Has re-reading enlightened you enough to realise that this:Re read it and still think it bollocks as I said its the person that holds the throttle that should be responsible nobody else.
is the total bollocks to which I referred?biggles12 said:I can't wait for the may day run. If someone speeds, people who have already reached hastings could be nicked, as its a large group. Even if they have got off their bikes!
Has re-reading enlightened you enough to realise that this:
is the total bollocks to which I referred?

So you may have re-read it but you still haven't managed to join-up reading with comprehension.Not as much bollocks as this law. Who is to say who is in front or leading on a big run like the May day run. Its the law being an arse and people not taking responsibility for their actions.
The reality is that there has been a massive sea-change in attitudes towards motorcyclists.Although you have provided sound reasoning throughout this post don't you get the feel of a 'sea-change' of approach towards bike riders i.e. someone's getting fed up with bike accident statistics?
May I refer you to post #18 and the link. That was one that I remember due to the locality and discussing the case with one of the investigators. There are probably more but to be frank, I cannot be arsed to search.You have quoted some car related cases - is this the first for bikes?
It's only unusual in that these tactics were used in relation to a road collision. It's certainly not unique though and will have been adopted for purely practical reasons:The police themselves admitted they had taken unusual steps in this case (dawn raids).
Just one tiny quibble - can bollocks be hysterical? Oxymoronic surelySo you may have re-read it but you still haven't managed to join-up reading with comprehension.
I'll try and make it clear for you.
If a group of riders are caught speeding and the lead rider is speeding, then the lead rider will be dealt with for the same (higher if applicable) speed as those behind him.
If the lead rider is not speeding (or not caught speeding), then he or she will not be held liable in any way.
It is the same principal as the "use, cause or permit" clauses that take the view that if you allow an uninsured person to borrow your vehicle, you commit the same offence of 'no insurance' as the person to whom you have lent your vehicle.
The basis of this is responsibility. The legislators have decided that someone who leads a group of road-users has a responsibility for their behaviour as far as the lead rider's speed may cause others to exceed speed limits.
Your suggestion that the first rider to turn-up at a venue that is the destination for an organised gathering/ride-out will be liable for those who are still en-route is bollocks. Hysterical bollocks at that.

What difference does it make? It makes every difference if the proportion of bikers getting prosecuted was way out of proportion to deaths caused by car drivers. To be blunt it does smack of bike discrimination to me. I'm all for holding people accountable for their actions, but this is stretching the principle to breaking point in my book.What difference does the means of transport make, especially if it's the principal of shared responsibility that so concerns you? ... If you are feeling as though there's an anti-bike prejudice, then consider the lack of physical opportunities for car drivers to do what bikes do..
I assume that the Police / CPS must be pretty sure in their own mind that a prosecution would be succesful, otherwise I assume they wouldn't waste their time and money persuing it.... As said already, the causational link between the manner of the riding of one or more of the five and the deaths, is yet to be established, nor is it established that they rode Dangerously or Carelessly: That's what the court hearing is for. An impression I've gained from some here is that the court is only there to hand-down punishment, that being charged is the same as a finding of guilt.
Sorry but I don't subscribe to the view that there's any discrimination. Show something tangible other than the persecution complex manifested by some riders and I'll give it greater consideration.What difference does it make? It makes every difference if the proportion of bikers getting prosecuted was way out of proportion to deaths caused by car drivers. To be blunt it does smack of bike discrimination to me. I'm all for holding people accountable for their actions, but this is stretching the principle to breaking point in my book.
TBH, I suspect that there's an element of the aforementioned "umbrella raising" to some degree.I assume that the Police / CPS must be pretty sure in their own mind that a prosecution would be succesful, otherwise I assume they wouldn't waste their time and money persuing it.
Why is it up to us to prove that we're being persecuted; why can't it be up the the authorities to prove that we're not and that I have just got a "complex"?Sorry but I don't subscribe to the view that there's any discrimination. Show something tangible other than the persecution complex manifested by some riders and I'll give it greater consideration.

Why is it up to us to prove that we're being persecuted; why can't it be up the the authorities to prove that we're not and that I have just got a "persecution complex"?![]()

I do feel paranoid. What I'd like to know is whether this paranoia is justified. And the only way we'll know this is when someone in authority does some number crunching to see whether bikers are far more likely to be prosecuted under this law than car drivers. Obviously it has to be a Government Dept because they're the only ones who have the figures.And if I say that you are paranoid, is it for you to prove that you are not, or for me to prove that you are?![]()
The legislators have decided that -------------------------
Clearly made up, or apocryphal if I was being politeFrom another forum, but are we heading this way?
A guy at work was on business in China and was sat in the back of a taxi on the way to a site. A truck pulled out in front of the taxi and a collision was unavoidable. The Chinese police take the view that it is the taxi passenger who is at fault on the basis that if he had not asked the driver to travel from A to B then the taxi would not have been there and the crash would not have happened. Intervention by the local government officials meant that he was not arrested and charged.
I don't know the exact numbers but motorcycles cause more than 20 times the number of deaths or serious injuries per mile compared with cars.Given that I'm just 1 self-employed bloke, it would probably be better if someone in the Home Office (there must be a few hundred around who have access to the figures and who could work this out)could get the figures and compare the deaths from bike accidents and the deaths caused by car accidents; work out the relative number of riders and car drivers; count how many prosecutions there have been for each type and therefore work out if you're more likely to be charged under this law if you're a biker. I suspect we are - please prove me wrong.

How many motorcyclists do you know of that have been dealt with for using a mobile phone while riding?I do feel paranoid. What I'd like to know is whether this paranoia is justified. And the only way we'll know this is when someone in authority does some number crunching to see whether bikers are far more likely to be prosecuted under this law than car drivers.
Kaister said:this is the scary bit...it just smacks of orwellianism



The fact that even after these changes there are still a percentage that ride like idiots and believe that they are somehow entitled to visit two-wheeled anarchy upon the rest of the motoring public (sometimes abetted by the daft notion that they belong to a special and distinct 'brotherhood') has led the authorities to look at ways to make such people see that they have a collective responsibility when acting in a collective manner.

The problem is like with most laws in this country they get applied to the easy targets.
You only have to look at "Joy riders" or "Twocers" on the TV shows, a complete disregard for anyone elses safety, they get away with driving cars they have stolen at ridiculous speeds, can deliberately crasdh into objects and vehicles and zap across kids play areas, if they drive really dangerously they are rearded by the plod giving up, and if caught will get some piffling fine (they won't pay) at worst, but more likely sent on a bloody holiday at our expense.
At the other end a group of decent motorcyclists riding a shade above the speed limit risk a lot more, if one of his mates decides to give a quick blast up a straight section (Could be a straight bit of road with no other traffic / junctions and a safe although illegal speed), his mate upfront who may only be 3-4 mph over the limit can suddenly face a ban leading to loss of job / house etc.
This is all a load of f***** BS, it is this sort of BS that has turned this once world leading superpower into a complete joke of a country with all the rewards going to the lazy and criminally inclined and hard working decent people getting shafted left, right and centre.
I operate my own throttle...
If I go faster than the guy in front it is not his fault,
If I follow a speeding bike and get done it is my fault
If I fall off trying to follow a better / faster rider it is my fault
If some twats falls of following me it is not my fault
Why does no one want to take responsibility for ther own actions any more, and why should I be expected to take responsibility for the actions of others.
Perhaps I should just rob a bank, surely it is the fault of whoever filled the vault with cash and they should do the time if I get caught.
Perhaps I could shoot my way out, should be OK to blow away a few coppers as surely it would be their own fault for attending the call, and their family could sue whoever installed the bank alarm system, they could in turn sue the company who distributes the alarms, who could sue the person who invented the alarms![]()