You're the one bitching about it, aren't you?
If the owner of that street
Your disjointed LIEbertarian response is hilarious. Who "owns" the streets in the towns and cities across the United States? When and where can I see signs along town and city streets stating that driving 110 mph is disallowed?
I'm pretty sure speed limit signs look somewhat like this, all over North America...
Individual: the natural right to do anything that doesn't violate anyone else's rights - such as make, sell, buy, or use drugs.
In your lifetime, when was that legal?
Relevance?
You're the one bitching about it, aren't you?
No, I'm the one answering your original question.
Does driving 110 mph down a residential street violate anyone's rights?
If the owner of that street has disallowed that (and, for public owners, the disallowing is reasonably related to the protection of rights such as the right to not be run over) then such actions violate the owner's rights.
Your disjointed
Only in the eyes of semiliterate Drug Warriors.
LIEbertarian response is hilarious. Who "owns" the streets in the towns and cities across the United States?
The people through their local governments. Did you really not know that?
When and where can I see signs along town and city streets stating that driving 110 mph is disallowed?
Here's one: