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In Eastern PA around the turn of the century, using a signal was tipping your hand, and others would race you for that open slot. You know, they were afraid of losing time because somebody might gain a position ahead of them or something.
It's appalling beyond words, isn't it, that anyone over the age of eighteen doesn't comprehend that there's a social contract in the very dangerous enterprise of piloting north of a ton of metal at high velocities where you should try to be no one else doing the same's problem.You know, I don't recall a single word said about practical driving ethics in high school driver's ed. I've heard that a lot of that gets taught in the driving classes judges sentence drunks and speeders to take - but I'd say it was a profound mistake to leave that off for only the problem cases who got caught. Regular people going about their otherwise legal lives are out there changings three lanes at once -and a million other reckless things- and endangering everyone else on the road every day. -Some preemptive instruction to the kids might help a little...
I just know that more than once, I've been talking about the wisdom of slowing down before stoplights to try to hit the intersection rolling, or how speeding doesn't even pay off much except on long drives, and someone accused me of having taken one of those drunk driving classes.No - I'm miserly and think cars are dangerous; worked those things out for myself - but why they didn't tell me in Driver's Ed when I was 15, I don't know. It just seems like if you tell a roomful of kids "this doesn't get you there much sooner, but it DOES make it A LOT more dangerous for you and everyone on the road" a few will actually listen; more will remember a few years later. The level of anti-social driving habits might go down a little. I don't see a downside.If "this is immoral" didn't reach me back then, "this is the SMART play" should have...
You realize I was talking about slowing down to give the red light time to change, right? Most people power right up to the light, slam on the brakes, and have to accelerate from a dead stop when it turns green - slow down and let it turn before you get there, and you can blow the door off the impatient people starting from a dead stop.
I dunno - no downside to trying to plant an ethical POV into young minds to help influence the driving style decisions they make; especially as they age and get more patient/prudent.