lolnotanengineer
NotAnEngineEngineer
lolnotanengineer

Of course I am starring (recommending) my own posts. I take driving seriously, and you are spewing incorrect information and replying over and over muddying the waters for other people wanting to understand the rules of driving.

The fact that you didn’t/don’t understand the following:

YELLOW LINES SEPARATE TRAFFIC

And, for reasons of finality, so people are not confused by all this nonsense (in New York specifically - where you claim this is not legal) - here is the EXACT up-to-date text in the NY driver’s manual regarding this:

No, what you are saying is incorrect... Otherwise the wording of it would make no sense: “You can pass other vehicles (supports what you are thinking) or change lanes (proves what you are thinking is not correct, as you cannot change lanes into oncoming traffic”...

I don’t think you understand how road markings/lines

You need to not pick and choose what you copy and paste from the driver’s manual - as that section is in regard to a section of road with a mandatory “turn-right lane” (meaning WITH ARROWS) and the other lane continues straight (WITH ARROWS).

If you would look directly above your “selected” image that proves you are

No, I wasn’t - copying and pasting an irrelevant section of a driver’s manual just to prove a point - while being the millennial standard for achievement/proving point - doesn’t make them right.

As you can see, that section is talking about a section of road that has ARROWS COUPLED WITH A SOLID WHITE LINE.

As you can

Well, then you got ticketed for something that wasn’t illegal, are lying, did something else to get a ticket, or the law changed (not likely, since it’s like this in every state that I know)

You need to not pick and choose what you copy and paste from the driver’s manual - as that section is in regard to a section of road with a mandatory “turn-right lane” (meaning WITH ARROWS) and the other lane continues straight (WITH ARROWS).

If you would look directly above your “selected” image that proves you are

No, he’s wrong. He picked a part out of the driver’s manual that proves exactly what I said.

He took the part in regard to a mandatory right turn (lane) WITH ARROWS and used it - when the correct answer was directly above:

No, you are absolutely wrong. Where are you guys coming up with this garbage?

You have no idea what you are talking about. You are certainly allowed to cross a solid white line; there is absolutely no law against doing so.

You can google it if you want, but instead you can just assert whatever you think is right - and add in some flair like “once you get to the solid ‘portion of an intersection’

No, it’s 100% true. And what you are saying is 100% INCORRECT.

Think about the logic you are asserting here.

If everyone “merging” remained at the exact same speed as the traffic they are merging INTO, and the road is at near capacity (meaning, at that exact moment you decided to merge onto the expressway, into the

And, you are the reason for all things wrong in this world with regard to traffic. No one lets other people merge in - they speed up/slow down to prevent them from getting ONE SPOT ahead. By doing this, everyone has to apply the brakes in a chain reaction, and this is literally the reason we have traffic jams.

You

I handle that edge case by taking driving in a serious manner, and not blaming other people for “incidents” that could have been avoided - using discipline and my brain.

Because, if you saw the motorcyclist “weaving” - you SHOULD have used your neurons (that you obviously don’t have) to say to yourself “oh, shit - I better make sure I watch this person, as it’s a danger to them and myself if I don’t” - instead you claim nonsense.

If you saw this motorcyclist weaving and lost track of

LOL - you ABSOLUTELY cannot call yourself an “engineer” if you AREN’T thinking of the 1% cases... You know, the 1% that actually matters - not the “easy path” 99% common scenario(s)...

Your logic needs more work than everyone else’s if you are truly an engineer. This is the first thing you should have learned in school.