OlasDAlmighty said:
Where are you from OP?
Where I'm from, St. Louis Missouri, you almost never see people breaking the law or driving recklessly. Sometimes a person will speed by 5 - 10 mph, at which point they will swiftly be pulled over by our horrible corrupt parasitic traffic control officers and given a 200$ speeding ticket. There are cameras at all our stoplights, not just to catch people running red lights, but also to catch people speeding. I've been given a 100$ ticket because I was caught on camera driving through an intersection 7 miles over the speed limit.
If people did the type of stuff your talking about over here they'd probably wind up in prison before the day is out.
Come over here to Springfield, you'll see lots of stupid stuff, as well as very stupid bicyclists. In fact just last fall we had a bicyclist killed because he didn't stop at a red light like he should have. Got run over by an 18-wheeler. Like yeah, it's sad that he died...but the only person that could have prevented it was himself.
Also, in Springfield we've got two major one-way streets downtown, Jefferson and Campbell. Twice in the last six months I have personally saved people from going the wrong way on them. I mean, I only cross those roads maybe a few times a week. You'll just be sitting at the stop sign, and suddenly the person in front of you is signaling to go down the street the complete wrong way. Both times I've done this they were about halfway through the turn when I laid on my horn, and at that point they realized what they were doing. I'm certain it happens way more than that, I'm just shocked it happens so often that little old me has been the person right behind the idiot twice.
Also...7 miles over for a ticket from a camera? That's harsh. The smallest window I've ever heard of from a camera system is 10 miles over. But wait, are the cameras still working in St. Louis? As far as I know, Missouri hasn't found a legal way to do that, at least in Springfield. The story goes that in Springfield there was a camera system for a while, but then it turns out the tickets were being issued by the camera company rather than the state. At no point were the tickets being approved by the DoT or whatever state department handles that, and the state of Missouri requires tickets to be issued and approved by the state, not a private company. This was brought forward by a highway patrolman, of all people. So they stopped issuing tickets in order to find a way to do it that was legit, and now it's been like a couple of years and they still haven't got the cameras going again. But again, maybe that problem was exclusive to Springfield.