Hoop66 wrote: » I was driving from Leamington Spa towards Banbury/M40.
OldNotWIse wrote: » Yes, my parents were nearly wiped out by "boyracers" a number of years ago. Thankfully my Dad was going slow at the time. Mam ended up in hospital for months. No sympathy when these f.uckers go out and smear themselves on the road, but I feel sorry for the people coming towards them.
Graces7 wrote: » Took great delight recently in keeping a boyracer behind me on the winding road from Killarney as far as Derricunnihy... he huffed and roared, headlights full on so I slowed right down like the little old lady I am....enjoyed it and anyways he was so close I could not have safely pulled in until the big layby there.. I kept braking but he took no notice :P Odd that! He then exploded off up the road.... what a stench
ScummyMan wrote: » Driving back to college this evening, narrow enough road between Tipp Town and Limerick with bends everywhere. Got caught behind a Corsa going slow enough, not crazy slow mind you, around 70km/h. Some lunatic stuck behind me decides to overtake both me and the Corsa, coming towards a bend on a solid white line. Of course just as he was passing me a car comes round the corner towards him. He had nowhere to go it looked like there was a head on at speed coming. I slammed on the brakes and he managed to squeeze in between me and the Corsa and skid into the hard shoulder, but there was literally inches in it. Not going to lie it shook me up a bit, I'm not driving long and that's the closest I've come to a crash. I can only imagine how terrifying an actual crash is, anyone have any similar stories?
twin_beacon wrote: » people slowing down like what you did there are also the cause of a lot of accidents, people get frustrated being stuck behind a slow car and try to overtake when the usually wouldn't. If the full beams were on, stick on your fog light, then you are only pissing off the car behind you, and not the queue of cars that could be piling up behind.
Mozzeltoff wrote: » Agreed. That kind of driving just comes across as passive aggressive and is equally as dangerous. I don't agree with boy racers acting the moron around the road but when you're acting like this and forcing them to drive like aggressive apes you could potentially cause an accident.
Valetta wrote: » Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. Nobody is "forced" to do anything. If an accident occurs, it is solely the fault of the dangerous overtaker.
OldNotWIse wrote: » How was I forcing them to drive like aggressive apes??
Mozzeltoff wrote: » First of all we were talking about this post: This kind of driving is dangerous. Braking when there's no need to brake? Slowing right down and pissing off the driver behind you and therefore making them drive more aggressively. You can't say it's not passive aggressive driving. I don't condone the behaviour of boy racers and they do drive me up the wall but don't go acting the clown around the road yourself because you want to piss them off.
bluewolf wrote: » Maybe she took some glee out of it but I don't see anything wrong with slowing down in those circumstances. I always pull over where possible though
Took great delight recently in keeping a boyracer behind me
twin_beacon wrote: » incorrect, you are provoking them to overtake. The driver intentionally slowed down, to piss off the driver behind him, with total disregard for other drivers caught behind them. If you give abuse to somebody, and they punch you in the face, would you not feel stupid for provoking them? Coming from person that regularly drives tractors with large trailers, keeping a queue of cars stuck behind you is not only stupid but dangerous.
twin_beacon wrote: » the person did it out of spite, thats not right, as you are slowing down other cars stuck behind the "boy racer"
OldNotWIse wrote: » If someone punches you in the face, they will still be charged with assault. They might plead provocation as a defence but it's a high barrier as we are expected to maintain a certain level of self-control. We can't just go around punching people and driving recklessly and then claim that we were provoked or that someone "made us do it". Whenever we tried this line on my parents as kids, mum would say "yes, and if he told you to put your hand in the fire would you?" We are only provoked as much as we allow ourselves to be. There needs to be accountability for one's actions and a certain amount of self control. As I already said, if you're the kind of person likely to fly off the handle and engage in reckless driving because you are infuriated by someone else driving slowly, then maybe you shouldn't be on the road.
OldNotWIse wrote: » If someone punches you in the face, they will still be charged with assault.
OldNotWIse wrote: » They might plead provocation as a defence but it's a high barrier as we are expected to maintain a certain level of self-control. We can't just go around punching people and driving recklessly and then claim that we were provoked or that someone "made us do it". Whenever we tried this line on my parents as kids, mum would say "yes, and if he told you to put your hand in the fire would you?" We are only provoked as much as we allow ourselves to be. There needs to be accountability for one's actions and a certain amount of self control. As I already said, if you're the kind of person likely to fly off the handle and engage in reckless driving because you are infuriated by someone else driving slowly, then maybe you shouldn't be on the road.