semi-panic state from out of the blue chest or abdominal pains.

          I’m pretty sure it’s the same guy. The only thing I can think of to explain his behavior is that he’s a concealed carry guy & he wants an excuse to shoot someone & so he’s antagonistic as fuck hoping that he can goad the patient into getting physical with him. Then he gets to pull out his gun and shoot you.

          So any way. Fuck engandering other people here. I’m driving myself in next time. Actually, it’s only a 20 minute walk so I’ll be doing that instead if I’m up to it.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            15 months ago

            even if it was self-inflicted cocaine, it’s still not his job to tell you shit.

            I remember going to the ER with a friend who’d self harmed when I was a teenager and they were bleeding real bad. Doctors was huffy because they’d deliberately taken resources from someone who may also need them, which is fair on one hand, but couldn’t the same be said for car crashes, falling off a mountain, getting a TV remote stuck up your butt, complications from smoking…? I bet more than half medical emergencies are caused by deliberate action and unfortunate consequences.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      55 months ago

      As a somewhat recent arrival to NZ, I found it interesting — starting with our rental car — that the speed limit is displayed on your dashboard. It changes colour as soon as you go 1 km over the limit.

      All very cool. The most notable issue with this is there are sections of roads where this doesn’t work at all.

      That said, there is a LOT of traffic calming here.

      There’s still the occasional assclown that goes way over the limit. Unsurprisingly, that usually happens on long, straight roads without traffic calming.