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People who zone out just looking in front of them.
You should be looking around constantly when driving. That's a GOOD thing. That's what an aware driver does. A distracted driver only looks in front. A speeding driver who is constantly looking around is infinitely better than a slow driver just looking forward. |
If you are being rear ended by tailgaters often, then you're the problem. Look at the common demoninator. Regarding signaling... I think you (and a whole lot of people) are doing it wrong. You don't just turn on your signal and expect people to let you in. You first look for an open window of space, THEN signal right as you go into the next lane. It's an indicator, not a request. Expecting people to let you in means you're totally doing it wrong. Pay attention to your total surroundings all the time, and it's not a problem. |
Lol |
Were your chatty passengers riding in the trunk? |
This happened to me once in Boston, on the street where I lived at the time, and it was so insane I still remember it. Here I haven't ever had anyone actually pull around on the left to turn right in front of me, but I have been honked at a lot in DC and Arlington for waiting for pedestrians to cross before I turned right. When they had the walk sign. It's the aggression. |
DP. It's happened to me several times in the past few years, too. It's horrifying, because you know they're heading straight toward a person in the crosswalk, and you know they are too impatient to wait 30 seconds. In one case, the driver was annoyed because I wasn't turning right on red at an intersection with a no-right-on-red sign, AND there was a person in the crosswalk. I think too many drivers have gotten used to the idea that they should never have to stop, wait, or even slow down when they're turning right. |
Bingo. The people who say this are the same ones that think that someone driving the speed limit on the beltway is the dangerous one because if everyone else is speeding/ being aggressive then the person following the law and driving safely is somehow the one putting everyone else at risk. Slowing down or braking before an intersection, especially if you can't see is not inherently dangerous or unpredictable behavior because pedestrians have the right of way at the crosswalk/ intersection and a car needs to be able to drive a speed that allows the driver to stop safely for a pedestrian. If you rear end someone who slows down to ensure he won't kill a pedestrian then you are a bad driver and absolutely at fault. |
There are studies that the faster you drive, the more narrow your field of peripheral vision is. Also, it is charitable to think that most speeding drivers (who are already breaking the law and driving aggressively because they are speeding) are looking around more than someone driving cautiously. |