Hmm. There's no mention of JC at all. Yes, he has argued against them (sorry, whinged; people object if I use that expression on gransnet) but he's only one of many, including the AA.
The new guidelines seem completely sensible to me. Here is the good sense succinctly: "drivers will know that cameras are only sited in places where there is a genuine speed and accident problem and they will drive accordingly."
I say "new guidelines" because that's what the article said, but speed cameras have supposed to have been clearly visible and painted yellow for years! Those guidelines are not new.
It looks as if some police forces have been using speed cameras more as revenue (tax) collection devices than useful signs to motorists that there is a potentially dangerous bit of road ahead, which was the original idea behind speed cameras.
Aha! hang on. I told you these were old guidelines! Here are the last three sentences of the article:
"The Government's own figures show cash raised by speed cameras has more than doubled since Labour took office five years ago.
The number of camerarelated fixed penalty tickets has also more than doubled, to over 600,000 a year, and had been predicted to top three million in the next two years.
Prosecutions at magistrates courts have rocketed 16-fold in some areas, with the total across England and Wales soaring from 48,000 to more than 109,000."
Since LABOUR took office?!?!?!? It's an old article.
And my question hasn't been answered: on what evidence do you base your claim that harm has been done by JC's "whinging" about speed cameras?
There is no evidence of harm in this old article, only of guideline changes from several years ago.
Besides which, Clarkson is only one person "whinging" about speed cameras, alongside many others including motorists' support groups like the AA.
I don't object to speed cameras at all, but I do understand why some people campaigned for fairness in their siting. Some police forces, it appears, were using speed cameras in a way that was not intended as part of their purpose. That is manifestly unfair and probably, as MrB has said, completely unhelpful in reducing road accidents.