You do know police drivers don't have to use blue lights to exceed the speed limit? Just saying. The exemption is in law not the switch that turns them on.
Also, I've not said anything until now, but I'm interested in why you seem to hate the thin blue line so much? No one ever said even the best police drivers aren't flawless, just as no one is, including yourself. The way you bleat on, you'd think you've never, ever made a mistake behind the wheel.
OK. I said this thread was speeding up. Let's see if it can go round corners too.
My own opinion of my abilities behind the wheel? I described them earlier. Mistakes? Many. I've always been hypercritical of my own driving. Doubtless lots of other mistakes as well I didn't notice. But I've also been lucky enough to be able to compare my own driving with others who were really good at it and marvel at what is possible. That's the only difference I'd claim between me and other people here. As for 'bleating on' [I bet that's not a phrase you've ever written in your notebook!], was that meant to be the same sort of litotes I used when I watched a video of a driver who apparently didn't have to abort any manoeuvre he'd begun as opposed to another driver who did? I didn't comment on either speed or blue lights.
But you've made me think why I seem to hate the thin blue line? I'm a middle aged, middle class, parent to three grown up kids, a homeowner, a business proprietor, never even been threatened with arrest for anything, victim over the years of burglary, theft and a staff member being racially assaulted. If policing is by consent I'm the sort of person who should consent and you lost mine years ago!
FWIW, I have absolutely no beef with traffic police. I've chatted with a few over my 40 years of driving enthusiastically and in that time I've collected one 3-point speeding ticket which was given and received with knowing smiles that we both knew what we were dealing with.
But my dealings with the police as a victim reporting a crime or a witness have always been deeply unsatisfactory, marked by incompitence, beaureaucratic failure, laziness and outright cowardice ["Was the alarm all right, sir? We were waiting across the road if you got into any trouble!]. The best I've ever experienced was when I had to make my own citizen's arrest of a thief who returned to the scene of the crime, that a DS wandered over from the station to take the thief into custody.
So the continuous disasterous PR and press reports of the polices' behaviour towards others sadden but never surprise me. I suspect I've grown older and wiser and better informed rather than the police behaving worse but I'm definitely one of those millions of middle class non-revolutionaries who think that if a society gets the police we deserve, we're screwed!
It's not very original to state that the police have long been the nasty public face of the state's disconnect from its citizens but I wonder if Blairite double speak is at play too - I mean both Eric and Tony; 1984 vs 1997. When Police organisations were Police Forces, they seemed to offer a degree of public service. These days they've been redesignated as Police Services and lots of us nowadays only ever see force!