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26-06-2011, 04:37 PM | #1 | |||
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http://www.couriermail.com.au/news/q...-1226081923215
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26-06-2011, 04:40 PM | #2 | ||
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I don't see the problem with that, drink-driving is abhorrent and disgraceful. It's not like they were bagging out car enthusiasts.
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26-06-2011, 05:01 PM | #3 | |||
Regular Member
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Have to agree, I cant see anything against car nuts. "He said impoundments and ignition interlock programs were "the way of the future'', warning that hefty fines were "probably not enough of a deterrent'' Its about time they started doing this, evens the playing feild a bit as far as hoon laws and impounding of cars go.
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26-06-2011, 05:23 PM | #4 | ||||
Life begins at 40
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Justice is what you get when you run out of money.
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26-06-2011, 05:37 PM | #5 | ||
Formally Kia Chaser
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Location: Newcastle
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So what does this have to do with hooning? Not questioning the post title, rather the quoted article.... Is hooning driving while over the limit or is it speeding, burnouts, etc...
It seems the media uses the term hooning for any act that is in breech of any motor act...
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27-06-2011, 12:48 AM | #6 | ||
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No time for drink drivers at all, couldn't care less what happens to them. The general public has some sympathy for most "hoon" attack laws as they can see they go a bit overboard and target the wrong people a lot of the time, but there's no sympathy for drink drivers.
People really wouldn't like what I've always proposed for them... First offence: everyones allowed one mistake I suppose...$5000 fine and one years suspension from driving, no "work licences" either...take the bus or walk, and learn your lesson. Second offence: Didn't learn the first time hey? $10,000 fine, one months jail, and absolute disqualification of all licences you hold of all sorts. That's it, no more "second chances", no work licences, never to hold any kind of drivers licence of any sort again, full stop. Didn't learn from your first penalty, you don't get a second go. Third offence (for the truly stupid): $10,000 fine, two months jail, and confiscation of the vehicle being driven at the time (unless stolen or a rental), no matter if it's yours or a mate has lent it to you, not to be returned to you unless a $5000 bond paid, auctioned off within a month if bond not paid. Your mate or family member doesn't like that? Well they shouldn't have loaned thier car to someone who is "never to hold any licence again", and should have done the normal thing and taken a bit of care to ensure who was driving thier car... |
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27-06-2011, 01:00 AM | #7 | ||
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2011G6E.... Run for Victorian Transport minister, seriously, do it now.
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27-06-2011, 04:17 AM | #8 | ||
Banned
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i have no time for people who break road rules, whether they call themselves car enthusiasts or not. the funny thing about australian drivers, is they often are hoons on the very first day they get their licence. i have heard many storys of aussies getting there licence (essentially signing a contract stating they will obey australian road rules or face the consequences), and on the first day of having their licence, they take their mates or their female friends for a drive, and decide to show off and start racing their cars on public roads, doing burnouts and poweslides and speading. the other thing i have noticed is that there are thousands of people who call themselves "car enthusiasts" and secrectly routinely test the limits of there cars on public roads, they will deny it because they havent been caught, and then when they are caught for a basic road infrigment like driving 9km over the limit, they cry foul about revenue raising. revenue raising is the best way for governments to make money, its a voluntary taxation of the idiots of society who routinely voluntarily break road rules.
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27-06-2011, 06:16 AM | #9 | ||
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no doubt the hoon word has an application, but it seems to be covering more and more crimes every day, a few days ago some dilberry (i think it was a politician) was calling someone who purposely ran some one down with their car and then backed over them again a hoon,............... what the hell has that got to do with some person horse playing in a motor car in a wreckless fashion, and lets face it thats what hooning is about, nothing to do with attempted murder .
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27-06-2011, 06:24 AM | #10 | |||
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27-06-2011, 07:49 AM | #11 | |||
Saving for a Jet Car
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There was one in the Adelaide Now a few days ago as well...
http://www.adelaidenow.com.au/ipad/h...-1226081669456 Quote:
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27-06-2011, 09:16 AM | #12 | ||
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Good article, despite the "hoons kill everyone on the planet" philosophy.
In a Rockhampton Bulletin article last year they proudly showed a view of the police import yard with the "hoon vehicles" confiscated over the weekend. They comprised such magnificent vehicles as a crappy old Camry, a ratty VN, a primered rough looking ute, and a few other crapbuckets. Not one single Silvia, WRX, Skyline, or other well-modified and expensive vehicle... |
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27-06-2011, 09:36 AM | #13 | ||
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i'll admit it, i hoon occassionally, i speed on country roads, i'm 46 years old, had my licence for nearly 30 years and never killed anyone or had an accident that involved another party. was i lucky or do i do things logically?
kpcart you are the perfect citizen my friend, kudos to you p.s i do not drink drive, it's courtesy bus or cab. |
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27-06-2011, 09:52 AM | #14 | |||
Silky Smoothe
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Hampton Park, Melbourne.
Posts: 412
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There is a group currently on fb. "There is no regular open safe place to do burnouts, But Junkies get 'safe rooms.' " There is no real place for these 'hoons' to go. I admit that i have gone 120 instead of 110 on the hume at night. I'll admit i did it last night to get my partner who was feeling ill to the service station as soon as possible for water. Sure we have places such as Calder, all the 'Nats' throughout the year, Your Powercruise, cruise for charities. but there is no actual place for "come in, do skids. change your wheels, go home." If a place like that was founded and open weekly, You will see a DRAMATIC drop in "hooning" on the streets. At the end of the day, no one in their $500 eBay VN Commodore wants to pay $199 to get into the 'Nats' to have to do skids, when you can do it for free in public places. There is no logic. My friend recently decided he wanted to learn how to control his car if it 'lost control' around a corner. We went to a local Stockyard's carpark, Blocked off the entrance and seeing as it was raining, we drove and turned sharply to loose control and tried to safely gather control back. You may consider it "trying to drift." Someone reported the police, They came, but we had all the basis covered, we had the entrances blocked. And it was a blocked off carpark with 15M high fences. No harm could be done to others, we were smart about it. The police congratulated us for taking smart choices doing it in a carpark at 2AM and not on the street. /rant. |
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27-06-2011, 10:18 AM | #15 | |||
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Once again, the eternal questions arise about "burnout venues":
I'll just cut and paste something I wrote in a thread quite some time back about legal burnout venues... Quote:
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27-06-2011, 10:40 AM | #16 | |||
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Doesn't need to be anything fancy. Just the basics. How do councils open skateparks? There is a big chance for someone to get injured at a skate park. Does anyone pay for insurance or liability? Most I see these days have a sign that basicly says. "You hurt yourself here, your fault. You know the risks so don't come whinging to us" Obviously its worded better, but that is the message. |
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27-06-2011, 10:48 AM | #17 | ||
Silky Smoothe
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Hampton Park, Melbourne.
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A simple paper work at the door stating
"We are not liable for any damage done to your car, nor yourself while on the premesis. You will change your tires to roadworthy ones before leaving." to get people to sign would suffice. $10 entry spectate, $50 to pop some tires .. Open Fri or Sunday - 12PM to 5PM. 20 cars x $50 = 1k for 1 day.. Not including spectators, Surely you would clear your overheads.. |
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27-06-2011, 11:01 AM | #18 | |||
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The problem is there are many who will complain that these venues don't exist, and there are those who don't want to be seen to support them, and then further there are those that will put up every argument under the sun as to why they're not viable...and they have crap attitudes about everything, not just hooning. Again, media will print anything that will sell their papers, although I'm not sure they can be called 'newspapers' anymore, they're becoming more like tabloids, with 'intelligent' articles hidden in the middle. The original article is just further proof that the media can seemingly print whatever emotive headline sells and the AJA don't seem to do a damn thing about it. The content of the article might be true...it's the headline that's BS and a complete lie, or is the word 'hooning' now becoming synonymous with DH of any variety? There is supposed to be 'truth' in journalism, not just the 'truth' that you want to see. Balanced articles are being pushed by the wayside for 'opinion' based pieces, and we all know about opinions. Often misguided and poorly thought out prior to presentation to the world... The article is about drink driving, not hooning - and whatever bozo came up with that headline, should be sacked for stupidity (among other things).../end rant.
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27-06-2011, 11:07 AM | #19 | ||
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If they made it i would go all the time.
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27-06-2011, 12:58 PM | #20 | ||
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In Victoria drink drivers are not part of the Anti hoon Laws. It has got me why they are not.
In Victoria with the updated hoons laws from the 1st of July this year, if I decided to drive and take 5 of my friends home when my car can only fit 4 passengers, I leave my car open to be impounded if pulled over by the police. But if I decided to drink a bottle of Vodka and drive home, my car will not get impounded. I just do not get it. |
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27-06-2011, 03:22 PM | #21 | |||
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There can't be "just the basics"...can you imagine someone getting injured and then having to stand up in court and explain why you didn't have adequate first aid facilities, emergency services on site, run off areas, armco railing to protect spectators, etc, etc, etc...? It wouldn't be pleasant. Sad but true, nowadays you can't just lay a strip of bitumen and say "go for it" without covering yourself for all consequences...workplace health and safety would ream you out with a pineapple if you didn't. As for waivers, you can have a sign with three foot tall illuminated letters saying it, you can get the most carefully worded waiver that someone has to sign with a drop of blood and sign in triplicate, but none of it means jack squat when someone gets hurt. Our motorcycle club used to have a once a year rally, and for that rally we had insurance of $500 or so for the one day. This was purely to cover us in case someone got somehow hurt by one of the bikes on display at the show (I don't know...knocks on over on themselves? They were stationary). Legal advice we had about a waiver for the observation rally was that we didn't have to be very detailed in what it said, as they are meaningless. If someone got hurt, and decided to sue, the judge wouldn't even consider the waiver. This is why the insurance industry nearly ruined so many local clubs some years back, as pony clubs, race clubs, BMX clubs, etc, all had waivers, but the insurance companies knew it was still a huge risk as they mean nothing when push comes to shove. Someone gets hurt at a skate bowl and decides to sue, it comes out of the councils pockets. Someone gets hurt at a burnout strip after signing a waiver, they can still take you to court and sue. The idea of a waiver is just a means of trying to dissuade people from suing...many don't know that they mean nothing, but trust me, if they get hurt at your facility, plenty of injury lawyers will damn soon point it out to them... Of course, it could all be fixed with the stroke of a beaurocratic pen by making waivers legally binding once you had signed them, and writing it into law that once signed, you give up all legal rights to recompense from the organiser or officials at the event. Easy. Can't see it happening...but it's a nice idea... |
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27-06-2011, 04:52 PM | #22 | |||
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27-06-2011, 05:34 PM | #23 | |||
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27-06-2011, 08:57 PM | #24 | ||
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Well, a "hoon" is probably only a danger if they are doing a burnout in a public street, and only while they are doing that.
A drunk however is a danger from the moment he staggers out and turns the key in his car all the way up to the moment he (maybe) makes it into his driveway and turns the car off... I'd say drunks pose a much higher danger to the general public than "hoons"...which is a sweeping generalisation anyway and covers everything from truly dangerous morons who speed in quiet residential streets and do burnouts in crowded city streets, to someone who merely chirps the tyres away from the lights... |
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27-06-2011, 09:04 PM | #25 | ||||
Captain Malcolm Reynolds
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2011G6E, I really like what you're saying in this thread. Thinking with your brain and making some really valid contributions. I agree with what you're saying.
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28-06-2011, 02:15 AM | #26 | ||||
let it burn
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To help, lets use the Sky Diving example. If you jump from a plane and through no fault of the operator (ie: appropriate conditions, suitable and correctly operating equipment, qualified and satisfactory instruction etc) you died/seriously injured, then there would be very little to sue the operator for. There are risks that a person assumes when they engage in a dangerous activity, and you wont successfully sue on those grounds alone. The lawsuits are generally (and beofe anyone chimes in with my aunties uncles brother etc, yes there are aberrations) only successful when the operator has in some way been negligent in the duty of care. Note, care, not guarantee of safety. Quote:
Same way that people who through no acts of their own now have to make do with compensation of less than 200k for life, when that amount wont cover one year of the costs for some. Might seem fair if they were on the Dole before, but hardly fair if they were on $200k a year. But hey, lets just point fingers at the easy target, much like the hoon laws have. Lets not concern oursleves with the purpose of the law in the first place, to encourage operators to ensure that the obligations to public safety are met, instead of a an attitude of "Oh she'll be right" due to a cost benefit analysis which says the risk of lawsuit is waived so lets roll the dice, by providing both remedy and punishment for breaches. In other words, the complications that sometimes arise from such laws are the balance struck between public safety and counteracting that human nature to cut corners. Much like why many criminals are found not guilty. The failure to provide adequate proof (the standard of proof) also protects the innocent from being found guilty of a crime they never committed. Its far from simple. Every law is a double edged sword and there will always be aberrations. |
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28-06-2011, 10:48 PM | #27 | ||
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My question is how is Drink Driving hooning? What is the definition of hooning etc. I'm all for harsh punishments for anyone busted over 0.05. It's the hoon wording in the title that has me stumped.
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29-06-2011, 10:37 AM | #28 | |||
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The word hoon or hooning is a made up word by the media. If you get caught doing burnouts and such and go to court, you are actually charged with careless driving loss of traction, not hoon driving. |
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