Hi, Folks,
I'm posting this article because, from my time in the ER, I believe the reason Miami is rated this way, is because, as I described to a Florida Highway Patrol officer there for an accident, Miami has multiple driving cultures which just don't mix. Plus, in my OPINION, the illegals, in general, just don't think our laws apply to them. I tell my visitors to drive with their 'paranoid cap on 'cause they are out to get you!' If you visit...do NOT blow your horn at anyone! You might get shot. Also, at a red light, it's a city 'joke' that 3 cars ALWAYS run it.

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Survey looks at road rage across nation
Miami tops rude drivers list; Minneapolis nicest

Updated: 4:44 p.m. ET May 16, 2006
Stressed Miami drivers speed, tailgate and cut off other drivers so frequently that the city earned the title of worst road rage in a survey released Tuesday.

AutoVantage, an automobile membership club offering travel services and roadside assistance, also listed Phoenix, New York, Los Angeles and Boston among the top five cities for rude driving.

Minneapolis, Nashville, St. Louis, Seattle and Atlanta were rated as the cities with the most courteous drivers, who were less likely to change lanes without signaling or swear at other motorists.

More than 2,000 adult drivers who regularly commute in 20 major metropolitan areas were asked to rate road rage and rude driving in telephone surveys between January and March. The survey conducted by Prince Market Research has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.2 percentage points.

Drivers owned up to some rude behavior themselves: Nearly all said they had talked on a cell phone while driving, and 64 percent acknowledged they occasionally drive too fast.

Young drivers and people with long commutes were found to be the most likely to react to an aggressive or rude driver. The top reactions included honking the horn, cursing or making an obscene gesture.

No distinct differences were found between male and female drivers.

“Human behavior is so involved with crashes at all levels,” said Elly Martin, a spokeswoman for the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. “(Aggressive driving) is a pattern of behavior drivers exhibit over and over.”

AutoVantage, based in Norwalk, Conn., hopes to use the survey to educate people about how to resist road rage. Among its tips are remaining calm and not making eye contact with an angry driver.

© 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.