“In four years Mike van Erp has filmed 1,400 drivers using their phones, leading to 1,800 penalty points, £110,000 of fines — and him being assaulted by disgruntled motorists. Is he a road safety hero or just a darned nuisance? Nick Rufford joins him on patrol”

I’ve watched a few of his videos. I should be surprised that he catches so many drivers in their phones, but in and around London? Not surprised at all.

  • Arrakis
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    1 year ago

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    • Blake [he/him]
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      1 year ago

      No, that’s not correct. It’s entirely about determining when you are, or not, driving. That’s why the course went to the House of Lords for a determination. This precedent establishes that “driving” can include when you’ve stopped and gotten out of the car, assuming that you intend to continue your journey.

      See my previous comment: are you going to actually answer my question? Whether or not you think my statements are unreliable doesn’t matter.

      You can answer that simple question without having to rely on anything I have stated.

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        • Blake [he/him]
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          1 year ago

          Happy to restate the question:

          Is using a handheld phone while stopped and stuck in traffic more dangerous than using a phone handsfree while driving at 60 miles an hour?

          • Arrakis
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            1 year ago

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            • Blake [he/him]
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              1 year ago

              And now you’re running off, because you know fine well what the answer is and what that entails.

              Instead of admitting that you’re wrong and reconsidering your perspective, you’re just hiding in deeper and deeper levels of denial to protect your ego.

              Cognitive dissonance is uncomfortable, but the only lasting resolution is to reject your beliefs that do not stand up to scrutiny.

              It’s easier in the short term to take the path which preserves your ego, but you’ll always be wrong, and it gets harder and harder to deny reality.

              Every time you reject the truth it gets harder and harder for you to admit that you were wrong all along.

              • Arrakis
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