I've had many a ding-dong with cagers, especially cabbies and I've heard the usual tirade - you don't pay tax etc.
I'm well aware of what they say - what I don't get is that part of their inner psyche which says it's OK to treat other human beings that way.
Where is this going? My fear is that if people don't see justice via legal recourse, they may resort to other means of asserting themselves. This might seem a horrible thing to say, but I wonder where this tension is going (violence?) - I don't want to see that happen.
So, if we want change, we must drive it. We need to get our point across to lawmakers and decision-takers. If we want the law to be better enforced and offenders properly dealt with (i.e. larger fines and no getting out of bans with sob stories) we need to influence key people.
To influence senior people, make an issue public and work so hard to get your point across succinctly to the widest audience, so that those in power they are compelled to act for the sake of their own interests. Politicians (and stock markets!), are on the whole immensley sensitive to media pressure. However, this can be an expensive business - I wonder if there are any cycle-friendly PR firms, who would be prepared to do some pro-bono work on a campaign for cycle safety and advocacy??
Food for thought.