"When you see somebody with their hazards on, it indicates you're stopped, need assistance or something's wrong."
Something's wrong is the key word for me....
Something's just plain wrong is the key for me. To wit:
"When
you see somebody with their hazards on, it indicates
you're stopped, need assistance or something's wrong."
How can seeing someone
else with
their hazards on mean in any way that
YOU are stopped, or need assistance?
To protect and serve, your tax dollars hard at work, is what it means. <snort>
My other issue is this:
How frequently that happens is not readily available. The state's uniform traffic citation statistics are not broken down to that level.
Well, why not? How else are you going to know which laws are effective, the frequency with which they are broken, and possibly needing some special target enforcement if they are frequently broken or are creating safety issues? The laws that aren't broken very often probably don't even need to be on the books.
"We see it all the time and it's a pet peeve," said Boca Raton police spokesman Marc Economou.
Ah, OK, that's why it's on the books. It's a pet peeve.
Well then enforce the stupid law, then. Get soaked, do your job, earn your money.
The law comes down to safety, Wysocky and Economou said. The turn signal and brake lights on some cars don't work when hazard lights are activated, Wysocky said. And people who see hazard lights may think the car is already stopped.
Yeah, they MAY think that, but nobody does, not for a car that has its hazards on in the rain while they've not stopped. And if they DO think the car is stopped, they certainly aren't very likely to plow into it. What a goober.
If I ever get pulled over in Florida for having my hazard lights on, I'll just say that I have them on because I was afraid of serious bodily injury or death and they are on in self defense.