Yes, and I also saw him get taken to the cleaners by Justin Wilson in Formula 3000.djos wrote:You never saw him race in the Junior categories and for the Mercedes Sports Car program then I take it?
Yes, and I also saw him get taken to the cleaners by Justin Wilson in Formula 3000.djos wrote:You never saw him race in the Junior categories and for the Mercedes Sports Car program then I take it?
As we've all consistently pointed out, it does not say that at all.vall wrote:for me the rule is clear: if you have SC during the last lap, this means race finishes under SC and the racing is over. This is what 40.13 means.
what else does it mean then? Why is this rule there? For me it is obvious. I hope the Brawn-Shummy trick will not work this time. It worked too much in the past.segedunum wrote:As we've all consistently pointed out, it does not say that at all.vall wrote:for me the rule is clear: if you have SC during the last lap, this means race finishes under SC and the racing is over. This is what 40.13 means.
I'm afraid saying "What else does it mean?" and "It is obvious" is not how the world works. The world is based on clear and accurate communication, especially when it comes to rules and regulations. When many rules and regulations are legally accountable that is especially so.vall wrote:what else does it mean then? Why is this rule there? For me it is obvious.
What may or may not have happened in the past has no bearing here. You've just discredited yourself.I hope the Brawn-Shummy trick will not work this time. It worked too much in the past.
No policemen? Thanks for this clarification. By the way, I was referring to the green lights being inferior to rule 4.13 and not the safety car... To answer your question, ganja.WhiteBlue wrote:What did you smoke? There are no policemen in F1. They are called safety car, and we have covered that item.Moanlower wrote:When i'm arriving at a crossroad with traffic lights on green and a policeman in the middle of the road guiding the traffic and tells me to stop I have to stop even though it shows green. Some rules are simply inferior to others.
Unless you have a written rule for that it is utterly meaningless.Mahalollama wrote:The 'spirit of the law' - meaning the race was OVER!
40.13 does not override anything. It clearly states "If the race ends whilst the safety car is deployed". It wasn't. It's as simple as that. I suggest you go and read exactly what 40.13 actually says.Moanlower wrote:No policemen? Thanks for this clarification. By the way, I was referring to the green lights being inferior to rule 4.13 and not the safety car...
Actually, the letter of the law (rules) are often manipulated to contradict the original intent, or spirit, of a law (rule). It's called "gaming the system". That's where someone uses the letter of the law to achieve a specific result. Original intent of the law be damned.segedunum wrote:Unless you have a written rule for that it is utterly meaningless.Mahalollama wrote:The 'spirit of the law' - meaning the race was OVER!
you should quote the entire sentence and not a part of it. "If the race ends whilst the safety car is deployed it will enter the pit lane at the end of the last lap and the cars will take the chequered flag as normal without overtaking."segedunum wrote:40.13 does not override anything. It clearly states "If the race ends whilst the safety car is deployed". It wasn't. It's as simple as that. I suggest you go and read exactly what 40.13 actually says.Moanlower wrote:No policemen? Thanks for this clarification. By the way, I was referring to the green lights being inferior to rule 4.13 and not the safety car...
I'd refer you to this TED talk from awhile back...sknguy wrote:Actually, the letter of the law (rules) are often manipulated to contradict the original intent, or spirit, of a law (rule). It's called "gaming the system". That's where someone uses the letter of the law to achieve a specific result. Original intent of the law be damned.segedunum wrote:Unless you have a written rule for that it is utterly meaningless.Mahalollama wrote:The 'spirit of the law' - meaning the race was OVER!
Often it is that "specific result" which conflicts with the original intent. So... writing a rule doesn't guarantee that everyone will follow it. The letter of the law can be manipulated to achieve any outcome that anyone so chooses it to mean. That's why it's very important that there be some common understanding of the original intent (spirit) of a rule, or law. It is intellectually impossible to write a rule for every situational iteration imaginable. If we did write such rules there would be no point to the sport and we'd all be either rules players, or there would be no sport left to play.
People shrug off the importance of the spirit and original intent of rules. But they are much more important than people think. If you don't respect original intent then everyone should just write their own rules. All rules or laws need to find a balance between protecting against anarchy (lawlessness) and allowing for growth (R&D). Just my thoughts, lol. Sorry for being off topic.
I think thaT IS THE ONLY POINT THAT people who agree and disagree with the penalty can/would agree upon... but it has been noted that there is no such provision in the rules... if he is guilty than that must be the punishment...Jersey Tom wrote:To be honest the 20 sec penalty is prob a bit much. Shoulda just bumped MS back down to 7th.