jsb223
0
[ame="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DVuQaPpHXzU"]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DVuQaPpHXzU[/ame]
mods please delete if a re-post...
mods please delete if a re-post...
Looked like he was in the HOV lane and the car decided to come on over on top of him...
If you watch very many cager vs biker video compilations offered up on Youtube, you'll find that the biker over reacts and turns vigilante or rides in the cagers blind spot and is forced to avoid.
Being "in the right" doesn't mean much while in the hospital or just dead.
The biker just rode off into the sunset (well, sunrise). Nobody got a license plate. The CHP is out looking for him. So, if you're the rider, do you come forward voluntarily?
Let's be honest folks - every single one of us makes an occasional mistake when driving or riding. Why do we think it's so much more deserving of personal retribution when somebody else is equally imperfect? Give the other guy your horn (not your finger; he can't hear your finger), make the necessary correction, and get on with your life. Part of being mature enough to drive a motor vehicle is disciplining ourselves to think with our brains instead of our emotions.
The biker just rode off into the sunset (well, sunrise). Nobody got a license plate. The CHP is out looking for him. So, if you're the rider, do you come forward voluntarily?
This is one thing I've tried to come to grips with lately. Watch a few videos of places like Russia or Vietnam and you quickly realize that what here appears to be someone "Trying to kill you" wouldn't even be a blip on the radar over there.
And speaking of Russia, check this guy who decided to mess with the wrong cast of characters:
The greatest road rage of all time - YouTube