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Women More Prone To Road Rage Than Men

Started by GG, July 29, 2012, 10:38:59 PM

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GG

http://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2012/07/27/study-reveals-women-more-prone-to-road-rage-than-men/

A new survey of America's commuters reveals some interesting facts. Chief among them: many folks text and drive, while far more — especially women — have a tendency to fly off the handle.

The study was conducted by Harris Interactive between May 14 and June 4 of this year. Over 3,800 commuters were surveyed, all of whom were employed full-time and most of whom (83%) drove to their workplaces. For the purposes of the study, Harris limited participants to those who were not self-employed and not in government jobs.

When all the dust had settled, Harris found that America has some very angry drivers, and quite a few who aren't entirely safety-conscious. Here are the major takeaways:

   Women are more prone to road rage than men. Of those surveyed, 61% of women said that they had experienced road rage, compared to 56% of men.
   Younger drivers are more prone to road rage than older ones. Roughly 68% of respondents between 25 and 34 years old said they experienced road rage, while just 47% of those 55 and older said the same.
   It's too darn hot (for road rage): 17% of those surveyed said they experienced less road rage during the summer months, while 10% said they experienced more.
   Roughly 9% of commuters have actually gotten into a fight with another commuter.
   Almost one in four commuters — 24% to be precise — has been involved in an accidenten route to work. We'd expect that figure to be a little higher because...
   Fully 30% of commuters have sent text messages while driving to and from work.

The study was commissioned by CareerBuilder — which, to be fair, has an interest in pointing out the dangers of commuting, since that might encourage more folks to use the site to look for new jobs. Among the tips that CareerBuilder offers for making commutes less stressful are leaving earlier, taking public transportation, and playing easy-listening tunes en route. We agree with that last one: Judas Priest, like gin, can't be fully enjoyed until lunchtime.

Commuters: do these stats jibe with your own experiences? How do you cope with the stress of driving to and from work? (Please don't say, "By beating the crap out of the schmuck who cut me off".)
Trust but verify

Red Arrow

Quote from: GG on July 29, 2012, 10:38:59 PM
Commuters: do these stats jibe with your own experiences? How do you cope with the stress of driving to and from work? (Please don't say, "By beating the crap out of the schmuck who cut me off".)

I mostly consider them to be ignorant and that they would not be allowed to drive in any other country in the world. Too many American drivers have no discipline at all.  They also think they are being courteous but really they are causing traffic difficulties (to be polite).  It's a price we pay for being American and allowing drivers to get their license from the back of a cereal box.
 

Teatownclown

It's the price we pay for being humans....

nathanm

I text while in the car on occasion. Even while I'm in the driver's seat. However, I have the sense to do it while stopped, not while hurtling down the freeway at whatever speed traffic is going that day.
"Labor is prior to and independent of capital. Capital is only the fruit of labor, and could never have existed if labor had not first existed. Labor is the superior of capital, and deserves much the higher consideration" --Abraham Lincoln

MrsConan

That's rather ironic, that women experience more road rage than men, because when I see a driver doing something stupid, it's usually a woman.  I will have to admit that I used to get pretty upset with drivers doing stupid, inconsiderate crap in traffic.  I could write a book on the stuff I've seen, but I'll spare you as most of you have probably seen similar or worse things.  I've calmed down considerably as I've learned that it's nothing personal, that people in general really don't give a rip about the consequences of their actions behind the wheel.  And Tulsa seems to be one of the worst. The times I've been VERY near misses and the one time my car was hit were all right here in T-town. 

Hoss

Quote from: MrsConan on July 31, 2012, 01:43:46 PM
That's rather ironic, that women experience more road rage than men, because when I see a driver doing something stupid, it's usually a woman.  I will have to admit that I used to get pretty upset with drivers doing stupid, inconsiderate crap in traffic.  I could write a book on the stuff I've seen, but I'll spare you as most of you have probably seen similar or worse things.  I've calmed down considerably as I've learned that it's nothing personal, that people in general really don't give a rip about the consequences of their actions behind the wheel.  And Tulsa seems to be one of the worst. The times I've been VERY near misses and the one time my car was hit were all right here in T-town. 

Two places I'd never like to live for fear of the other drivers:

McKinney TX.  Not sure what it is about this little burb in the MetroPlex, but everyone else once you get to Plano and inside the LBJ freeway does fine.

Northern Virginia - Wow.  That's all I will say.