Driving in france: a clash of cultures on the road? 🚗🇫🇷🛣️


Driving in france: a clash of cultures on the road? 🚗🇫🇷🛣️

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A CONNEXION READER TAKES ISSUE WITH CORRESPONDENTS LABELLING FRENCH DRIVERS AS IMPATIENT AND AGGRESSIVE To the Editor, Your correspondents in recent issues appear to live in a different


France from me. Are French drivers as aggressive, ill-mannered and impatient as they suggest?  LETTERS: HIGH DEATH TOLL ON FRENCH ROADS IS NO SURPRISE Some of them undoubtedly are, of


course, as are drivers in every single other country. I see these letters and wonder how experienced the people are as drivers themselves, both generally and internationally.  Having driven


extensively, for example, in the US, it is undoubtedly true that the whole experience is very different – roads are typically pretty straight, junctions tend be straightforward crossroads


and there is almost always plenty of room for two gas-guzzlers to pass each other without either party needing to pay too much attention.  Read more: Campaign to reduce speed limit to 30


km/h in all French towns Here in Europe, that is not how things work – and visitors should take pleasure in that if they want to enjoy what we have to offer.  I do not think there are very


many in France, whether native or immigrant, who wish to see much of the countryside bulldozed and tarmacked to make D roads wider and straighter and provide 'road shoulders and


pullouts'. Perhaps the problem lies with individual drivers, rather than a road network which, in general, satisfies the 60 or so million French people who use it.  Let’s remember that


we are the immigrants, so it is our responsibility to adapt or go elsewhere – it is not for France to turn itself into a ‘little America’. Ashley Hildebrandt, by email Send us your own views


and experiences via [email protected]