True, PM. Perhaps rather than 'leering', I should have used the example of someone following a woman to her car, making suggestive remarks, and then following her in her car to her house. I wonder if that's a crime in other countries? I can't really think of it happening where I'm from. I imagine if it happened to someone back home they would call the police and maybe try to get a restraining order.
I figure this is the kind of country where traffic policing now no longer involves actual police. There are red light cameras and fixed speed cameras, but no actual police.
Is this a country where there a random speed cameras, or fixed speed cameras?
Is this a country where people are affraid of talking on their mobile while driving, in case they get a ticket?
Are people here scared about driving without their seatbelt, in case they get a ticket?
And people would never dare to let their kids jump about in the front and back of the car rather than buckling them up?
Honestly, if the police *wanted* to crack down on reckless drivers, they would. But based on the most basic of observations, you can only assume that road safety here is a token gesture.
True, PM. Perhaps rather than 'leering', I should have used the example of someone following a woman to her car, making suggestive remarks, and then following her in her car to her house. I wonder if that's a crime in other countries? I can't really think of it happening where I'm from. I imagine if it happened to someone back home they would call the police and maybe try to get a restraining order.
I figure this is the kind of country where traffic policing now no longer involves actual police. There are red light cameras and fixed speed cameras, but no actual police.
Is this a country where there a random speed cameras, or fixed speed cameras?
Is this a country where people are affraid of talking on their mobile while driving, in case they get a ticket?
Are people here scared about driving without their seatbelt, in case they get a ticket?
And people would never dare to let their kids jump about in the front and back of the car rather than buckling them up?
Honestly, if the police *wanted* to crack down on reckless drivers, they would. But based on the most basic of observations, you can only assume that road safety here is a token gesture.