Surviving the Hoons
One of the current affairs TV programs did a story recently on the efforts by NSW police to crack down on ‘hoon’ drivers through a specific squad targeting them. The Victorian Police recently announced a similar project with the squad headed up by one of Victoria Police’s most effective senior officers, Inspector Bernie Rankin. Unusually for the TV program concerned, it chose to do less of the ‘sensationalising’ more typical of those types of programs and instead used a discussion between one of the so called ‘hoons’ and a member of the public keen to get them off the road. It was perhaps the best piece of footage covering the issue for quite some time and gave the final clue to what actions need to be taken by the wider community to address the challenge:
Crush their cars.
The meeting between the alleged hoon and the member of the public took place in an underground car park and the discussion was well handled. No one could say that the younger man supporting hoon driving was not intelligent – quite the contrary – his demeanour and way he put the argument forward was indicative of someone who had a great deal of intelligence. What was clear though is that his justification was not in alignment with what the wider public wants.
We best remind ourselves that this discussion is not about ‘hoon driving’ alone but rather the problem it often represents – that hoon driving leads to the deaths and injuries of thousands of (often) young people each year. And let’s not beat around the bush either – these accidents cost society a heap of money in the form of taxes being spent on hospital admissions, recovery programs, insurances, road campaigns and more. And yes, the greater cost is of lives, the tragic and soul destroying impacts on those left behind.
The interview in the carpark saw just one ‘crack’ in the thinking of our young hoon and that was when it was suggested that his car ought to be crushed and how devastated he would feel if it were to happen.
Which is why this is the obvious, required and ultimately short term response to the challenge. Even better, as part of the crushing, do it in public with the offender being required to push the button on the crusher – it would the ‘stocks and tomatoes in the Town Square’ equivalent of the 21st Century.
But a longer term fix is required which I suggest requires at least two further steps:
- Legislation that allows a car to be impounded if police suspect the car has been modified for the purpose of being able to exceed the speed limit; and
- a requirement that all cars in Australia be limited in their ability to speed.
The real ‘final’ step would be to utilise automatic speed adjustments in vehicles that prevent them from being able to exceed speed limits in any given zone. The technology is now available to utilise WiFi networks to ‘trigger’ speed limitations in a car’s computer system such that they are unable to exceed a certain speed threshold. Such a system may be a while off but it is perhaps the single most significant step that might resolve the challenge of dealing with hoon drivers.
In the meantime, we need to also think about giving these kids something worthwhile to do which would likely include acting as orderlies in hospitals in the trauma centres and rehabilitation clinics, and digging holes in graveyards
With the moderately surprising news that Christine Milne had decided to step out of her current political life, Dr Richard Di Natale moved into the driver’s seat for the Greens. And I flag that this spells trouble for the National Party because this shift, this change in voice and style, connected to similar passions, will…
Read More >In fact I’ll go one step further and say that many Strategic Plans are DELIBERATE methods for NOT Progressing. In far too many organisations, the process of Strategic Planning is about compliance to a process of ‘having a plan’ and typically it has nothing to do with achievement of the outcomes listed in the Strategic…
Read More >Around Australia and parts of the world like the USA, some governments and especially many large scale power utilities, are pursuing a campaign to prevent domestic solar from being fed back into (sold to) the grid. I’m assuming that the (fundamentally flawed) thinking is that by denying additional energy production points, they’ll prop up or…
Read More >I’m male. You may like to take that into consideration with the rest of what you read as, a) I’m part of the problem b) Whatever I say cannot, no matter how well intentioned, be in anyway able to represent women I’m prompted to write this particular piece following on from the ABC’s…
Read More >On a day when The Age front page ran a story of mass disconnections of householders struggling to pay their domestic electricity bill, Futurist Marcus Barber and ABC Goulburn Murray’s Joseph Thomsen discuss the future of energy – what’s happening now, what are we going to see in the future and what can consumers…
Read More >With Farmland across NSW, Queensland, & the Northern Territory under pressure from the mining sector, the quality of discussion as to which land use is of best outcome or most suitable seems to go astray. I’ve been flagging the ‘Eat’ OR ‘Extract’ challenge for a few years now and this radio interview is one example…
Read More >For the past few years I’ve decided to declare each year to be something I think the world needs or is likely to see. It’s not so much about the prediction but more about the likely focus that will benefit the world. So I’m declaring this year to be the International Year of Battery Technology…
Read More >I keep reading posts that Uber is an example of the ‘sharing economy’, the one in which people freely share what they have with others. But it’s NOT – it is instead part of what I call the ‘Utilisation Economy’ which is about use of spare capacity. About 15 years ago I began writing about…
Read More >One of the reasons I founded The Australian Strategic Planning Institute was to ensure that high quality futures perspectives were included in the Strategic Planning process. Typically they were not which meant too many businesses and organisations were planning for futures that just would not exist as expected, meaning wasted resources and sometimes and marked…
Read More >As Victorian edges its way into a new drought phase and plays catch up to other parts of the country, I’ve been pushed to remember an article I wrote about our then State Government’s push to get people to reduce the length of their showers. The Four Minute Shower was an attempt to highlight just…
Read More >