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Episode: 3978
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Title: HPR3978: Driving in Virginia.
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3978/hpr3978.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 18:13:39
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3978 for Wednesday, the 1st of November 2023.
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Today's show is entitled, Driving in Virginia.
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It is hosted by some guy on the internet and is about 30 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, Scotty talks about driving in the state of Virginia.
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You are listening to a show from the Reserve Q. We are airing it now because we had free
|
||||
slots that were not filled.
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This is a community project that needs listeners to contribute shows in order to survive.
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Please consider recording a show for Hacker Public Radio.
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Hello and welcome to another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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I'm your host, some guy on the internet.
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Welcome to a quick recording.
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I'm just going to be chatting with you about driving today.
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We've had shows where hosts have recorded while driving.
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I'm not recording while driving, but I will be discussing driving.
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And where I drive the most, I drive for a living.
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We refer to it as operating.
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I operate for a living, a commercial vehicle.
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And I do that within the state of Virginia, currently.
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I should probably also mention that I live in a United States for anyone who can't tell
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or haven't listened to previous shows.
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But here in the state of Virginia, we have some pretty interesting motorists around here.
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And there are some very interesting behavior that happens.
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Now throughout my years of driving, I've held different roles.
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I was once a union president.
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I was a shop steward before president, then I became president.
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I served one term realized that it was not what I thought it was supposed to be.
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You know, it seemed like it was going to be so much more.
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And eventually I found out that I'm not happy and I may have even been deceived.
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So as soon as I could get out of that, the next election came around.
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It was like, look, somebody take this away.
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I can talk about that another day.
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But the reason I bring it up in my role as the president for our local, not for the region
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or anything.
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I wasn't that big, but just for our local.
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We had to deal with lots of accidents and things of that nature.
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Any kind of collisions, rather it'd be collision with fixed object or collision with another
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motorist on highways, you know, wherever.
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And all of our units were outfitted, what was called the Apollo system.
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The Apollo system has, it was like between seven and nine cameras.
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It depends on the unit that you were operating.
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And like three of the cameras are on the driver.
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So you'll have one that's mounted to the windshield to the, was it called the dash cam.
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So the dash cam has two cameras on it, one facing outside the windshield so I can see
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the road.
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The other one facing inside the unit so it can see the driver and sort of everything
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around it.
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And it's kind of like that fisheye lens sort of has a very wide viewing angle.
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Then you have another camera like directly above the operator's head.
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So it's like looking right down on you, everything you're doing where your hands are, you know,
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what you're doing if you're eating, drinking, anything.
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And all of these also have audio, by the way.
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So there's microphones and cameras all over the unit.
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They can hear up to 15 feet away from the unit and they're surprisingly good.
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We've had some interesting conversations have an outside of the unit that were caught
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and investigations done to either prove something was done or wasn't done.
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Then there's another unit by the service door, another camera by the service door that
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looks directly at the operator from, from the side.
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So there's, you know, you're covered in cameras.
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This camera's all on the outside, all on the inside, just everywhere.
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And if anything happens and I do mean anything, if somebody called and then said this vehicle
|
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was driving all over the place, I think that the driver was drunk, they can tap into it
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at real time and watch you as you're operating the vehicle.
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So if anything is going on, obviously the dispatcher will then, you know, ring you, you will
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be told, you'll be instructed to pull over somebody will come and meet with you and you'll
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probably be taken to a facility to take a test.
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Now there's different things that happen, you know, sometimes it's maybe the driver behind
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you did not see what you were seeing because it could be something simple as there was debris
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in a road and you move to avoid running over the debris or vehicle in front of you was
|
||||
carrying trash and the trash fell off the back of the vehicle.
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||||
So you, you know, you, you tried to evade some of the, the trash without breaking your lane,
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that kind of thing.
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The person behind you may not know that yet and, you know, for whatever reason they just
|
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call you in.
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Now, we also have fraudsters here on the road in our area and here, there's some common
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techniques that I've seen either in my position as the, I should still, I'll just say professional,
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well, no, because then I am a professional operator, I do it for a living.
|
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But I mean, as a union official or just an operator, I've seen numerous types of fraud.
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There's the one where, you know, that the usual where you're in a straight lane.
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This is a multi lane highway or roadway, whatever you want to call it.
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We operate from the right lane on most, most of the time we operate from the right lane.
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The vehicle will probably pace with you for a while.
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You know, they'll, they'll probably be in, say, the, uh, the middle or the far right lane
|
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as well.
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Just kind of pacing with you and eventually what'll happen is they'll, they'll accelerate
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as though they're going to pass and going about their business.
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But what normally gives them away is you can see how they're positioning themselves in
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the lane, unless you've seen it before.
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And I know my explanation may not be the best here, but you can see the, the, the motorist,
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the person operating the four wheeler, they're going to be targeting you, right, looking
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at you in a certain way, like trying to, trying to make sure that they can get the angles
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just right for what they're attempting.
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And when you see the style of, um, acceleration is something that you notice over years.
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You can tell when someone's accelerating to go about their business versus someone
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who's accelerating to accomplish something.
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And when you see the style of acceleration, they, they pull themselves up alongside your
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vehicle, like think about right along where your front tire is.
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They don't decrease speed.
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They just don't accelerate as much.
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||||
And then eventually they tried to quickly merge in front of your vehicle.
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Now, the reason why they do this is because if you're not paying attention and following
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your training, what will happen is when you merge in front of you at that close distance,
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you're going to hit them.
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And that is going to be a rare end situation, which means when an officer arrives at the
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scene, they'll probably attempt to ticket you for following too closely.
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Now sometimes you can get a supervisor out to the location with video.
|
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But often, no, the officer is there.
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Then he has no proof of what has happened other than your vehicle smashed the back of
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theirs in and they're claiming to be half dead.
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They need an ambulance, you know, the whole night, um, and you're going to get a ticket
|
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for that.
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Now, not only that, whenever there's a collision in the street, one of the things you have
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to understand is you're not only facing whatever you have to do, you know, for your license
|
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for in the public, because you'll have to go to court and fight that.
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You have to hire an attorney, you know, do whatever.
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||||
And the company will provide you with the video, but you have to go through the union
|
||||
to request the video.
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There's a process.
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||||
You don't just go run to someone, you know, hey, give me the video from today.
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There's a process for that.
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||||
But once you get the video, you go fight that in court.
|
||||
You know, hey, this guy is a fraudster, et cetera, et cetera.
|
||||
And also your insurance is going to get involved with that as well.
|
||||
You have to contact your insurance because even though this is a company vehicle dealing
|
||||
with company insurance, this stuff still gets reported.
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Your name still goes into a database somewhere as having that kind of a collision and you're
|
||||
going to have to prove it to your own private insurance as well, because it will show up there.
|
||||
Even though you have to do that fight publicly, that's, that's what I call like the public
|
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style of fighting it in the courts and things of that nature.
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You're going to have to also fight within the company as well.
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Within the company, there is the, the argument of preventability, yeah, preventability that
|
||||
other, I know I'm tongue tied and I'm saying it a little weird, but it is preventable.
|
||||
That's what they're trying to argue.
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Now what they do is they argue rather than you could basically, could you or could you
|
||||
not have prevented that collision?
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That's basically what they want to know.
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||||
And they have to do these different cases for insurance purposes, right?
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||||
Whenever an operator is having too many collisions of any type, we've got to get rid of them,
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you know, you, you are a risk.
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And as we know in the commercial game, insurance rules everything.
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It does not matter if a company wishes to employ you to be an operator.
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If the insurance company says we're not going to cover that guy, we'll drop you if you
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||||
attempt to let him operate those vehicles, well, clearly you're not going to be operating
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vehicles.
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There's nothing to do with the company.
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The supervisor doesn't like you, the GM's a bum, all of that.
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You say whatever you want, if they will not ensure you forget it, you're done for, right?
|
||||
That's just as bad as not having a CDL, but still operating a commercial vehicle.
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Before anyone that doesn't know CDL stands for commercial driver's license, which that's
|
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a crime, by the way, if you operate a commercial vehicle without a, without a CDL, that's a crime.
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So you get back to the base, after you just had this accident, you found out you either
|
||||
do have a ticket for the accident, you know, the rear ending because this jerk pulled
|
||||
in front of you and then you tapped him.
|
||||
The company will then let you know, hey, we're going to schedule you for this call, the
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accident review board in our company, that's what it was called, and you have X amount
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of days to appeal, you know, well, well, first they'll charge you inside the company.
|
||||
The company will charge you and say, we reviewed the evidence and we believe this accident
|
||||
was preventable and they'll give you the paperwork letting you know that you've been officially
|
||||
charged blah, blah, blah, you'll then have to appeal that through the union to request
|
||||
that the accident go through the accident review board.
|
||||
Now, again, if you've been charged, that's going to get forwarded to the insurance company
|
||||
as the company's due diligence, right, they reviewed all the evidence and found out it
|
||||
was not equipment failure, anything like that.
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||||
The operator did something wrong and that's why the accident occurred.
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||||
So we're blaming the operator for this kind of that's that's somewhat of how it will
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||||
go.
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||||
The operator now has to defend themselves not only from the ticket that he receives from
|
||||
the police officer because that's bad enough getting that kind of ticket on your on your
|
||||
CDL, but now you have to defend your job inside the company as well because you just got
|
||||
a preventable accident.
|
||||
You now have to get union representation to fight that case as well.
|
||||
So you have to sit down with the union rep, fill out all that paperwork and yada yada, I'm
|
||||
not going to go into that part too much right now.
|
||||
And if you want to hear more about that in the future, I guess we can talk about that.
|
||||
But that's one of the things you'll have to face when operating on roads around here.
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That type of fraud where they pull in front of you and just kind of they they basically observe
|
||||
how you operate your vehicle.
|
||||
If you're very comfortable, relax, not paying attention, not keeping your head on a swivel.
|
||||
One of the things I notice is if you spot them when you when you spot them and you look
|
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directly at them, they just go on about their business most of the time, right?
|
||||
When you give them that dead stare in the mirror and they see that you're looking at them,
|
||||
they don't really pull it.
|
||||
But if you're kind of just, you know, maybe you're eating chips or reaching for a bottle
|
||||
of water or something like that, not really paying attention or they'll they'll swing
|
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right in on you and it's game over when it happens.
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Another type of fraud I've seen in our area and this one's very tricky.
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This has happened to me and I swear I had hit this guy.
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Imagine you're on a, I don't know, some side road and you're driving forward toward the
|
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main road.
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Now here in the US, we normally make a right onto the main road and in this particular
|
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road, there was no, no left that you could make, right?
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Like you, you had to make a right onto the main road.
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So the side road is about let's just say 25 miles an hour, you're going through like
|
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a neighborhood or something.
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The main road goes up to about 45 miles an hour, maybe 50, something like that.
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I don't know what that translates to in kilometers.
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But you get to the intersection where there's like a stop sign or we call it a turn signal
|
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or traffic signal.
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That's what it's called traffic signal and you're waiting there because you, you may have
|
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the option to make it right on red.
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Sometimes there's a sign there that'll say no turn, no right on red, but in this particular
|
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example, we have right on red, we can make a right turn.
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There's a car in front of me.
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He's prepared to make his right turn.
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He's looking left to make sure that there's plenty of time and distance.
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Those are the factors that we as professional operators deal with where we're prepared
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to make this type of merger.
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There's plenty of time and distance from me to merge on to the main road from the side
|
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road and then accelerate to keep up with traffic.
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So the motor is in front of me.
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That's what he's doing.
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Whether he knows it by that terminology or not, he's looking.
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The coast is clear.
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He thinks he can make it.
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He goes right.
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He guns it.
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I pull up and this is partially on my fault right here, you know, I look to the left.
|
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I did not come to a complete stop.
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We were all at a complete stop because we're waiting to see if it's clear to go.
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He went first.
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He meant his right.
|
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So I eased up while looking left to see if it's clear.
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||||
It's wide open.
|
||||
So I started pulling forward and as I swivel my head back to the right, I realized the
|
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guy in front of me came to a complete stop.
|
||||
So here I am stepping on the accelerator, getting ready to pull into the into traffic and
|
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the guy in front of me who appeared to, you know, at first he appeared to just have taken
|
||||
off like made his right turn and go on about his business.
|
||||
Instead, he pulled forward like he accelerated just a bit and then came to a stop because
|
||||
I was looking left to ensure that the path was clear for me.
|
||||
I did not realize he came to a stop until I swiveled back to the right.
|
||||
However, I was already in a process of accelerating.
|
||||
You understand?
|
||||
I nearly ran right in the sky.
|
||||
It wouldn't have been high speed or anything because we were both at a stop before making
|
||||
this turn.
|
||||
However, when you're getting ready to merge on to a, a road where the speed is significantly
|
||||
higher than the one you're currently on, you got to gun it, you know what I mean?
|
||||
So that's a scary situation to find yourself in and I've seen it from the Apollo system
|
||||
with many other operators and yes, had I hit that guy that would have been 100% maybe
|
||||
the cop would not have taken it in me had he seen the video or maybe I could have gone
|
||||
to the judge and showed the judge with this guy done and they were thrown to take it out.
|
||||
However, in the company, the argument of preventability, preventability would have 100% been
|
||||
on me.
|
||||
I would have been charged and found to be not guilty.
|
||||
We didn't deal with guilt.
|
||||
We dealt with preventability, right?
|
||||
So yeah, they would have said I could have prevented that accident by basically keeping
|
||||
your head on a swivel by before you accelerated outward and I should have, I should have came
|
||||
to a complete stop after moving up to the line to view the traffic from the left before
|
||||
turning right.
|
||||
I did not, but I learned my lesson that day.
|
||||
I've seen that type of accident numerous times, those type of collisions from frosters.
|
||||
They pretend like, okay, you know, I want to make this right and get out of here, but
|
||||
then they they accelerate aggressively just for a second.
|
||||
So you hear the engine run, but then they come to a stop shortly afterward.
|
||||
And it's always in a situation where there may not be the time, you know, a lot of people
|
||||
are impatient.
|
||||
They're on the gold.
|
||||
They're trying to get where they need to be.
|
||||
And when you hear that guy's engine like he took off, that's the only thing you're thinking.
|
||||
He just got out of there.
|
||||
It looks clear enough for me to get out of here too.
|
||||
Let me go right behind them.
|
||||
And that's, you know, you're looking left by the time you swing your head back around
|
||||
right.
|
||||
It's a tough time when that happens.
|
||||
You're upset.
|
||||
You know, he got you, you know, right?
|
||||
There's no point in arguing with him.
|
||||
There's also other policies you have to ask.
|
||||
I mean, things you have to follow.
|
||||
So when a collision like that happens and you know the scumbag set you up, you still have
|
||||
to go and ask him if he's okay and call for a ambulance, you know, all the whole ring
|
||||
maroo.
|
||||
So these are just some of the type of fraud things that we deal with when driving in Virginia,
|
||||
especially Northern Virginia.
|
||||
When you go further south like below Richmond and stuff, I don't see anywhere near the type
|
||||
of crap that I witnessed in Northern Virginia up toward Arlington, heading up toward DC,
|
||||
especially in DC.
|
||||
Oh my God.
|
||||
DC in Maryland like the DMV.
|
||||
It is terrible.
|
||||
DMV.
|
||||
I should specify there's there's the DMV, the Department of Motor Vehicles.
|
||||
That's where you go to get your driver's licenses and register to vote, know what sorts
|
||||
of other things, things like that.
|
||||
And then there's also what we refer to as DMV, which stands for DC, Maryland, Virginia
|
||||
in the tri state area.
|
||||
Now another bit of fraud that I noticed is, well, before before I go further, let me just
|
||||
mention that one of the things we teach when operating, you're most vulnerable during
|
||||
any form of acceleration, rather you're building speed or maintaining speed when you're interacting
|
||||
with the accelerator and not the brake.
|
||||
That's when you're most vulnerable is you're in a commercial vehicle vehicle, rather you're
|
||||
keeping it at let's say 45 miles an hour or or bringing it up to 45 miles an hour.
|
||||
There's a lot of power and remember, when you want to stop this thing, you need time
|
||||
and distance as well as space to, you know, stop it without there being collisions.
|
||||
One of the depending on the company that you work for, I know that every company is a
|
||||
little bit different.
|
||||
I've been with some companies that they really don't care so much as long as you don't
|
||||
hit anything.
|
||||
It's okay.
|
||||
So I've, you know, if you're in a commercial game, you probably seen Swift trucks a lot.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
I mean, I don't like the bash operators, but oh, boy there in our line of work, there's
|
||||
a difference between a driver and an operator.
|
||||
Swift's got a lot of drivers, not many operators.
|
||||
All right.
|
||||
That's all I'm going to say about that.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Now one of the things I want to also mention here, I got a little side track there.
|
||||
When you're operating on a highway, and again, right lane, we're talking interstate and
|
||||
you're just rolling nice, long straight road.
|
||||
One of the things that I see a lot, I call it leapfrogging.
|
||||
I don't know if there's another term for it.
|
||||
Maybe the jerks that I actually performed this maneuvering have their own little name
|
||||
for it.
|
||||
I have no clue.
|
||||
I saw it the most a few years back.
|
||||
I guess there was a new, what do you call those movies, Fast and a Furies.
|
||||
Whenever one of those movies come out, you always get these situations where these kids
|
||||
come out with their little cars, they call them rice burners and things of that nature,
|
||||
you know, little Honda Civics with, you know, maybe a rap on it or a custom paint job of
|
||||
not just mufflers and all of the nonsense.
|
||||
Well, one of the little, the games that they play on a highway is, imagine being in
|
||||
right lane, you're operating going straight on the interstate.
|
||||
The vehicle will be behind you, somewhere behind you either in the lane, behind you
|
||||
or the lane, like say center lane or even a far left lane, but behind you, you're approaching
|
||||
an exit.
|
||||
It is not your exit, you do not need it.
|
||||
However, the motorist, the bonehead does need that exit.
|
||||
Now they could simply pull in the lane behind you because the exit, the exit is coming up
|
||||
and they're actually behind you already.
|
||||
What they do is wait to get significantly close to that exit and they aggressively accelerate
|
||||
changing lanes to the left, accelerate around you and then quickly cut you off to make
|
||||
that exit.
|
||||
It is the most silly, dangerous, nonsensical thing you could do out there, especially dealing
|
||||
with commercial vehicles, but it happens a lot, not even just two commercial operators.
|
||||
I'm talking about just even in my private vehicle, I see this nonsense all the time, now
|
||||
because I've seen it so many times, again, you learn to tell the driver by the way they
|
||||
operate, right?
|
||||
You can see when somebody's going to do something stupid, here's this guy, he's been
|
||||
right, you know, say we're going 60 miles an hour, he's been doing 60 this entire time,
|
||||
just cruising back there.
|
||||
Now as River approaching this exit, this guy looks like he's doing 90 all of a sudden,
|
||||
like, you know, you just know, just let off the accelerator, you may have to go, you
|
||||
know, you may have to break and lose some speed here, but you know, he's going to do something
|
||||
stupid.
|
||||
So one thing, one thing that I can tell you as a professional operator, do not ever, do
|
||||
not ever in your life, compete with stupid, all right, you're never going to win.
|
||||
Stupid always wins.
|
||||
I'm telling you, in a situation like I just described to you with this leapfrogging nonsense,
|
||||
if you try to accelerate to prevent them from making that merger that they're trying
|
||||
to do with merging off the highway onto that exit ramp, they are not going to do the smart
|
||||
thing and slow down because you've beaten them and now they have to go up the road to
|
||||
the next exit.
|
||||
No, you're competing with stupid here, they're going to slam into you and both of you are
|
||||
going off the road now.
|
||||
That's if you're in a car, if you're in a commercial vehicle, obviously it's not going
|
||||
to work quite that way, but I mean, you may be dealing with a fatality at that point.
|
||||
I mean, do you really want to be on the side of the road with highway patrol dealing
|
||||
with that?
|
||||
If you've ever seen fatalities with commercial vehicles or been in one or understood
|
||||
what you have to go through whenever there is a fatality as a commercial operator, you
|
||||
don't want to know, you don't want to go through that, all right.
|
||||
So whatever you do, do not compete with stupid, the moment you identify stupid and stupid
|
||||
has very simple plans, all right.
|
||||
Stupid goes fast, all right, DFN drive fast now.
|
||||
That's what stupid does, all right.
|
||||
You don't ever at any point think, all that guy is going to try to cut me off or he's
|
||||
trying to cut the line, you know, you'll have people, they'll jump into the right turn
|
||||
lane just to cut the traffic and then cut into the left even though the lane says right
|
||||
lane must turn right.
|
||||
You still use it just to cut left, do not ever compete with stupid, all right.
|
||||
What you're going to find yourself is in a situation where you're going to probably
|
||||
end up in a shootout on the highway because you don't know what stupid's prepared to
|
||||
do the win.
|
||||
All right.
|
||||
I don't say I'm serious, do not compete with stupid.
|
||||
It is not worth it in the long run, all right, people who will already play at that
|
||||
game, you have to understand, there's a good chance that vehicles probably stolen.
|
||||
They probably have no license, no insurance, possibly no other identifiable information
|
||||
or whatever, you know, you'll be competing with stupid, just don't do it.
|
||||
We have this mindset when operating in commercial vehicles, it's called the be my guest mindset.
|
||||
Whenever you see somebody who knows they should merge over, so like, if there's construction
|
||||
and there's like 100,000 signs and cones and things, making it abundantly clear that you
|
||||
need to merge over into the right lane because the left lane ends or whatever, and you see
|
||||
that jerk who's still trying to ride up that left lane, trying to cut the line, you know,
|
||||
everybody in the right lane is moving nice and slow and he's hauling it up the left to
|
||||
get up to the front of the line, maintain the be my guest mentality, let them in.
|
||||
Don't try to tighten it up because you think you can stop stupid, right?
|
||||
You can beat stupid in this race, don't do it. Let them in.
|
||||
All right, you're going to save yourself and everybody else a lot of time by doing it.
|
||||
Oh, another thing that I'm going to also point out to you, you may be licensed to carry
|
||||
and Virginia is an open carry state, but as a commercial operator, you are not, you do not carry
|
||||
in your commercial vehicle. I'm just, I'm just pointing that out. Now that does not mean that people
|
||||
are not carrying in their commercial vehicle. I'm just telling you, if you are caught carrying
|
||||
in your commercial vehicle, there's a problem for you. Now, none of that means anything when
|
||||
you get into a shootout on the highway, and it has happened here in Virginia a couple of times,
|
||||
as well as Maryland and DC. Well, DC, they shoot, they just shoot all over the place. So there's no,
|
||||
they're killing each other for fun around there. I don't know what's happening in DC, but
|
||||
we've had quite a few. I hadn't seen one recently, but that doesn't mean that we won't,
|
||||
they won't decide to start the trend back up. So I run into a lot of guys who like to, you know,
|
||||
talk about what they'll do if a situation were to occur, what they're not telling you is what's
|
||||
going to happen to them. Yet, sure, you, you may survive that incident, right? You may survive,
|
||||
but your livelihood is in great jeopardy. One of the things that's going to happen is you're
|
||||
probably going to get sued even after that, even if the guy pulled on you first, you got to
|
||||
understand how many witnesses are going to see it the way you saw it. Two, you know, his defense
|
||||
is going to probably be arguing the most that you should not have had a weapon in that vehicle in
|
||||
the first place. So, you know, you're going to lose your CDL at least for a certain period of
|
||||
time. So you're not going to have income to continue paying a lawyer to, to, you know, deal with
|
||||
that situation. It's going to be a nightmare situation. So just don't, don't compete with stupid
|
||||
whatever you do. Let them in. It's much easier. We have this other saying is much easier to drive
|
||||
around an accident than it is to drive away from one. All right. So I think I've, I think I've
|
||||
rambled on for quite a bit here. I'm trying to think of anything else I can toss in real quick.
|
||||
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. One of the things I encourage everybody to do, learn about the different,
|
||||
a lot of what I've learned came from, you know, the position as being in the union and in the union
|
||||
official. We learned about what to do at accident scenes, like how to investigate them, learning about,
|
||||
you know, how you should take your photos, catching the accident from the different angles,
|
||||
the debris field on the ground, all these different things you have to capture. Because again,
|
||||
when you go to court or not even gorgeous, when you have to return back to the company and then
|
||||
fight that preventability charge, all of this, you have to use, right? So you, there's a lot that I
|
||||
ended up learning. And I also learned it even in insurance, right? That preventability, that word
|
||||
comes up a lot, right? A lot of people will argue that. What could you have done to prevent that,
|
||||
right? Preventability will destroy you. So you need to be careful there. So I encourage you,
|
||||
if your state issues any sort of motor vehicle books or anything, refresh yourself, learn about
|
||||
different fraud that takes place even on your roadway, you know, fraudsters, they have these different
|
||||
techniques that they use as well, where one of the fraudsters pulls in front of you. The other one
|
||||
is on the side of you to the left kind of cutting you off where you can't change lanes very easily.
|
||||
And the one in front of you would then kind of go on a break. And because you can't change lanes,
|
||||
you're probably going to rear end them. So there's different techniques that are used by fraudsters.
|
||||
I suggest you inform yourself, stay up to speed on all this stuff, and understand how your
|
||||
phone works. Because when you have to start taking images of an accident scene or whatever to prove
|
||||
that you were in your lane, the debris field means a lot. Trust me, wherever the debris fell,
|
||||
that can help you in your case, improving where you were at the time of the incident. Because
|
||||
you know, sometimes you have to move out of the street to allow traffic to flow that kind of thing,
|
||||
depending on your state and what laws are. So yeah. So that's all I got time for today. I hope
|
||||
you guys enjoyed the show. This is just a rant. All right, I'll catch you guys in the next episode. Take
|
||||
it easy. You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio. It doesn't work.
|
||||
Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording
|
||||
broadcast, you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is. Hosting for HBR
|
||||
has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive, and our sims.net.
|
||||
On this otherwise stated, today's show is released under Creative Commons,
|
||||
Attribution 4.0 International License.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
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