On thing that always amazes foreigners here, who are used to more proactive policing, is the brazen way in which drivers simply commit traffic violations right in front of policemen, who simply ignore them. Yesterday I happened upon an accident near my house. As I waited behind a long line of cars, two cars sped down the opposite lane, went to the front, waited in the opposite lane for the light to turn green (thus blocking all right turns from the crossing traffic), then made a right turn across the front of the entire line of waiting cars. Because of the high volume of traffic turning left, cars on our side of the road were pinned to their places and forced to wait until the next green before they could move. This of course leads to the other question: what kind of mentality could behave in such a manner, both towards others, and with a policeman right in front of them?
The next red brought a motorcycle here crossing the street illegally, against the light, as the policeman next to him writes up his report between the two vehicles, the white car and the green car. You'd think that the two damaged vehicles might act as a warning to the errant motorcyclist, but to that driver evidently they are merely an impediment.
Here he speeds through the crossing traffic, some of which has stopped to gawk.
At last my turn comes, and I plunge into the maelstrom. Scooters ignore the lights as they weave through the crossing traffic.
The police were measuring along this side of the road, indicating that at least one of the vehicles was traveling on the same road as myself, though in the opposite direction. My wife and I puzzled for quite some time over how the cars ended up in their final positions.
[Taiwan]
But Micheal, those two are obviously important individuals going about business of life-and-death importance. It's only outsiders like us that cannot see this fact.
ReplyDeleteMaybe there's something of the "You're not important to me/not my kin - so you dont count" in Taiwanese/PRC attitudes ot others - certainly on the road at least. Also - no eye contact = invisibility.
ReplyDeleteAt least in a cab you can close your eyes!
huoguo, that's the way I see it to. There's no civic culture, and no place where people recognize responsibilities to strangers. Either you're kin or you are OUTSIDE.
ReplyDeleteMichael
it's organized chaos
ReplyDeleteI see incomprehensibly stupid driving and parking every day. I've come to the conclusion that in many cases these people are living inside a bubble of selfishness that is so dense, so utterly impenetrable that it never even crosses their tiny minds that they are severely inconveniencing those around them by their actions. It's total and complete unawareness.
ReplyDeleteTheir brains never even get to 'Could I, or could I not, care less?'
how many times have we been walking along, only to have a scooter slide right into a parking space immediately in front of us, so close that it requires us to stop walking in order to avoid being hit? it would not occur to any Taiwanese to delay for the 2 seconds required to allow us to pass - oh no - no one waits for anything. if you even try to explain that concept you will be met with total incomprehension. you are the crazy one, not them.
ReplyDeletethe comment about the eye contact is so true. Taiwanese walk around with such tunnel vision that i am contantly amazed how well they function. just the other day i left my friend's home to go to the 7-11 on foot. during my absence, his wife also went to the 7-11 by another route. i was standing at the counter when she walked in. she spoke with the counter person and stood there for a full 30 seconds before she realized that she was standing beside me. mind you, i don't "blend" at all! she honestly didn't notice me because the radar is turned completely off. you can't expect a police officer to be any different.
"When in Rome" is the way I look at traffic in Taiwan. Chances are that I would not run a red light or drive down the wrong side of the road in North America in fear of a fine or increased insurance premiums. The problems is not the people driving the car or scooter rather how traffic laws are enforced in Taiwan.
ReplyDeletei'm kind of on the same wavelength as tclyde. [when in rome...]
ReplyDeletei actually enjoy the freedom one has on the roads here.
as long as you don't get caught...
I ride 12km daily in Tainan city center by bicycle.
ReplyDeleteThe only solution to that kind of problem? An agressive riding and a powerful horn (the kind the ice cream trolley has)...
I hope no one was seriously injured from the accident. I think the drivers should be disciplined to have a responsible attitude towards traffic.
ReplyDelete