Abercrombie wrote:
Johnnytheboy wrote:
I think if you can't change lane without "lunging and lurching" maybe it's time you hung up the Clio keys.
Look, I expected some denial from the likes of you, but right-thinking people know that inappropriate lane changes are a large cause of frustration and accidents. And only the most hardcore of car-freaks and weirdos would deny that there are many, many incidents of inappropriate lane changes.
Could I have some clarity: are you calling
me a car-freak or a wierdo, or both?
And once again, who are "we"? Who are you speaking on behalf of? Or is it the 'royal we'?
Now I'm not denying for a minute that changing lane badly causes accidents, but it's a huge (and fallacious) logical leap from there to saying that one shouldn't change lane. The problem is not the lane change but the way it's done. Saying something is often done badly, so shouldn't be done at all is like banning music because some school violin players sound like they're torturing a cat. Think, man, you're not making sense this morning!
Besides, the less you do something, the less good at it you'll get. Practice, abercrombie, is the key! If you keep trying, eventually you'll get the hang of it. You might even come to take pride in your driving, you never know.
Quote:
So here's a couple of general rules, to help you all to drive well...
Following these rules may de-stress the odd car-hating know-it-all or day-out pensioner, but it will wind up everyone nearby that has to get from Over Here to Over There on a schedule, and take a lot of the joy out of driving for a lot of others. Many people (obviously not car-hating know-it-alls) get a great deal of joy out of driving quickly and smoothly, and being held up by someone trying to drive as slowly as possible in the outside lane will not lower the stress levels of anyone who drives for
a living.
Apart from your tendency to flippancy when at bay, why the emphasis on delaying your arrival at places? Would you recommend this to the drivers of delivery vehicles heading to your home or business?