Nebraska always scores high in the Best Drivers category every year (as does Kansas) because we start them young. :-) :tongue:
Also, one of the good things about North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, and Kansas is that there's room, plenty of room, for one to drive, without being hampered by a whole lot of other traffic.I seriously believe that horrible drivers "are born" in large cities. I read an article just a few days ago about the states with the best and the worst drivers, and I'm sure that the states with the most city-slickers had the worst drivers.
There's inconveniences to living in a small place, but there's advantages too.
I suspect people living in blue states would almost kill for the chance to have 20 miles of open road, no other vehicles.
It's been my experience, madam, that the worst drivers are in Boston and Baltimore.I was in Boston once, on a business trip. When I got back to Nebraska, I told my boss that I was sure they sent us to places like that just to remind us how lucky we were to live in Nebraska. He just laughed.
I dunno why that is; it must have something to do with those corrupt Republican party machines that run those cities.
I was appalled one time in Boston, to watch as fire trucks and ambulances tried to get their way through traffic, and all of these CLINTON/GORE-bumper-stickered drivers wouldn't let them through.
That should be a penal crime, to not give way to emergency and law-enforcement vehicles. Like ten or twenty years in the slammer.