I assume you mean paying for a license, although that's meeting you more than half way given the goalpoasts in this discussion seem to be pretty mobile.rubberman wrote: What some people will do to avoid paying for something.
Every study into the matter settles on the figure that 4 out of 5 incidents between cars and cyclists have the motorist at-fault. The road toll is ~1200 per annum, almost entirely made up of licensed drivers colliding with one another, or stationary objects. Presumably these motorists all have paid for a drivers license, yet it seemingly does little for the "safety of their behaviour"?
Do you really think a licensing regime addresses non-compliance? Do you think clowns who blow through red lights on a push bike do so because they don't know that it's an offense to do so? SAPOL announced today they caught 48 drivers a day using a mobile phone behind the wheel in February. That's a staggering 17,000 people a year - and only represents the percentage that SAPOL are catching - most of whom, it is reasonable to assume, are "paying for" their right to use the road. 15 a day are being caught not wearing seat belts, the single biggest contributor to your chances of dying in a crash. But it's ok because they've "paid to use the roads"? What behavioural change are you suggesting would come from a licensing regime?