QUOTE(nihility @ Jun 11 2025, 03:39 PM)
The more he explains, the worse the criticism will become. Just step forward, apologize, and face the necessary punishment.
Capital punishment as a deterrent may only prevent reckless driving to a certain extent. What’s more important is the mindset of the individuals employed in this field. As bus drivers, they are entrusted with the lives of the public, and their awareness of this responsibility will have a lasting impact.
If a driver holds the mentality of "my life is cheap," and "I’m just working to get by — the public’s safety is not my concern," then incidents like this will continue to happen.
Lots left to explain with allegations of him not having a PSV license, multiple outstanding summonses and passengers saying he was driving very fast, even when told to slow down.Capital punishment as a deterrent may only prevent reckless driving to a certain extent. What’s more important is the mindset of the individuals employed in this field. As bus drivers, they are entrusted with the lives of the public, and their awareness of this responsibility will have a lasting impact.
If a driver holds the mentality of "my life is cheap," and "I’m just working to get by — the public’s safety is not my concern," then incidents like this will continue to happen.
Investigations will uncover the allegations of brake failure, which I think is unlikely unless he overheated the brakes and had it faded.
As to your point, that unfortunately is the mentality of those entrusted to drive busses and lorries, as with the companies that run them and the tidak apa attitude/kasi hantam mindset so common among some of us.
Jun 11 2025, 03:50 PM

Quote
0.0160sec
0.46
6 queries
GZIP Disabled