Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

Not a good one, I imagine.

My drive to work each morning involves travelling on a stretch of rural road which is about 6 miles long with no boundaries stopping animals such as cows, horses and donkeys wandering into the path of speeding cars. The limit is 40mph but it's mostly ignored.

As a consequence, around 40 such beasts are killed each year because the majority of people believe their need to drive at 20% above any given limit (for no other reason than satisfying their fragile egos) outweighs the lives and welfare of innocent animals.

So who's going to care less for the lives of a few birds when delivery of random crap from amazon is given priority?




> majority of people believe their need to drive at 20% above any given limit

It’s almost endorsed legally afaik. We were even taught this “rule” at school

The insane speeding on tight country roads in the UK is absolutely bizarre. It’s in no way safe but everyone does it. My friends dad died on a motorcycle by riding around country roads too fast. It should really be a 30 limit, even 20 considering the visibility, but people drive at 60, even along single file roads that require you to reverse if you come across an oncoming car


And at this time of year you're quite likely to meet a house-sized tractor or combine coming round the bend. Those don't hang around either! I'm amazed there aren't a lot more fatal accidents on country roads.


Most roads in the UK were co-opted from farm tracks and never really designed for cars. A lot of the grading of roads is just wishful thinking and not linked to the engineering specification of the road. And people are constantly surprised that the road they have spent the last ten years driving to work on is not an eight lane freeway.


People will selectively care a lot about animals. Just look at how may people become bird lovers when they want to stop a wind turbine.


This is in the UK?



Ah - slightly more rural than my part of the south east. I guess I see one deer every two years run over. The rest of the time it is mostly rabbits and badgers with the occasional fox. Hedgehogs not so much now they are rarer in the UK.




Consider applying for YC's Fall 2025 batch! Applications are open till Aug 4

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: