Their parents didn't teach them good manners,thats why
2007-01-31 22:08:53
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answer #1
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answered by Seby 3
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If I remember rightly from a few years back when Jeremy Clarkson did an episode of his "Jeremy Clarkson's Motorworld" tv series in India, I think part of it had to do with the Hindu belief in reincarnation, and partly because back then the driving test simply consisted of driving the car a couple of hundred yards and stopping (and I'd assume a large number of people who passed this old test are still driving).
Here's the start of it on YouTube (which I ain't checked out for quality yet 'cos I gotta head out shortly): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eCotAvH3SKM
It's split into parts.
2007-02-01 04:22:01
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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it is fairly nicely achieveable. One city at a time. i think of it has began in many things of India with the form of the hot highways that require tolls. yet considered one of these considerable exchange could initiate from the best administration/government. may well be they could initiate from considerable metropolitan factors and then bypass directly to smaller cities. a million. extra effective salaries for the site visitors police so as that they at the instant are not tempted to take bribe from site visitors violators. 2. extra effective roads, extra effective pedestrian walkways for the protection of drivers and public. development extra effective roads and distinctive pedestrian walkways might help quite. government. could spend tax funds to renovate present roads and development new infrastructure. 3. The punishments/fines could be logical and can be performed no count what. contain court docket if desire be in case a violator needs to take the undertaking to the court docket. 4. The petrol/gasoline/gasoline costs could be decreased using fact I’ve seen human beings using incorrect thank you to keep gasoline. 5. Required using assessments for licenses for various instructions of autos. i'm not sure no count if there is something corresponding to the dept of motorcars. i think of there is actual one that matters the drivers licenses. those human beings could arise with stable written tests, and functional/in the back of the wheel assessments that the motorists or drivers could take up order to get/renew their licenses. 6. set up a minimum age for using for various instructions of autos. 7. Stricter policies for drivers and pedestrians (they shouldn’t be allowed to bypass roads purely everywhere yet basically at distinctive crossings) 8. There could be very strict policies for drivers who force under the impact of alcohol. I actual have seen drivers getting away with murders while they ran over some pedestrian walking on the area of the line. those are basically some factors first of all. There’s plenty extra which would be finished. the policies and policies in different countries during the international could be considered to confirm which policies have worked so some distance and which policies haven’t. getting to understand from others' blunders and not making the comparable ones might keep a good number of time and power. this may well be a stable beginning factor.
2016-12-13 04:01:10
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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what you tell is not new...you forgot to tell many other things too..maybe because, it would take the entire page to write all that..
anyways it is said that one cant clap without two hands, i feel what you state here is the same..one reason being that people lack the social responsibility to adhere to rules, everyone thinks "im the king of the road...my brother-in-law is in the police, or my friend is a local politician's goon...whoz gonna touch me??"
and on the other hand we have politicians and administrators who lack responsibility and dedication to their work..policemen who fail to stand and regulate and specifically enforce traffic rules..but then why would he stand ? the government doesn't give him cooling glass for standing in the sun nor do they give masks to protect themselves from the pollution nor do they get 5 figure salaries? what is he working for?this runs in his mind....then who are we to blame ? government which doesn't have the machinery to enforce or we the people who refuse to accept the rule of the land...i have been shown the hand by several motorists several times just because i refuse to skip a signal..now is that my problem??
nice that you bring these issues to light..
2007-01-29 14:44:54
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answer #4
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answered by RockDj 2
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Its not just India, I think it the entire asia, which faces such a problem....
China’s police officers have a tough enough job as it is. We ask them to be on their feet eight to 12 hours a day, hot or cold, and uphold the law.
We ask them to avoid the temptation of corruption, working for painfully low salaries.
We ask them to put their lives at risk when desperate robbers take hostages in a bank and hold people at gunpoint. Police must suddenly put on their psychologist hats and negotiate for hours with troubled people threatening to commit suicide by jumping from atop buildings.
We even ask cops to come to the rescue of our silly cat when it wanders up a tree and won’t come down.
But, no, we don’t like them when they catch us personally misbehaving, perhaps when we disobey traffic rules by parking our cars in the wrong spot or when the lead in our foot causes us to drive too fast.
I’ve got news for you, folks. You’ve got to take the good with the bad.
A recent incident in Guangdong is a case in point. Two traffic police officers stopped a bus along a road near the border of Guangzhou and Foshan after it paused too long for passengers, according to Xinhua News Agency.
When officers tried to detain the bus driver to issue a citation, a crowd of 200 people suddenly decided to interfere. The officers had demanded to see the bus’ operation licence and the driver refused to comply. The bus’ ticket collector and the driver then pushed the police officers off the bus and drove away.
This would be unthinkable in the West. At a minimum, the bus’ tyres would have been shot out. Or, the driver would have been shot dead.
In any case, the officers radioed their colleagues who stopped the bus at some point farther up the roadway.
But the bus operators had also called for backup, and more than 200 people arrived from out of the woodwork and surrounded the traffic police.
Where did these 200 people come from? Why do authorities in China allow such chaos to take place?
If people who are disgruntled about traffic rules simply join hands to disrupt officers whenever a disagreement takes place, and then intimidate officers by sheer numbers, chaos will replace the rule of law.
This is not how democracy is designed to work. Democracy protects the few, not the mob.
The group of miscreants on the road pushed the officers, and tried to keep them from detaining the bus operators. Local police were asked to send out 20 more officers to keep order.Though no one was seriously hurt, the ensuing madcap situation resulted in a three-hour traffic jam.
It is said that Guangzhou’s traffic authorities have suggested a joint campaign with Foshan police to target buses violating rules. I would argue the situation merits much more. A campaign should be started to crackdown on the most uncivil disobedience exhibited among the people in the area who disrupted the police from completing their duties.
If law officers in the West are physically touched in any way by citizens while writing citations for unlawful citizens — much less shoved — such citizens would be arrested for assaulting the officer. An assault of that nature is a serious offence. It could result in years in jail. If citizens interfered with an officer doing his duty such as these citizens did, they would likely be arrested and charged, too.
If China wishes to progress to become a developed country, it must rid itself of such chaotic scenes.
And to be respected in the international community on all fronts — from showing respect for intellectual property rights to agreements on the textile trade — Chinese leaders have declared the nation must be based on the rule of law. It all starts at home on the streets where people obey the traffic rules and respect the police.
Time is of the essence.
2007-01-29 17:40:31
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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On account of lack of a sense of discipline as also a king sized ego both peculiar features of the Indian psyche.
2007-01-29 14:27:57
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answer #6
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answered by rkbaqaya 5
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* lot more people than roads can handle.
* even a 2yr old can pass driving test if it was tall enough
*no penalty 4 breaking law,bribing police officers
*hey who cares nobody ever cares to ask.they r busy doing their own business.
2007-01-29 18:10:00
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answer #7
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answered by shindu 2
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The reason is poor law enforcement by the authorities.
2007-01-29 13:53:30
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Intimidative Driving !!!
2007-02-01 02:32:01
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answer #9
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answered by Sri Ram t 3
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we should charge more fine for the people who breaks the traffic rules!
2007-01-29 14:09:10
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answer #10
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answered by sourabh_b_1234 2
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