Drivers as a reflection of our society

I know by the end of this post I am going to sound like an old man talking about the good old days, but you know what I don’t care!

Now my scooter keeps up with the traffic (top speed over 120Km/h most limits in Australia peak at 100Km/h), the only people I “slow down” are the ones that want to travel well over the speed limit and then I will always be in the slower lane. However I tend to leave a good three second gap in front of me as stopping distance.

Today on the way to work on my scooter I experienced the most stupid dangerous piece of driving I have seen in a long time. I was undertaken (passed on the left hand side, remember we drive on the left here) while trying to negotiate a left hand sweeping turn onto a on-ramp. The road was wet from last nights rain and I was taking the corner a little easier than normal and was off to the right to give myself room as I turn into the apex on the left. Just as I start to turn in a large family sedan appears on my left hand side. Now this is a single lane on-ramp, the car had two wheels on the verge (actually a bicycle lane) and the other two in the lane. Luckily I had given myself enough room that I did not run into the side of the car (turn in) or end up across a traffic island (not enough turn) so I did survive to swear loudly at the person. It was also lucky that she did not slide out on the corner due to the wet greasy conditions and take me and my scooter out because I had nowhere to go to avoid that.

Now do you know what advantage this person got from this extremely risking driving maneuver? Well it was five car spots… behind me! Just after passing me the person pushed into the right lane (nearly collecting a small compact car, obviously did not mater car or bike), I stayed in the left and in the stop-go traffic I was taken ahead of them quite a way.

So this person risked MY life and limb (I was traveling about 65Km/h) on there drive to work to hopefully save themselves what 20 seconds at most. Even then due to the traffic that time was lost. Now this was not some 19 year old “lead foot”, this was a “lady” in her 40’s driving to work for the day.

This is not a comment on old/young, male/female drivers but more a comment in general.

When did we as individuals stop thinking about the effects our actions have on other people?

This in most graphically shown on our roads, behind the anonymity of our vehicles we are impatient, aggressive and dangerous.

  • People a buying cars that protect themselves to the detriment of the environment and other road users (yes SUV owners).
  • People fit devices on the front of the car to reduce repair costs after small accidents, these same devices are shown to kill pedestrians much more effectively and at lower speeds than a car without a “Bull-Bar” or “Nudge-Bar”.
  • Drivers will double park, use disabled parks or parent parks just to save 20 meters extra walk to the shop.
  • Parents the stop next to and sometimes across a school crossing because they don’t have the time to find a park and walk in with the kids.

What happened to the days when people would:

  • smile and wait for the old lady to cross the road
  • give the learner driver just a little more room
  • let the lady with the kids in the back have the park that you “spotted first”

OK so call me the old man pining for the good old days. To be honest I think the world is full of individuals now and because of that I am unsure how a society can survive.

3 Replies to “Drivers as a reflection of our society”

  1. All I can say is: Welcome to riding a motorcycle. I rode a motorbike from when I was 17 until I was 31. I used to ride it to work and this sort of delibrate crap would happen at least once every couple of months. The “Surprised, I didn”t see you” incidents happened a lot more often. Get used to it. It’s not right, but it is the way it is.

    As a grumpy old man myself, I have to agree that the “make way for me, I’m important” attitude seems to be increasing.

    Merlin

  2. Can accept the fact I need to drive for them and how stupid they can be. Hence why I am typing today and not in hospital nursing injuries. I will continue to drive as if everyone is out to get me because it seems that 1 in 100 actually is.

    The attitude is increasing and not only on the road, bank queues, checkout queues (how many people do you see in the 8 items or less with over 20-30 items) and people accepting incorrect change only if it is in their favour.

    Welcome to the grumpy old man blog 🙂

  3. It’s Canberra as well.

    I’ve seen at least the same amount of road stupidity here as in Brisbane, even though the population of the former is less than a quarter of the latter. I am unsure as to how much the “rural placement” of Canberra has to do with this.

    I once saw a guy (in a 4WD, but you already knew that) stopped (red lights in all directions) at one of the many broad Canberra intersections, in the right-most “going straight” lane, wait for the green “turn right” arrow to come on and then proceed to creep out (around a refuge island, which means he was in the path of other cars coming turning right from the opposite direction) and turn right, cutting across the _actual_ “right turn” lane. Now what the fool didn’t notice (but everyone else stopped at the intersection did) was the the first car in the “right turn” lane that he was cutting off was a police car, which had fortunately hesitated and was now patiently waiting for him to complete his stupendous maneouver. Now if he had obeyed the rules and u-turned 150m down the road at the next intersection, it probably would have cost him, < 90 seconds, rather than say > 200 dollars.

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