Over here, P-Plates* are basically easy targets for police officers. This seems to go up if you happen to be:
-Male.
-Under 25.
-Driving a Holden Commodore or Mitsubishi Lancer.
Now while P-Platers over here are subject to a number of restricted conditions (YMMV on what those conditions actually ARE), the P-Platers are often pulled over in times when a fully-licenced driver is CLEARLY flouting the law. They ignore him/her to go after the P-Plater.
Example: Random Breath Testing spots. Across all states, P-Platers are meant to have a zero BAC. Other states vary in what the limit is for fully-licenced drivers (usually .05). The cops will be happy to wave in the P-Plater who's driving absolutely normal, but will quite happily ignore the VERY drunk driver in the car right behind them who will more than likely get away with it.
The second those P-Plates come off however, you're suddenly able to fly under the radar and basically do what you want (to a point)
(You'd actually be surprised at the fact that the people on P-Plates who DO want to flout the law are either too dumb or too proud to take their P-Plates OFF their car )
*P-Plates are basically the halfway point between a learner driver and a fully-fledged driver. Usually this means you can drive solo, but you're subject to a bundle of restrictions. Those restrictions vary between states.
-Male.
-Under 25.
-Driving a Holden Commodore or Mitsubishi Lancer.
Now while P-Platers over here are subject to a number of restricted conditions (YMMV on what those conditions actually ARE), the P-Platers are often pulled over in times when a fully-licenced driver is CLEARLY flouting the law. They ignore him/her to go after the P-Plater.
Example: Random Breath Testing spots. Across all states, P-Platers are meant to have a zero BAC. Other states vary in what the limit is for fully-licenced drivers (usually .05). The cops will be happy to wave in the P-Plater who's driving absolutely normal, but will quite happily ignore the VERY drunk driver in the car right behind them who will more than likely get away with it.
The second those P-Plates come off however, you're suddenly able to fly under the radar and basically do what you want (to a point)
(You'd actually be surprised at the fact that the people on P-Plates who DO want to flout the law are either too dumb or too proud to take their P-Plates OFF their car )
*P-Plates are basically the halfway point between a learner driver and a fully-fledged driver. Usually this means you can drive solo, but you're subject to a bundle of restrictions. Those restrictions vary between states.
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