>Detroit - you and I are on the same page. About 15 or 20
>years ago, I got a ticket going 5 miles UNDER the speed
>limit (I was following a dump truck) in TN. The trooper
>claimed I was going 14 miles over the limit and there was
>nothing I could say or do to prove otherwise. It dawned on
>me at that moment that these guys can ticket someone any
>time they want to and there's no recourse unless the accused
>happens to be traveling in a convoy of companions that he
>can round up to act as witnesses in court. To assume the
>integrity of all these troopers is beyond reproach is just
>being naive. There are some bad apples in that barrel too,
>and I want to know where they are. Therefore, since I can't
>handle the chatter on a CB any more I never travel without a
>radar dectector. I'm not using it to facilitate speeding or
>breaking the law - I'm just leveling the playing field.
I gotta tell ya, the more I think about this one, the funnier it gets.
"I'm not using it to facilitate speeding or breaking the law..." yet the fact that it is in a commercial vehicle is, in fact, breaking the law. Too funny.
Also, there's no playing field to level, unless you are, in fact, speeding to begin with, and you want to know where the bears are for that very reason. The playing field is already level, right at the speed limit. You break the limit and you've tilted the playing field in your favor. Bears use radar (and any number of other methods) to bring the field back to plumb.
If you aren't speeding, you're on a level playing field, and a radar detector will have no bearing on the fact that you are not speeding. Nor will it have any bearing on a Bad Boy falsely giving you a ticket for 14 over when you are going 5 under.
If you aren't speeding and you keep falsely getting speeding tickets, anyway, the only way to level that playing field is to get a black box recorder that records time and speeds
Bottom line is, you want a radar detector, so you've got one. There's really no reason to try and justify the fact that merely because you don't agree with a particular law that it shouldn't apply to you.
>years ago, I got a ticket going 5 miles UNDER the speed
>limit (I was following a dump truck) in TN. The trooper
>claimed I was going 14 miles over the limit and there was
>nothing I could say or do to prove otherwise. It dawned on
>me at that moment that these guys can ticket someone any
>time they want to and there's no recourse unless the accused
>happens to be traveling in a convoy of companions that he
>can round up to act as witnesses in court. To assume the
>integrity of all these troopers is beyond reproach is just
>being naive. There are some bad apples in that barrel too,
>and I want to know where they are. Therefore, since I can't
>handle the chatter on a CB any more I never travel without a
>radar dectector. I'm not using it to facilitate speeding or
>breaking the law - I'm just leveling the playing field.
I gotta tell ya, the more I think about this one, the funnier it gets.
"I'm not using it to facilitate speeding or breaking the law..." yet the fact that it is in a commercial vehicle is, in fact, breaking the law. Too funny.
Also, there's no playing field to level, unless you are, in fact, speeding to begin with, and you want to know where the bears are for that very reason. The playing field is already level, right at the speed limit. You break the limit and you've tilted the playing field in your favor. Bears use radar (and any number of other methods) to bring the field back to plumb.
If you aren't speeding, you're on a level playing field, and a radar detector will have no bearing on the fact that you are not speeding. Nor will it have any bearing on a Bad Boy falsely giving you a ticket for 14 over when you are going 5 under.
If you aren't speeding and you keep falsely getting speeding tickets, anyway, the only way to level that playing field is to get a black box recorder that records time and speeds
Bottom line is, you want a radar detector, so you've got one. There's really no reason to try and justify the fact that merely because you don't agree with a particular law that it shouldn't apply to you.