Jerry Eichenberger
Serious Thumper
   
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2006 S40. OEM windshield, saddle bags, Sportster
Posts: 2919
Columbus, Ohio
Gender:
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BH -
We don't teach better because we have the notion that everyone has to be driving. If the course were as tough as it should be, a few just wouldn't make it. And, for heaven's sake, we couldn't actually have someone wash out of driver training, could we?
Just a night or two ago, on the way home well after dark, I saw a car pull out in front of me, from a shopping center, with no lights on. I flashed my lights in her mirror, and she panicked and slammed on her brakes right there in the middle of evening traffic. I didn't hit her, didn't even come close. I pulled up beside her (young gal, late teens or early 20s) and told her to turn on her lights. She was actually surprised.
How can you not know that your lights aren't on? Simple, she never looked at her instrument panel to see that it was unlit. Again, when I taught my daughter, she was taught to look at the panel immediately after engine start, to be sure that the oil pressure light wasn't on, that the warning lights for an open door weren't on, etc. But again, how many student drivers are taught that - next to none. Most young drivers, especially the girls (no bias intended, just the truth) probably don't even know what the oil pressure light is for.
I blame our notion of what driving is and what we teach that it is. We only teach the crap they put out in driver's ed courses - don't speed, signal every turn and lane change, and don't text while driving. That's all there is to being a safe driver in the minds of most driving instructors.
It won't change, I'm mainly just ranting.
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