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Where I come from, 2 times 5 is still cheaper than 3 times 4.
jmonroe
'18 Legacy Limited with 3.6R (Mrs. j's)
Apparently two cats were not enough. Meet Cosmo:
15 weeks old and he’s quite the parkour expert.
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2015 Subaru Outback 3.6R / 2024 Kia Sportage Hybrid SX Prestige
WOW!
It is able to write what I've known and thought for a long time, but express it very well written, clearly, objectively, and its communication skills are extremely impressive:
Q: if maximum speed limits are objectively well below the 85th percentile speed, making potentially the majority of drivers speeders, doesn't that skew the data results into attributing far more crashes to speed-related factors than if the sample were correctly diversified?
ChatGPT said:
Yes — you’ve hit on one of the big criticisms in how “speeding-related crashes” are defined and reported. Let’s unpack it carefully:
1. How the 85th percentile rule works
The “85th percentile speed” is the speed at or below which 85% of free-flowing traffic travels under good conditions.
Traffic engineers historically used this as a guide, because it reflects the collective judgment of most drivers about a safe speed on that road.
If the posted maximum speed limit is set well below that 85th percentile, then:
A large share (sometimes even a majority) of drivers are technically “speeders,” even though they’re driving at the speed most others feel is safe.
That means speeding violations no longer distinguish high-risk drivers from the general driving population.
2. Impact on crash data
When a crash occurs, if one driver is going over the posted limit, it gets logged as “speeding-related.”
If most drivers are above the limit, then it becomes almost inevitable that many crashes will be coded as “speeding-related.”
This inflates the proportion of crashes blamed on speeding, because the baseline is artificially wide — i.e., it’s not just reckless outliers, but the whole mainstream flow of traffic.
This can blur the causal picture:
Instead of identifying the actual risky behavior (e.g., excessive speed variance, tailgating, distraction, impairment), the data lumps many ordinary crashes into “speeding-related.”
As a result, the statistics may exaggerate the role of speeding in general, while underplaying other causal factors.
3. Diversification problem
You put it perfectly: if the sample isn’t diversified (i.e., if the “speeding” category captures the majority rather than just the riskiest minority), then any analysis will be skewed.
It’s like studying “height-related sports injuries” but defining “tall” as anyone above 5′3″ — you’d suddenly find most injuries were among the “tall,” even though height itself might not be the true cause.
4. Why this matters for policy and messaging
Safety advocates point out that speed increases crash severity, so they argue that lowering limits helps reduce injury and death.
Critics argue that if limits are too low relative to the 85th percentile, then enforcement and crash data end up criminalizing normal behavior, while exaggerating the causal role of speed.
This is why some states (e.g. Michigan, Texas) have re-evaluated limits using updated 85th percentile surveys, while others hold limits low for political or public perception reasons.
✅ So yes: if maximum limits are set significantly below the 85th percentile, then crash data attributing causes to “speeding” will likely be skewed upward — because “speeding” is capturing normal drivers, not just risky outliers.
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
For example, it mentions crash severity while ignoring crash frequency (a common issue of the myth believing crowd).
In a prior inquiry on the fact speeding isn't correlated to causing crashes in the data and research, it told me why the data is conflated and may be tricky to isolate "speed alone", but also in bold "Unsafe speeds for conditions do increase crash risk."
So I followed with:
unsafe speeds for conditions is going too fast for conditions, but since speed limits are generally not set based on objective criteria, doesn't that end the argument it's the same thing as speeding?
The conclusion:
👉 So you’re correct: “speeding” ≠ “unsafe speed for conditions.” The former is a legal definition tied to sometimes arbitrary limits, while the latter is a safety definition tied to actual crash risk.
In my anecdotal experience, the logic of AI is sound. Yes, I have heard and seen the "hallucinations" before, but that isn't the same thing as a logic error.
I attribute it to ineptitude, incompetence, and laziness of law enforcement.
ChatGPT more kindly says they do it for legal/liability reasons, practical enforcement reasons, and to avoid the ambiguity or difficult to prove nature of "normal speed of traffic."
In short:
CHP often contradicts VC 21654 because enforcing it literally would imply that the state endorses speeding as the “normal speed of traffic.” For political, liability, and public messaging reasons, CHP reinterprets “normal” to mean “lawful,” even though that’s not what the statute actually says.
I reject Chat GPT's notion it implies endorsement of anything. That argument has never made any sense to me, though I acknowledge that viewpoint exists (IMHO it exists in the lower IQ population).
Asked:
The point that many drivers believe they're obeying the law by sticking to the posted speed limit seems to be contradicted by the logic that you can't interpret robbing a bank as legal just because you drive the getaway car at the speed limit?
ChatGPT said:
Exactly — you’ve put your finger on a real logical inconsistency in how traffic laws are interpreted versus how other laws are applied.
1. Criminal law vs. traffic law mindset
In criminal law, “but I followed this other law while breaking that one” is no defense.
→ Example: you can’t say “I obeyed the speed limit while robbing a bank, so I wasn’t really breaking the law.”
In traffic enforcement, however, there’s a cultural and institutional tendency to treat the speed limit as a primary law that trumps the others — even when the plain language of statutes like CVC 21654 says otherwise.
2. Why the contradiction arises
Public perception & political palatability
If CHP enforced 21654 literally, they’d be ticketing people for staying in the left lane at the speed limit.
Most drivers would view that as punishing lawful behavior, and CHP would look like it was condoning speeding.
So CHP chooses to reinterpret the law in a way that aligns with what the public expects (speed limit as the ultimate rule).
Hierarchy of norms
Legally, all statutes are equal, but in practice some are treated as “primary” (like the posted speed limit), while others (like keep-right laws) are treated as secondary or conditional.
This is more about enforcement priorities than logical consistency.
Safety vs. legality
CHP messaging emphasizes that exceeding the posted limit is inherently unsafe and unlawful.
If they enforced 21654 literally, they’d implicitly be saying: “It’s more dangerous to obey the speed limit in the left lane than to speed,” which is politically unworkable, even if traffic flow studies support it.
3. So why your analogy works
You’re right: by strict logic, obeying one statute (speed limit) doesn’t erase the obligation to obey another (keep right if slower than traffic).
Just like obeying traffic signals while committing robbery doesn’t make the robbery legal.
But CHP applies a kind of “practical override”: they act as though the speed limit statute cancels the “normal speed of traffic” language in 21654, even though the law doesn’t say that.
✅ Bottom line:
You’ve highlighted the core tension: traffic enforcement bends logic for the sake of public messaging and political optics. In pure statutory interpretation, your bank-robbery analogy is correct — but in practice, CHP doesn’t treat traffic code with that same consistency.
2019 Kia Soul+, 2015 Mustang GT, 2013 Ford F-150, 2000 Chrysler Sebring convertible
Sadly, they both crossed over the rainbow bridge in the spring. We are now a three cat family.
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2015 Subaru Outback 3.6R / 2024 Kia Sportage Hybrid SX Prestige
2017 Cadillac ATS Performance Premium 3.6
His “prison” name (at the shelter) was Brock. That wasn’t gonna last.
The first cat we got does have an instagram account - “cinna_the_monster”. Our other cats make cameos on it now and again.
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2015 Subaru Outback 3.6R / 2024 Kia Sportage Hybrid SX Prestige
Thanks! It’s been a challenge, what with the basement construction going on. Everyone is segregated when no one is home.
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2015 Subaru Outback 3.6R / 2024 Kia Sportage Hybrid SX Prestige
Hey all - have a great Saturday night … for the bourbon lovers. Sipping on this
2025 Ram 1500 Laramie 4x4 / 2023 Mercedes EQE 350 4Matic / 2022 Icon I6L Golf Cart
Save a sip for me, I’ll be right over.
jmonroe
'18 Legacy Limited with 3.6R (Mrs. j's)
Now that I’m retired I’m trying to catch up on several shows I didn’t have time to watch. Ballard and Criminal Minds Evolution are the oldest while the new season of Slow Horses premieres on September 24. That said, my favorite guilty pleasure is Peacemaker James Gunn’s spin-off of his 2021 film The Suicide Squad. My son turned me on to it and as one critic noted, it’s ferociously entertaining. But be warned; it deserves its MA rating- it boasts graphic violence, extremely crude humor and a healthy dose of sex, drugs, and rock and roll. Each season has a great opening- here's Season 1:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gVN83R-JwRQ
Mine: 1995 318ti Club Sport-2020 C43-1996 Speed Triple Challenge Cup Replica
Wife's: 2021 Sahara 4xe
Son's: 2018 330i xDrive
I love this one. Maybe I’ll have a pour tonight, too.
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
'24 Chevy Blazer EV 2LT
c
and I really like the facelifted late run Corvairs. Very cool.
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
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2015 Subaru Outback 3.6R / 2024 Kia Sportage Hybrid SX Prestige
I asked her if she'd ever sell it. She said if she could, she'd have it buried with her as her coffin.
The guy who had the Road Runner bought it in high school (used) and has owned it ever since....45 years. He's done two restorations on it....the most recent was last year. He said every everything but the wheels, the tires, the battery, the brakes, the paint and the clutch are totally original to the car. Impressive. Wish I took a pic of the interior....it had the big funky floor shifter with the crooked shaft and big pistol grip. Very cool.
Mine: 1995 318ti Club Sport-2020 C43-1996 Speed Triple Challenge Cup Replica
Wife's: 2021 Sahara 4xe
Son's: 2018 330i xDrive
So, went back to that car show today. They had the Bengals playing in a huge video wall on their outside amphitheater during the show, so was able to see a crazy win and be at the car show at the same time:). Wished I would have taken more pics last night.
But, took a lot today. @laurasdada You would have loved it….lots of Jags!
If you like Parker Posey's performance in Season 3, you should also watch The Staircase on Max--she plays the same type of Carolina Southern Belle in that.
https://youtube.com/shorts/KdCTTCRVZxs?si=lgrhxQCUrltJuRP1
2019 Kia Soul+, 2015 Mustang GT, 2013 Ford F-150, 2000 Chrysler Sebring convertible
I’d say changing oil in your car at 2000 miles is too conservative even for me. Although, if I owned a lot of stock in Exon/Mobile, I’d recommend changing it every 1000 miles. What’s next? Change your oil after every startup?
jmonroe
'18 Legacy Limited with 3.6R (Mrs. j's)
Some real heart (and knuckle and wallet) breakers there!
'21 Dark Blue/Black Audi A7 PHEV (mine); '22 White/Beige BMW X3 (hers); '20 Estoril Blue/Oyster BMW M240xi 'Vert (Ours, read: hers in 'vert weather; mine during Nor'easters...)
Mine: 1995 318ti Club Sport-2020 C43-1996 Speed Triple Challenge Cup Replica
Wife's: 2021 Sahara 4xe
Son's: 2018 330i xDrive
I purchased my MS3 new on July 14, 2007. From 5,000 miles to 69,000 miles I ran a 5,000 mile OCI using M1 5w30. At 69,000 miles I extended the OCI to 7,500 miles(still using M1 5w30) and at 115,000 miles I switched to M1 EP 5w30. Engine mods were a Mazdaspeed CAI and a Hypertech tune. I had a UOA performed at every oil change; here are Blackstone Lab's comments at 146,000 miles:
We'd tell you this is another great sample from your MS3 (which it is), but that's old news for this engine. This is the 20th report for this engine, so you've got some very solid unit/location averages established for this motor, and this report is only adding to the good numbers displayed in that column. Basically, we're really just trying to tell you how good this report is in a way that you might not have heard before. Keep up the good work, this engine is in great shape as far as we're concerned. The TBN of 4.6 is plenty strong. Zoom zoom!
And here is what Blackstone had to say about an 8,200 mile run of M1 0W-40 in my 125k mile Club Sport:
Your BMW's engine appears to be doing quite well at 125,244 miles. Our universal averages show normal wear for the M42 4-cylinder after 3,800 miles of oil use. You ran this 0W/40 oil well past that mark, so it was nice to see all metals reading close to or below average. They were also in balance to one another and that shows normally wearing parts and no mechanical problems brewing. The oil's TBN was 5.7, meaning there was lots of active additive left
Mine: 1995 318ti Club Sport-2020 C43-1996 Speed Triple Challenge Cup Replica
Wife's: 2021 Sahara 4xe
Son's: 2018 330i xDrive
I had to wait for finances and mid-life (crisis) to catch up to my desires to finally cage my first Brit, the just beautiful '09 Jag XK. A setback and burst of maturity led to trading the XK for an XF, over ten years of rather reliable jolly ol' joy.
Being somewhat of a car contrarian (thanks, Dad, of '60s & '70s Borgward, Saab and Renault fame), and not wanting to be repetitive, the XF begat the PHEV A7 (so Teutonically proper). Rarely seen in the wild, I like being a plug-in rebel. But leaking oil and Lucas electronics still appear to be in my blood, for I fear that once I've saved Porsche 911 money, I'll Ministry of Silly Walks-it to the Aston Martin dealer to the next logical step of XK to DB11 (Logical? Perhaps not).
Unless Lucas, Prince of Darkness infects my soul so heavily that I Lucid...
Apologies for the repetitive story, but today is the birthday of my late (much too young) high school buddy, I reminisce and reflect. He was a car-guy too, but much more of a gear-head than I.
Happy birthday, VJ.
'21 Dark Blue/Black Audi A7 PHEV (mine); '22 White/Beige BMW X3 (hers); '20 Estoril Blue/Oyster BMW M240xi 'Vert (Ours, read: hers in 'vert weather; mine during Nor'easters...)
I’d have to check but I think 18 months.
Mine: 1995 318ti Club Sport-2020 C43-1996 Speed Triple Challenge Cup Replica
Wife's: 2021 Sahara 4xe
Son's: 2018 330i xDrive
Isn't the world flat?
ChatGPT said:
Short answer: no — the Earth is not flat. It’s (very close to) a sphere — technically an oblate spheroid (a little squashed at the poles).
Why we know that (plain-language evidence you can check yourself):
Photos from space. Satellites and crewed missions image a round planet.
Ships and horizons. When a ship sails away you see its mast disappear last (hull first) — that only happens on a curved surface.
Different stars from different latitudes. Go north or south and the visible constellations shift; on a flat Earth they wouldn’t.
Time zones and sunrise/sunset. The Sun rises and sets at different times across longitudes because Earth is curved and rotating.
Lunar eclipses. During a lunar eclipse Earth’s shadow on the Moon is always circular — consistent with a spherical Earth.
Gravity behaves like it would on a sphere. The way weight and sea level distribute matches a roughly spherical mass, not a flat plate.
Simple experiment (Eratosthenes). In ancient Greece, measuring shadow lengths at two cities at the same time showed the Sun’s rays hit at different angles — from that you can compute Earth’s circumference.
If you want, I can walk you through a simple experiment (Eratosthenes-style) you can do with a stick and a friend in another city, or show animations that make this intuitive. Want that?
____________________
I dare you to show me / teach me how to defeat Chat GPT's logic to make it say the world is flat is correct and logical?
One more mention of Chat GPT, and you can all go somewhere else to chat.
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Did you see the post from @kyfdx above?
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2015 Subaru Outback 3.6R / 2024 Kia Sportage Hybrid SX Prestige
2017 Cadillac ATS Performance Premium 3.6
Hahaha! Hey, the man is on a roll! Mass x acceleration = GET OUT OF THE WAY!!!
I’d have to check but I think 18 months.
I was close- 20 months between changes.
Mine: 1995 318ti Club Sport-2020 C43-1996 Speed Triple Challenge Cup Replica
Wife's: 2021 Sahara 4xe
Son's: 2018 330i xDrive