Toronto Bike-Car Incident Serves as Catalyst

[In the spirit of the world wide web I'll start by providing a little excerpt from Wash Cycle quoting NPR, follow the links for more information.]
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"This change going on on the streets is happening on the fly," [Noah Budnic of the North American Alliance for Biking and Walking] says. "They're learning how to behave differently and drive and bike on streets that are still designed for cars. So there's a lot of tension because people are just making it up as they go along."

Road rage expert David Weisenthal, a psychologist at Toronto's York University, says it's that sense of unpredictability, combined with a desire for revenge, that leads to conflicts.

"We know we will never see the other drivers again who are in front of us, in back of us, alongside of us," Weisenthal says. "We also have a sense of anonymity so that we feel freer to act in what may very often be a nasty manner."
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<a href="http://www.thewashcycle.com/2009/09/toronto-bikecar-incident-serves-as-catalyst.html">http://www.thewashcycle.com/2009/09/toronto-bikecar-incident-serves-as-catalyst.html</a>;

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