PP wasn't having a medical emergency. |
If getting honked at makes them panic then they shouldn’t be driving at all. |
+1 |
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Totally agree OP. Also on my list:
-People who just stop in the right lane and block all the traffic behind them to wait to pick someone up (bonus points if they put on their flashers, as if that makes it ok) -People who cross multiple lanes of traffic without looking in order to not miss their turn -People who enter the intersection when they obviously aren't going to make it through before the light turns red, potentially blocking traffic coming the other way for most or all of their green light |
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Was in court to pay a ticket, guy was there because he BACKED DOWN an exit ramp.
He lost his license for a year. I wanted to clap. |
What do you mean he wouldn't "let" you pull over? Why didn't you slow down and let him pass? I can't picture what the scenario was here. |
| Glad you posted OP. I switch jobs and have been driving in to DC for about a month now. I cannot believe the number of people who don’t pull over in time and then try to merge at the last second. They are of course blocking the people behind them because they didn’t get over in time. It is not a mistake, it is willful. |
Sure, the first driver is in the wrong because they are plugging up the lane because they made a mistake. No argument there. I question what you are achieving by laying on your horn? I suppose venting your rage is better than kicking the dog when you get home. Otherwise, you're just escalating the situation and generally making the world less nice. |
Honking is immediate feedback for the incompetents and the a$$holes. People won’t honk at you as much if you drive better. |
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I think there are 2 schools of thought. People who think that horns should be used very rarely, and others who use it as a form of communication. I honk at someone probably once a day - people who do stupid dangerous maneuvers, people who veer over the line of their lane, people who are distracted and remain stopped after the light turns green, and yes, people who do selfish and dangerous things like block lanes if they made a mistake, and decide to make everyone behind them pay for their mistake.
If people honk at you more than rarely, it's time to look at what you did to cause that behavior. Be a good driver, and people won't honk at you. And as someone who's a pedestrian half the time, I don't mind honking. It makes me look towards the dangerous drivers who are being honked at - and make a point of avoiding them. |
+10000 this. |
| You honk once a day? Omg. I have honked twice in 21 years of driving—when someone was backing up into me in a parking lot, and merging into me on the highway. |
Grandma has joined the conversation. Most people honk more than once in 21 years. Do you even drive places? |
+1 Does PP even have a driver’s license?
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You need to honk more, unless you rarely drive. If you're honked at, more than you honk at, then you're probably a terrible driver. |