Inattentive/ bad drivers are becoming more prevalent

Bretrick

Well-known Member
Yesterday I twice observed drivers going through red lights forcing the correct driver to stop lest a collision occurred.
Today, on a suburban street, an oncoming car was heading directly for me and had to swerve severely to avoid hitting me.
I need to become even more cautious to avoid becoming a statistic.
 

Whilst driving yesterday, I was in the outside lane (nearest the gutter) when this other car tried to push in front of me to get
into my lane, (no indicator light showing). I blasted him with the horn and the car behind me did the same. This idiot didn't
show any indication I was there, lucky I slowed down to let him in, and I looked to see where he was going, and it was into
the driveway of the local hotel. He could have caused two accidents.
 
I think it's far worse in America :(

I can drive anywhere at anytime and see more traffic violations than I have the ability to document. If the police would make any effort on enforcing traffic laws, no city or county would ever have a lack of funds for anything.
 

Whilst driving yesterday, I was in the outside lane (nearest the gutter) when this other car tried to push in front of me to get
into my lane, (no indicator light showing). I blasted him with the horn and the car behind me did the same. This idiot didn't
show any indication I was there, lucky I slowed down to let him in, and I looked to see where he was going, and it was into
the driveway of the local hotel. He could have caused two accidents.
Also yesterday, on a suburban street, I was behind a woman who was driving 15 km below the speed limit, constantly, every few seconds, looking left and down to the passenger seat.
Eventually I had enough and pressed my horn for more than 10 seconds.
F*cking people like this deserve a smack in the chops
 
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IMO it’s all a symptom of the world we live in.

It’s all about me…if you don’t get caught, it didn’t happen…we need law enforcement to protect us from the other guy…

I notice it when I’m out for my morning walks and the school drop off parents are in the neighborhood, they seem to be rushed and distracted to the point that they become dangerous to anything in their path.

These same people would be shocked at similar unsafe behavior towards their children and would all be quick to tell you what excellent drivers and fine upstanding members of the community they are.
 
One that gets me riled is people that don't know how to merge onto a freeway. There can be space ahead of you, and space behind you, but they just push their way into your space thinking they have the right of way, and you need to change lanes to avoid them hitting you. I even had a UPS driver blow his horn at me as he was merging onto the freeway I was on. Mind you, there was no one even close to me in front or back. I had to change lanes to avoid him driving over the top of me. I called the company and reported him.
 
Police departments have been stretched thin. Many PD’s are hiring, but finding qualified candidates have become troublesome. The Pennsylvania State Police has lowered their qualifications to become a Cadet. They no longer require a candidate to have a college degree, but other than that, candidates must still pass equivalency tests, along with other testing.

Many police departments have been forced to keep their Officers on patrol, instead of watching for driving infractions at stop signs and red lights. When I would run a 2-hour radar sting, I could easily write a dozen citations. Speeding is probably the most violated driving law.

Cellphones have also increased the rates of accidents, but overall, here in Pennsylvania, driving fatalities have dropped over the past 2 years. However, police will stay on patrol in high accident areas. Police watch for drivers running red lights and doing crazy things like crossing the center line or running off the side of the road and onto the berm. This is usually a sign that the driver is texting, which in this state is unlawful.

Police stay on patrol to keep a police presence in neighborhoods with high crime levels or as part of their territory to keep crime down. Having a police presence does lower crime. Criminals are less likely to attempt a home invasion, auto theft or robbery if they know police drive through the neighborhood.

If people would be more responsible and obey the laws on the highways, everyone would be a lot safer, but that’s probably a pipe dream. I was driving a ghost car (unmarked) on an interstate going the limit of 65 mph when a BMW past me going 88 mph. I chased him for almost 2 miles before he crashed exiting the freeway on the ramp by failing to negotiate the curve. The driver almost died, but did have some broken bones and internal injuries when his vehicle flipped over.

And then we have the road rage drivers. I really don’t have much to say about them, but they are probably angry people to begin with. No one has entitlement on the highway. We get calls all the time about road rage. My suggestion is to install a dash cam for your protection. Road rage drivers do some very terrifying things, like pulling a gun. If you have a dash cam and record the person doing something like that, we can and most likely will arrest that person. Both men and women are driving using road rage. Be careful out there.
 

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