eee123 wrote: ↑Feb 04, 2020
symphonicpoet wrote: ↑Feb 04, 2020
^They still issue speeding tickets? Where did you get that? I thought even Marlboro had given up. Heck the proposed new county bike rules refer to vehicles operating at less than the "posted speed . . . " as though this was the recommended operating speed rather than a theoretical limit.
Nationwide, like 40% of motorists don't understand the speed limit, it being the maximum permitted speed, not the minimum. That part of the county bike rules really floored me.
Here in the city, it's all irrelevant. I nearly got killed biking here at
N. Blair at Branch a couple months back, a couple of quiet neighborhood streets. I was headed north (on a Bike STL route!), turning right onto Branch, there were two cars westbound on Branch, one passing the other in the oncoming lane, both going 45mph or so, not even slowing for the stop sign while disregarding the speed limit and the general rules of passing on side streets.
So that'll be the last time I'll listen to anybody tell me a damn thing about biking laws, or any other laws that aren't homicide in the city.
i'd say it's more like 90%—try driving the speed limit on the highway and count the number of cars that aren't whizzing past you. it'll be somewhere around zero. and it's not because they don't understand; it's because they don't care and nothing is enforced. drivers are a privileged class, and when people get behind steering wheels they become inhuman, dangerous assh*les.
funny story 1: i was also nearly killed while biking in the city—on Shaw. stopped at the stop sign and started to make a left turn and some human garbage in a neon blue BMW blew the stop sign going highway speeds. surprisingly, he actually bothered to swerve around me into the oncoming lane. thankfully, there was nobody waiting at the stop sign or i'd mostly likely be dead.
funny story 2: i yelled at a guy driving way too fast in a 30 and he got out of his car and told me it's legal to drive 5 MPH over the speed limit (he was going at least 15 over). i tried to explain to him that, no, it's not legal. it's that police radars are only accurate to within +/-5 MPH so they don't usually pull you over for 5 over. i don't think he heard me over his screaming. this occurred in a different state. i wouldn't do that in STL because i'd be shot.
funny story 3: some years ago i got pulled over just across the river on 64 for going 3 (three) MPH over the speed limit. no ticket, just had to sit in the front of the police car with the cop while he ran my license. it was weird.
anyway, ***** cars. had one for 17 years; never buying one again. not going to take part in this sh*t, car-humping culture any more.