Running stop signs

Excerpt from The Washcycle

Q. “Dr. Gridlock, several times in the last few months you’ve written that “drivers run stop signs too, but at least they slow down” as though that is a sign of greater virtue. But isn’t different behavior by different modes just a result of the technology, not the virtue of the operators? Drivers slow down because they’re going faster to start with, they can’t see or hear as well as cyclists, and they aren’t as maneuverable. In short, they slow down because they have to to avoid a crash. The prevelance of other illegal behavior seems to negate any claim to higher virtue. Would you not agree that cyclists, drivers and pedestrians do what they feel they can get away with without getting caught or being in a crash. So no group is more virtuous than other, right?”

Dr. Gridlock: My point exactly: Travelers generally comply with traffic law when they think there’s a reasonable chance they’ll get caught for a violation. Drivers complain about cyclists. Cyclists complain about drivers. But I don’t see any class of travelers having the moral high ground on complying with the law.



https://www.thewashcycle.com/2011/06/dr-bikelock-idaho-stop-pads-and-the-humpback-bridge.htmloldId.20110608115915758

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