Hi Guys, I hope you do not mind me commenting on your thread. I work as a civilian for the Police in the Criminal Justice department, in particular Roads Policing. I deal with offenders all day every day and investigate crashes. As for are standards dropping the answer is yes and no. For the average driver doing ten thousand miles a year the chances of being involved in a bump are 200:1 and this ratio drops significantly as the mileage increases but for drivers who do further training (usually insisted upon by the companies or cpc) the incident rates are declining. For those involved in collisions, the fatality rate rose last year!!!
The field of driver psychology is very interesting, we have bias's that get us into a certain way of thinking and we do not realize or question them until someone points them out. For example, if I was to ask you to score your driving on a scale of one to ten, with one being rubbish and ten excellent, 95% of people would answer 7. But shouldn't most drivers be a 5 as that's the average, are 95% of people above average? And if I am better than other drivers its okay for me to take extra risks because I can handle it! In reality we are not a fixed number as we have all had moments of brilliance behind the wheel scoring ten and we have ALL had moments we would rather forget and scored one.
As for police presence on the roads it is decreasing due to budget cuts which means we are relying more and more on enforcement cameras (speed, traffic lights, vehicle excise duty and ANPR) and the conviction rate is higher than ever because cameras operate 24 hours a day.
I hope you don't mind me jumping into your discussion.