Anonymous wrote:I have observed more reckless and road rage-y driving in the last year than ever before in my life. I don’t know if it’s phones, post-Covid, or what, but people drive like they have a death wish for themselves and others. It’s very frightening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The scariest thing I've seen most recently is someone pulling out in front of me and then slamming on their brakes in hopes that I hit them. I've had kids in the car too. It's happened to me twice. No one in front of them. They just slam on the breaks. One person even started driving backwards into me and I had to turn off the road immediately. Have cameras on your cars. Crazy drivers out there.
I had this happen to me years ago too. It’s totally a scam!
Anonymous wrote:The scariest thing I've seen most recently is someone pulling out in front of me and then slamming on their brakes in hopes that I hit them. I've had kids in the car too. It's happened to me twice. No one in front of them. They just slam on the breaks. One person even started driving backwards into me and I had to turn off the road immediately. Have cameras on your cars. Crazy drivers out there.
Anonymous wrote:The scariest thing I've seen most recently is someone pulling out in front of me and then slamming on their brakes in hopes that I hit them. I've had kids in the car too. It's happened to me twice. No one in front of them. They just slam on the breaks. One person even started driving backwards into me and I had to turn off the road immediately. Have cameras on your cars. Crazy drivers out there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Speeding isn't the problem. Frustration with poor and inconsiderate drivers is the problem, as is distracted/drunk/stoned driving. People who don't know how to merge without disrupting main lane traffic flow, people who camp in the passing lanes virtuously adhering to the speed limit, people driving at or below the speed limit on roads which obviously are safe at speeds 10 -15 over the limit, bicyclists who partially block motorized traffic on single lane roads, and drivers blowing through red lights at high speed right after the lights change are all causes of road rage and of accidents. Merely driving 10-15 over the speed limit is not a meaningful contributor to accidents, unless also distracted/drunk/high or simply incompetent as a driver (e.g., driving too fast for conditions in bad weather).
A major related issue is the virtually nonexistent bar to obtaining a driver's license. Almost anyone, regardless of actual driving skill, can get a license, which is seen by most people as an inalienable right instead of a privilege which should be earned.
Agree. It would be a pain, but people should have to work harder to get and keep a license. It is so clear that many, many drivers (and not necessarily new ones) have no idea what the rules of the road are. And I'm so tired of people making bad moves that endanger everyone because they got in the wrong turn lane. No, you cannot swerve over into my lane abruptly or hold up a line of traffic while you try to merge into another lane because you don't want to turn around.
A good driver will occasionally miss their turn. A bad driver never will.
Yeah, that was a lesson I drilled into my daughter, if you’re in the turn lane or a committed lane just take it and figure out how to get back, don’t try and make a last-minute switch
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Speeding isn't the problem. Frustration with poor and inconsiderate drivers is the problem, as is distracted/drunk/stoned driving. People who don't know how to merge without disrupting main lane traffic flow, people who camp in the passing lanes virtuously adhering to the speed limit, people driving at or below the speed limit on roads which obviously are safe at speeds 10 -15 over the limit, bicyclists who partially block motorized traffic on single lane roads, and drivers blowing through red lights at high speed right after the lights change are all causes of road rage and of accidents. Merely driving 10-15 over the speed limit is not a meaningful contributor to accidents, unless also distracted/drunk/high or simply incompetent as a driver (e.g., driving too fast for conditions in bad weather).
A major related issue is the virtually nonexistent bar to obtaining a driver's license. Almost anyone, regardless of actual driving skill, can get a license, which is seen by most people as an inalienable right instead of a privilege which should be earned.
Agree. It would be a pain, but people should have to work harder to get and keep a license. It is so clear that many, many drivers (and not necessarily new ones) have no idea what the rules of the road are. And I'm so tired of people making bad moves that endanger everyone because they got in the wrong turn lane. No, you cannot swerve over into my lane abruptly or hold up a line of traffic while you try to merge into another lane because you don't want to turn around.
A good driver will occasionally miss their turn. A bad driver never will.
Anonymous wrote:Speeding isn't the problem. Frustration with poor and inconsiderate drivers is the problem, as is distracted/drunk/stoned driving. People who don't know how to merge without disrupting main lane traffic flow, people who camp in the passing lanes virtuously adhering to the speed limit, people driving at or below the speed limit on roads which obviously are safe at speeds 10 -15 over the limit, bicyclists who partially block motorized traffic on single lane roads, and drivers blowing through red lights at high speed right after the lights change are all causes of road rage and of accidents. Merely driving 10-15 over the speed limit is not a meaningful contributor to accidents, unless also distracted/drunk/high or simply incompetent as a driver (e.g., driving too fast for conditions in bad weather).
A major related issue is the virtually nonexistent bar to obtaining a driver's license. Almost anyone, regardless of actual driving skill, can get a license, which is seen by most people as an inalienable right instead of a privilege which should be earned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Other first world countries calculate average speed and hand out tickets based on it. It 1000% works at controlling speeding and aggressive driving. If you've ever traveled abroad and driven in a country where they monitor speeding by calculating averages, you can absolutely see the impact by how almost no one goes over the speed limit. This would also go a long way at controlling insurance costs that are exploding. It's time for the US to get with the program and do what the rest of the world is doing. Clearly cops don't enforce traffic laws anymore. Something needs to be done ASAP.
You sound like you're about 73, recently treated for prostate cancer, drive a Toyota Venza and have lived in the same mid-grade colonial in Burke since 1982.