FridayNext
FridayNext
FridayNext

Bullshit. Certainly he could have accelerated. As I said, that’s an option. But no one is under any obligation to break the speed limit or drive unsafely because some asshole wants to tailgate. He was also under no obligation to move right until it was safe to do so, which it wasn’t.

It turned out okay, but there were too many cars and potential collateral damage for me to pat the brake-checker too hard on the back. Had the two been off on a lonely road together, fine, bit had the tailgater swerved to the right this could have been really ugly.

That’s another option, sure, but if accelerating puts you over the speed limit you might have other problems. Let’s see, someone around here mentioned it, let’s look. Oh here it is:

As long as it’s safe, yes. You have merging traffic from the right and what looks like a semi bearing down on him. It was not safe for him to move right until everyone got well passed the interchange. If I was him, I would have stated in the left lane until the merging car had position in the right lane and there was

Like I said above. I think a lot of commenters don’t seem to realize that the camera is actually sitting in a slow moving vehicle that everyone is in the left lane to pass. I don’t support the brake check for the simple reason that there are too many other cars near them. If you want to endanger just you and another

No. He was passing the slow moving vehicle in which the camera was sitting. By the time he passed THAT vehicle at a safe enough distance to pull to the right there was merging traffic from that direction with another car at his two o’clock. He was correct not to merge right until it was safe to do so. You literally

Does it seem to you that a lot of people commenting here don’t seem to realize the camera is in a slow moving vehicle, likely a truck. Every single car in the left lane has a right to be there because they are passing THAT slow vehicle. Whether they move back quickly enough is the question.

Actually, it looked to me like those cars (all of 4 of them) were in the left lane to go around the vehicle in which the camera was mounted. I assume. It looks like a truck.

Just providing my unsolicited 2 cents, but making someone take sensitivity training is not punishment. It is to a) make the workplace a nicer, more productive space and b) cover the employer’s ass in case someone sues. By making malcontents like Mr. Sucks take training classes they can claim they showed due diligence

You know what I find weird? People who will always eat vegan, natural this, organic that, and lecture me incessantly on not drinking carbonated beverages and all my other bad eating habits and how my body is a temple blah blah blah.

I worked in a building once that had two “front” doors, one on the first and one on the second floor. It was on a hill. It could get very confusing when someone told you to meet at the front door. And this was before large scale cell phone use so you couldn’t just call and tell people to stay put.

After I ran a marathon I couldn’t walk down stairs for a week. I didn’t even injure anything. My muscles just refused to work that way. No one told me that would happen.

Nor should you.

He is in jail a lot, so he’s probably used to it.

As long as they stand to the right, I have no problem.

Also, do you find that buildings never seem to number their floors the same? I used to do downtown deliveries and you’d think that a room number in the 200 range would be on the second floor, but sometimes it’s actually as high as the fourth floor after a G for ground, an M for Mezzanine and then 1 and 2. Or start

I might have to do some research, but his name might have been Otis. That’s just a guess, though.

HAH! Yeah.......... about that..... I meant to type “yards.”

I once had an office in “1/5" floor. It was a large storage space they divided into offices and created two floors. No elevator though. Just half a flight of steps.

This. As I said somewhere else here I have been a delivery person in a downtown full of high rises and not only do they hide the stairs, they are often locked on the ground floor. I have a regular appointment in a building on the second floor and I’d love to take the stairs, but unless someone is coming out of the