anton wrote:
Many disabled people own cars and do not have a valid licence to drive. You must register a car in the diasbled persons name to get tax exemption.
Have you got more on this ? Are we talking the about 'real road cars' or the 4 wheeled pavement/road rushing disabled vehicles ?
This thread has some great points being made.

I can see - reading it all in one go that some have made particular points in a deliberately 'end of scale manner', that have been perhaps the point' has passed un-noticed - or to a degree ....or mis-understood ...
When receiving instruction it was common (previously) to receive instruction for the 'road' and the official line to pass the test. That Information always told you what was clearly expected of you at all times. (The 'Right' way) The passed down real world experience give you valuable insight into how to drive well and learn from others ...
Abercrombie wrote:
On the contrary, once you've had a big scare, you become a safer driver. In particular, the excruciating pain of a crushed chest lasts for many months, and I expect you'd be pretty careful after that, unless you are a bonehead. The best cure for fast driving is to fall off a motorbike at 85 mph. It feel rather like being in a concrete spin dryer.
Actually the brain deliberately makes you forget over time the severeness as our instinct to survive take over and so this disaster *can* be - as it *needs to be* forgotten with time. We consciously try to remove those severe memories too, and (hopefully) as we learn better avoidance techniques and better car control, we re-gain confidence. So people may drive more defensively for a while but unless good and proper lessons are thoroughly learned and understood, in fact they *can* fall back in to similar previous problems ! (Frightening)
Safe Speed Manifesto states that we would like to see a help line for those who have had an accident so that they can talk over with the right people and obtain the best advice. (Would be good to enable practical help too in time when appropriate).
Quote:
Big Tone wrote:
the driver in front has changed their mind and dropped the anchors. (Her reason was "the sun was in her eyes”. Er, unless we have a second sun – no it wasn’t!)
Abercrombie wrote:
It is so common for people to glance away at the worst moment, then SMACK! Assumption is the mother of all screw-ups. So I approach all junctions at a snail's pace, to completely block anyone from tail-ending me at more than (say) 5 mph. What else can I do?
The best policy for this one that I have used is that you brake and stop and you do not release your brake peddle unless you KNOW your path ahead is CLEAR. To drive forward when you are looking away is going to cause an accident at some point.
I do agree we can catch ourselves doing it - the best practice is to stop (creeping forwards). By always releasing the brake when you move and not release until you can 'go' always helps someone else from shunting you too.

(I have found).
weepej wrote:
I read stuff like this and it does make me wonder, and whilst it's likely that not everybody in the crash behaved stupidly, it's clear to me that anybody who contacted a car in front (that weren't shoved from behind) should just never be allowed near a car again:
Current policy is showing a huge increase in illegal drivers. If someone has a key to a car that they 'can' drive, they will. It is making the enforcement fair so that the vast majority of drivers accept the rules AND the punishment. When many ignore the rules, the enforcement is broken and lawlessness prevails. This 'policy' concept I cannot see working as so many would see it is unjust? what have you shown or gained other than s sweeping policy that teaches nothing? (Appreciate that you were not 'trying to teach' - it is the concept of enforcement that is dis-respected that seems unfair - when a 'lesson' cannot be learned from a fair chance - first = hence teach).
I occurs to me that just possibly the sun in her eyes was 'reflected sun' than can dazzle ... off cars, buildings etc ....
Tone it sounds to me - just a thought but that car wasn't one of those 'deliberate' sudden stops to ensure a claim was it ? Ask the insurance to check out the driver and with the Police too - sounds possibly iffy ? Did the driver call the cops ? If a 999 call - car / bike accident and only ask for the ambulance the police will be sent and they will notify the fire-brigade is no additional info is given at the time of the call .... (or how it was a few yrs back anyway !)
This is also about 'Predictable Behaviour' the what is expected of a typical driver. As a good driver one cannot assume anything and have to expect 'every possibility' and be prepared (as is best & possible), then the general expectation maybe 'x' but you have to TRY and ensure that your driving gives you space and room and control all about you too.