Curmudgeon wrote:
Call me mad, (others have),
No, you just lack a little perspicacity my friend.
Curmudgeon wrote:
but I believe this last logic was dispensed direct from some "thought sphincter" somewhere, sometime.
Your belief is misplaced, you need to examine and think about (not just react with a gut instinct) what is being said in favour of deciding not to indicate when apropriate.
Curmudgeon wrote:
Not indicating stands no investigation at all, unless of course you are a Supreme Being who has 18 eyes positioned all around your head, can see through walls, trees, hedges, buildings... and you have the gift of seeing the future too. How can it be safer? How does indicating make me a bad guy? Maybe I'll just stop indicating just like 80% of drivers, and therefore become safer - maybe I can claim an insurance discount when I start not indicating.
A full explanation of the philosophy that underpins the concept lies elsewhere. Nobody is advocating thoughtless non-indicating; many drivers simply don't indicate when they should. Please don't confuse this with the planned decision not to indicate, the two behaviours are utterly different.
Conversely, many drivers indicate and just move anyway demonstrating an 'indication by rote' approach, this is the habit that the process of deciding
not indicate attempts to break.
In an urban environment, chances are that you will be indicating at most opportunities because there will invariably be something/someone there to benefit from it. If, in an otherwise empty environment, you are indicating 'just in case' then I'd suggest that anything that was close enough to you to benefit, you should have seen at the outset and your indication is a fallaceous 'safety valve' for that eventuality.
If you are on a deserted road, and arrive at a roundabout and your thorough observation, including checks of your blindspot where appropriate reveals that nobody else is around at all, would you indicate?