Suff wrote:It is hard to focus on single instances of brutality, which is what this death was, when so many people die every year. However I was wrong, we're down under 1,800 deaths each year now.
There is a pattern.
Only the safety features have saved lives.
Also, crash helmets became compulsory for motorcyclists in the early 70's.
Plus in the 70's learner motorcyclists were restricted from riding foul handling 250cc Kawasakis that could go 90 mph plus.
Plus cars are designed now to be less likely to kill a pedestrian in a collision.
Plus, medicine has advanced in the last 40 years and seriously injured people are now more likely to survive.
In the 60's upto early 70's you still got cars on the road with "trafficators", not indicators.
Many cars on the road then didn't have seat belts fitted. The first seat belts were not the self adjusting ones.
The steering columns on many cars were non-collapsing. It was like driving with a big spike pointing at your chest. Then we got the collapsing ones that didn't skewer you.
Some cars were still fitted with drum brakes instead of discs!
All of these improvements have saved more lives than any speed camera Suff, you are right.