Evadman
Administrator Emeritus<br>Elite Member
- Feb 18, 2001
- 30,990
- 5
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Originally posted by: spidey07
It's real fucking simple. I drove through a nasty storm just a few hours ago coming home from work. We were all driving about 40 MPH or less on the interstate. Driving too fast for conditions and failure to maintain control of your vehicle are driver error.
Many many years ago I was on my way home from college in a driving rainstorm at like 1 AM on a sunday. I could see MAYBE 100 feet in front of me, and was going about 30. I was passed by a vette and 2 SUV's going about 90 that were each about 30 feet from the next. I immediately speed up to catch them, and stayed about 30 feet behind the last SUV, figuring I would use the car in front of me as a gauge to figure out where I was on the road. At that speed and in the rain, my wipers were more for decoration than anything else, but I had some serious tires on my vehicle, so I wasn't worried about hydroplaning. I was worried about running into someone I couldn't see. But I wanted to be home before next Wednesday.
Along the way home, we picked up another SUV behind me. We passed a boatload of traffic; I don't remember taking my foot off the gas for at least 3 hours. We were seriously a 90 MPH freight train that couldn't see sh!t. I had trouble just seeing the tail lights in front of me thought he rain.
Looking back at it, I can't believe we didn't run into someone who was driving in the left lane. I'm not exactly sure where I was going with that story. Um, don't be stupid like me I guess, or maybe understand what the limits of your vehicle are, and don't exceed them. Yeah, I like that one better.
Originally posted by: runzwithsizorz
The cop is participating in an attempt to ruin the Ops' life
I think the cop has better things to do than 'try to run the OP's life'. The cop wrote a fricking ticket, not raped the OP's daughter and then kidnapped the OP's dog.