I'm a foreigner and have no problem driving on the correct side of the road...or of riding my bike for that matter.![]()
I'm a foreigner and have no problem driving on the correct side of the road...or of riding my bike for that matter.![]()
In space, no one can smell your fart.
Yes yes yes, but you're a foreigner from a country where they drive on the correct side of the road. So it's not going to make any difference to you, is it?
And anyway , you're from Glasgow.
I'm talking about PROPER foreigners, ones from Forn Parts, where they drive all perverted .
Originally Posted by skidmark
Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
I did some research on tourist crashes a few years back (bikes and cars). While in some areas they may make up 20% of crash involved drivers/riders there is no data on what percentage of them are on the road in those areas so it is hard to say whether they are a 'real' problem. There are those on the wrong side of the road for Europeans and yanks, but generally they have the same crashes as locals do including crashing on gravel roads, overcooking it in to corners when playing catch up and the standard intersection type crashes. Quite often the fact they are from overseas is pretty much irrelevant to the crash.
I don't think there are going to be enough overseas rider crashes to help with an argument. You have those here for two weeks who are in a hurry, but you also have those who have been working here for nine months. You need to dig deeper and look at their country of origin, time in the country, and then riding experience both here and back home. Big job.
Originally Posted by skidmark
Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
Same deal in DK. You can get a moped at 15 - and you have to go through a rigorous (by NZ standards) education process to get your license. You can get a license for a tractor at the same age. Cars and motorcycles you have to wait until age 18 - and the process of getting the license is much more thorough.
It is simple. But it is also completely daft. As for giving way to traffic coming out of carparks - that will confound people from elsewhere since in many places you have to give way when going onto a proper street from carparks, private roads and gravel roads - whether there is a "Give way" sign or not.
The really frustrating bit is when people are stopping to give way when turning left into a multiple carriageway. Or people coming from the other side thinks it is their right to come barging across three lanes of traffic to take the next left.
Actually I seriously wonder how much factual basis you have for this hypothesis. How many bikers have actually been taken out by tourists? We can all remember the tragic accident with the overcorrecting campervan (they were driving on the left) that crossed the road and took out two motorcycles, both carrying pillions. A couple of things to ponder:
1) Not all kiwis, motorcyclists included, manage to stay on the right (that would be as opposed to wrong, not left) side of the road all the time.
2) Plenty of campervans driven by kiwis.
3) How many accidents, involving tourists, actually have anything to do with driving on the wrong side of the road?
4) Are overseas driving standards inferior to NZ driving standards?
Big job, and most likely pretty pointless too. As long as we see a person killed in traffic pretty much everyday on average and the vast majority of all involved are Kiwis I don't think bashing tourists is a worthwhile exercise.
It is preferential to refrain from the utilisation of grandiose verbiage in the circumstance that your intellectualisation can be expressed using comparatively simplistic lexicological entities. (...such as the word fuck.)
Remember your humanity, and forget the rest. - Joseph Rotblat
In the same sequence of corners where Flyin died in the Wairarapa, a tourist on the wrong side of the road killed two motorcyclists, approx 5 years ago.
If a man is alone in the woods and there isn't a woke Hollywood around to call him racist, is he still white?
Totally agree. And your point 4 is important, especially when considering the amount of comment on the forum regarding the poor rider/driver training over here.
Doesn't the combination of speeding tickets reducing and the road toll climbing also suggest the possibility that speeding motorists are getting better at avoiding detection?
It'd reduce the speeding tickets issued and the associated revenue streams, but also possibly open the door to speeding more between cops/cameras/revenue collection mechanisms
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