Yep. It also makes the people behind them want to hurt them because you’re supposed to be driving when the light is green, not stopping to let someone else go. They’re lucky they don’t get rear-ended more often.
I agree with you, but I’ve heard that if you wave someone through, it’s like you’re directing traffic and you’re responsible if someone from another lane plows into the person you waved through. I think it should be the driver’s responsibility in a case like this, but I’m not sure which is true. Again, this is just what I’ve heard.
We have that rule here for marked crosswalks. Most drivers ignore it but I’ve stopped for a few only to realize the people are just hanging out at the corner, not waiting to cross.
When I first moved to this area a certain city didn’t want to put up stop signs in the neighborhoods but they still gave out tickets in accidents to the person who did not have the right of way.
Apparently there was some sort of understood right of way that everyone who lived here already knew. When I drive there I stop EVERYWHERE even though they’ve since decided to put up signs. It’s habit.
You don’t understand the pedestrian crosswalk law. The drivers are REQUIRED to stop for any pedestrian in a crosswalk or about to enter one.
You don’t have to be standing in the street, if you are standing on the corner they have to stop or risk a ticket.
This also applies to corners without marked crosswalk signs or lines on the road. There is an implied crosswalk at every intersection.
So the drivers are not just deciding to hold up traffic, YOU are.
Yesterday as I was driving home, I had to make two left turns. The first one, a bicyclist was riding along the sidewalk toward the intersection…and then he stopped. He apparently wouldn’t go until I made my turn. I grumbled and went, and as I approached my next left turn, I saw a car driving toward me, quickly enough that I would be safer waiting for it to pass. It stopped in the middle of the street for no discernable reason! It was too far away to simply be stopping for me, and it wasn’t making a turn or anything. I grumbled about that one too as I made my turn, which caused my passenger to chew me out, since the driver hadn’t put me in immediate danger. Consistency is key, though. When people start being unpredictable on the road, I get nervous.