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Woman Struck by Car Twice in One Incident

A woman is struck by a car not just once, but two times.

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sypher1187 • 6,811 points
How the hell did the second car not see the massive group of people?

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OnlyBringinGoodVibes • 3,983 points
Staring at a phone screen

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StuffyUnicorn • 1,103 points
I legit see this every day driving through the round about near me, it’s either people who have no idea what yield means or people that are just so oblivious because of the phone up to their face. Stay alert, peeps

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PeanutGallry • 286 points
I see people on their phones all the time at stop lights. Light turns green, I give them a couple seconds to see it, then honk. Most times, they’re furious at ME and flip me off. Like, who you really mad at?

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quandjereveauxloups • 248 points
They’re actually mad at you. They’re so entitled, and think that whatever they’re doing is ok, and you should just let them do whatever it was. I hate the “I only delayed you by a couple seconds” attitude. That couple seconds cost other people minutes. Not to mention that they’re not paying attention while at the helm of a 2-ton death machine.

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illegible • 109 points
My favorite is when you honk at them, they finally go, but only quickly enough that you can’t get through the light.

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quandjereveauxloups • 59 points
Yeah, those are fun. Especially when you’re sitting back in the line, you know that *you* honking won’t do anything, and no one else honks. Then they finally go, and you get to move up 3 spaces because no one wanted to inform them of their dumbassery.

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Creepy-Caramel7569 • 9 points
This is a Portland thing. No one honks, then when you do the person in front of you gets all butthurt. I’m not honking at you. I’m doing your job though, wuss!

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frenchmoxie • 5 points
Road rage/hot tempers/feelings of entitlement + vehicle + firearms = Me reconsidering that little *HONK* …I know this is a common thing, and can happen in ANY city, but honking at someone who is not paying attention to a green light can get you into some dangerous trouble in the city where I currently live (Flint, MI). I also would NEVER honk at someone in Detroit. No matter how late I was. These are just cities I list because I am familiar with them and obviously, I live here. I’m sure cities like L.A., Baltimore, and every single city in a Southern (red) state are full of folks that would just LOVE for someone to honk at them, because it would justify (in their stable minds) blocking traffic (and your car) to pull out a sawed-off SHOTGUN from the trunk/back of their vehicle to either brandish or hey, they might just forget about the brandishing and level-up to shooting shots immediately at your vehicle. So many people these days seem to get so butthurt if someone else points out their mistake. After having some scary experiences with road-ragers, I won’t honk anymore.

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Creepy-Caramel7569 • 2 points
Suit yourself, but I’m not gonna live with a bunch of time bandits out of fear of some rare & random reprisal. There’s far fewer maniacs than there are oblivious self-centered asshats.

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bonaynay • 19 points
>Not to mention that they’re not paying attention while at the helm of a 2-ton death machine for real. it’s basically the most dangerous activity we do and people dont even want to pay attention

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HOLEPUNCHYOUREYELIDS • 14 points
It is actually wild to think about the fact that we commonly drive around thousands of pounds of metal and plastic at high speeds with nothing more than a line painted on the road to separate everyone. And people are busy staring at fucking phones and shit while driving a wrecking ball Most people would not say they would trust a random stranger with their life, yet we all do basically every single day when driving

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[deleted] • 5 points
In the 70’s they promised flying cars by now. I’m thinking of all the chaos I’m missing because we all haven’t got one yet.

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bonaynay • 3 points
yeah there’s no trusting these hoes with flight

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omarcomin647 • 2 points
my wife is the best driver i know and i still worry about her getting into a bad accident driving to and from work every day (i take public transit). i trust her completely to drive safely, it’s everyone else that i don’t trust.

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[deleted] • 8 points
I’ve always said, 99% of driving is avoiding everyone else.

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frenchmoxie • 2 points
💯 this!!! I’ve lost count of how many crashes I’ve narrowly avoided simply because another driver made a mistake, yet I WAS PAYING ATTENTION TO MY SURROUNDINGS/other drivers. Yes there are still instances where you can’t help it if someone else rear-ends you. This was actually the first car crash I’d experienced (around age 28). A driver, who had been drinking rear-ended me while I was stopped at a light that was red but had JUST turned green. I had barely taken my foot off the brake and onto the gas when we were hit. Luckily I was in a Chevy blazer and was sitting higher up. When the driver rear ended us it pushed my blazer into a vehicle facing me on the other side of the intersection. Thankfully, I was essentially at a stop, so there was no high speed added to the situation, because that would have been worse, obviously. I’ll never forget one of the first things my father said after we got back from the hospital… he asked me WHY I HAD NOT NOTICED THE GUY’S CAR coming up so fast BEHIND ME… 🪞 🚗 🚦 😂 *side note: I swear my father cares, but like, he has problems showing it and problems communicating his feelings in general. But holy sh*t his comment pissed me off. Anyyywayyysss I digress a bit.* But this obviously was a situation where I had no control over some random guy hitting my vehicle from behind. So PAY ATTENTION OUT THERE YOU GUYS! 🚗

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HOLEPUNCHYOUREYELIDS • 2 points
Ive become an incredibly defensive and aware driver. The city I live in now is just pure chaos for driving. People making the most ridiculously risky and dangerous maneuvers out of nowhere, blatantly running reds and breaking numerous laws, and so on Getting to my destination 2 minutes faster isn’t worth the risk of getting demolished by some idiot blowing through a red light or cutting me off to make their turn

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bobenes • 3 points
Yet they‘d be furious at another person costing them said couple seconds. Everyone should act like the most pacifistic positive person on earth towards them as if they‘d ever do that themselves.

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Apprehensive-Pin518 • 5 points
I will admit I do this sometimes at lights but I do not get mad if someone honks at me because I know that they are just telling me the light is green and maybe blowing off a bit of steam as well.

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hypotheticalconverse • 5 points
Yeah, sometimes you’re just tired and find yourself staring into space. I do appreciate when people honk at those times.

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Tha_Watcher • 23 points
>Light turns green, I give them a couple seconds to see it, then honk. The problem is some lights are only a few seconds, so this infuriates me!

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PeanutGallry • 8 points
Indeed! And in NYC, if you’re not rolling as the light turns green, the cabbies are letting you know you’re too slow.

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shugo2000 • 4 points
That is legit insane to me. I mean, I’ll look at the screen on my car’s dash to check to see what song is playing/checking the GPS, but to be on your phone for the few seconds that you’re at a stop light?

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Pavotine • 6 points
Just the other day I was behind someone at a red light on a slight incline watching a fuckwit staring at his phone in front of me. Then he took his foot off the brake and started rolling backwards towards me. I held down the horn but the cunt never looked up and just rolled into the front of my car. It was a low speed, no damage collision but FFS! What a prick! He never noticed he was moving until the jolt snapped him out of it.

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GreenLanternCorps • 5 points
Shit I saw this woman both hands on her phone using her forearms to turn onto a busy street notices almost too late she’s going to run into a sign on the median corrects it and before her massive fucking suv even stops fishtailing puts both her hands back on her phone.

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ebolaRETURNS • 8 points
The charitable explanation does not unfold in terms of reasoning: the unexpected loud noise elicits an adrenal response, and then this response is channeled into anger or fear. In this case, fear is both more adaptive and intelligible.

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ghost_warlock • 23 points
Then they should be fucking paying attention to their surroundings so they’re not so easily startled

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ebolaRETURNS • 16 points
it’s a causal explanation, not an ethical justification.

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refusegone • 6 points
*You’re* an ethical justification.

What do you think?

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