I drive a hybrid, own a driving school and drive the speed limit. I have been flipped off, cursed, tailgated, cut off and passed OVER double yellow lines while teaching lessons and here is the kicker -- driving the speed limit. I've even been passed and flipped off by people I know who then sport a look of shock when they see that it is me. Quite funny but sad in another sense.
A lot of people are in a hurry and drive faster than the speed limit and while I<b><i> occasionally</i></b> do so in the Porsche I'm careful not to be to harsh to others who are going the speed limit.
Here are the laws for California:
1. A driver is obligated to use a paved turnout area whenever five or more vehicles are trailing her/him in a 2 lane highway.
2. Drivers should allow a three-second cushion of space between themselves and the vehicle in front of them. This is often not possible in the merge lane of freeways or on congested highways.
3. Drivers should signal their intention to change lanes for five seconds at freeway speeds.
4. It is NEVER legal to drive faster than the posted speed limit OR than is safe given the current conditions. For example, if traffic is heavy or there are a lot of pedestrians on the edge of the road you can be cited for driving faster than is safe for conditions even if you are traveling at the speed limit.
While I understand everyone's frustration with others not driving courteously, that does not -- as Flash said -- give anyone the right to react angrily or get back at the other driver.
Hybrids, electric vehicles, scooters and bicyclists all have a right to share the road with us. I might also add that these vehicles will become increasingly more common on our roadways in the near future. The idea that if you weigh more you can cut people off because they should fear a collision with you, is selfish and dangerous.
Remember that driving a few miles per hour faster on the highway will only save you a few minutes in each hour's driving. In the city, it will save you less time with signals and congestion.
I've actually see this happen on a daily basis when a vehicle passes me only to end up next to me at the next light.
Flash may sound old but I probably sound older! This is my two cents and after losing my mother in an automobile accident and watching other's drive dangerously for the past nine years that I've been a professional instructor, I felt compelled to respond to this thread.