Me and the woman were driving through MD on our way to NJ on a Saturday. There is a Hyundai SUV in the left lane going about 70. Cool, no problem.
See, now as I understand it - THAT IS A PROBLEM!
In the DC area there are far to many people who drive in the left lane, not passing anyone, and go 'no problem'.
I'm not down with the accident - it was messed up, but if there is nobody in the right lane, people should be moving over and allowing for faster cars to pass. This is a very standard concept in Germany and Belgium. If you pass someone, immediately move to the right lane to allow others to pass. You aren't the police, it is not your right to drive in the left lane.
If a driver behind you has enough room to get into the right lane, pass you on the right, and get back out in front of you (with enough space), then you are in the wrong freakin' lane to be driving in.
Now, not saying this was the exact case in this circumstance, since the guy didn't control his vehicle for some reason. But, for sure, just driving a bit over the local speed limit is not justification for being in the passing lane.
My real issue is that cops basically never enforce any passing lane laws in the USA. They are all over speeders, but if someone is forced to pass on the right because someone won't yield right of way, then there is never a ticket given.
Pretty sure 'flashing lights' isn't meant to be rude, but as a friendly indication to move over a lane as a faster driver approaches from behind when in Europe. Around the US it is often considered rude.
I don't get it. Seems like some laws in the US could be made in states and then enforced by officers to help the flow of traffic. Ensure the left lane drivers are passing, not impeding the flow of traffic and ticketing those who want to act as pace cars.
Same for those who use merge lanes as passing lanes, or actually enforcing HOV lane rules, which definitely allows for (and should) kids in minivans.