Road Rage Motorcyclist
Road Rage Motorcyclist
Video shows road rage incident in Sarasota, driver intentionally rams motorcyclist off road.
It’s awful. The motorcyclist could have been killed. I know he was being a jerk, but that doesn’t give the motorist the right to damn near kill him.
THE BIKER IS TO BLAME !! This morning on the news the biker was video’d saying, “It doesn’t matter how aggressive I was riding . . . ” I am SORRY !! It does matter. As my dad would have told me. “You got what you deserved!” Sorry, I am a biker. I ride my bike 100% of the time so I do understand what bikers deal with . . . but if you are riding like you should not . . . well, “You got what you deserved!”
Road Rage Motorcyclist
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:
Road rage is aggressive or angry behavior exhibited by a driver of a road vehicle, which includes rude gestures, verbal insults, physical threats or dangerous driving methods targeted toward another driver or a pedestrian in an effort to intimidate or release frustration. Road rage can lead to altercations, assaults and collisions that result in serious physical injuries or even death. It can be referred to as an extreme case of aggressive driving.
The term originated in the United States in 1987–1988 from anchors at KTLA, a television station in Los Angeles, California, when a rash of freeway shootings occurred on the Interstate 405, 110, and 10 freeways in Los Angeles. These shooting sprees even spawned a response from the AAA Motor Club to its members on how to respond to drivers with road rage or aggressive maneuvers and gestures.
According to a study by the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety that examined police records nationally, there are more than 1,200 incidents of road rage on average reported per year in the United States, a number of which have ended with serious injuries or even fatalities. These rates rose yearly throughout the six years of the study. A number of studies have found that individuals with road rage were predominantly young (33 years old on average) and 96.6% male. In Germany, a gun-wielding truck driver was accused of firing at more than 762 vehicles and arrested in 2013, an exceptional case of road rage. According to authorities, the autobahn sniper was motivated by “annoyance and frustration with traffic.”
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