Valuy@lemmy.zip to Videos@lemmy.world · edit-26 days agoWhen traffic comes to a standstill, German drivers instantly shift left and right to create a Rettungsgasse, an emergency corridor so ambulances and firefighters can fly through at full speedcdn.imgchest.comvideomessage-square177fedilinkarrow-up1516arrow-down110
arrow-up1506arrow-down1videoWhen traffic comes to a standstill, German drivers instantly shift left and right to create a Rettungsgasse, an emergency corridor so ambulances and firefighters can fly through at full speedcdn.imgchest.comValuy@lemmy.zip to Videos@lemmy.world · edit-26 days agomessage-square177fedilink
minus-squarefizzle@quokk.aulinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·5 days agoBecause, those thread is full of people saying that in practice it never looks like this.
minus-squareEvil_Shrubbery@thelemmy.clublinkfedilinkarrow-up1·edit-25 days agoI always see this tho, and I’m not even from Germany. It might not be that perfectly straight, but I can clearly see it as a better practice that the 10+ years ago (afaik the data shows that too). This isn’t just for standing traffic, it’s for rush hours too. (If someone wants to maliciously stop emergency vehicles they can do that on shoulders too.)
Because, those thread is full of people saying that in practice it never looks like this.
I always see this tho, and I’m not even from Germany.
It might not be that perfectly straight, but I can clearly see it as a better practice that the 10+ years ago (afaik the data shows that too).
This isn’t just for standing traffic, it’s for rush hours too.
(If someone wants to maliciously stop emergency vehicles they can do that on shoulders too.)