5 comments so far
Oh…Preach it, Sister!
How come the idiots that pull that stuff aren’t the ones getting blamed instead of those of us who see red when they do it?
See also:
http://www.ryanholiday.net/archives/going_slow_in_the_fast_lane.phtml
I quite agree. Though merging here in Pittsburgh (at least driving south from the north) does seem to work out a bit better than my experience elsewhere. But the road designers have to have been a bit crazy, with making everyone on the highway merge over a lane just so those on the onramp can have their own lane 1/2 mile later.
Like you, I have driven in the same cities and yes it is easier to drive there. If you haven’t driven in Charlotte, NC then you have no idea who the worst drivers are. The drivers in this city think the highways, local routes, and side roads are the back stretch at the local speed way - driving on a straight stretch means floor it, 90 mph is the minimum. When there is is turn in the road, all hell breaks lose. The locals seem to think since there is no banking in these turns, they have to come to a complete stop and then make the turn.
Burghers have nothing on the drivers in Charlotte.
Dawn, I agree with you, but also have to disagree with you to an extent on this one. Bad news first…Pennsylvania sucks to the extent that they put those little nagging signs up to “use both lanes to merge point.” This is why some people feel the need to stay in the merging lane to the bitter end. It angers me when I merge into the correct lane and Joe Dickhead speeds on by hoping to get to where he’s going quicker. I think the merge point etiquette needs to be readdressed somewhere along the line, because it simply sucks. If you see a sign indicating that the lane ends in 1/4 mile, get the f*** over! What gives you such an advantage in 1/4 of a mile that you need to continue until the lane actually ends? And I am definitely one to not let Joe Dickhead in at the merge point, even if I technically have to cut him off to prevent him from doing such to me. I definitely agree that I’ve driven in many other cities, and can’t seem to figure out how Pittsburgh was named as the most courteous. I learned to drive in New York state, and I am the typical “New York driver” in some regards. I hate driving in Pittsburgh, especially when it comes to driving downtown or during rush hour. I would prefer to drive in Buffalo, Indianapolis, Kansas City or even Washington DC than drive in Pittsburgh sometimes! And I can’t count how many times I’ve had people flip me the bird or shout obscenities from their windows at me because I’m the first to stop at a 4-way stop and they decide they need to make a left hand turn in front of me when I’m going straight, inciting me to blow my horn or start into the intersection to assert my right-of-way. It sometimes makes me want to carry a driver instruction manual in my car to verify that I’m not the one that has forgotten how to drive!

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