Honest
Hi!
- 11,676
- Posts
- 16
- Years
- Age 29
- New York City
- Seen Sep 30, 2023
Or if you're me, J walking.
For those of you who don't know what jay walking is:
I was actually going over this in my Urban Life class (yay for paying attention), and I was pretty surprised about how different places dealt with jaywalking. Here in New York City, jaywalking is illegal, but people do it all. The. Time. The red lights/dont walk signs don't mean crap; if there are no cars coming, you cross the street. A good method for weeding out those poor tourists who wait at the corner for the red light to change and inadvertently clog the corners.
Then there's the cases where people cross in the middle of the street cause the corner is too mainstream for them. I do that all the time. =P
So how about you? How's jaywalking in your city/town, and how would you react to a place like New York, or perhaps Seattle, where everyone waits for the green light apparently. Do you think it's a law that should be enforced, or are impatient New Yorkers right to cross when they can?
For those of you who don't know what jay walking is:
Jaywalking is illegal or reckless pedestrian crossing of a roadway. Examples include a pedestrian crossing between intersections without yielding to drivers and starting to cross a crosswalk at a signalized intersection without waiting for a permissive indication to be displayed.
I was actually going over this in my Urban Life class (yay for paying attention), and I was pretty surprised about how different places dealt with jaywalking. Here in New York City, jaywalking is illegal, but people do it all. The. Time. The red lights/dont walk signs don't mean crap; if there are no cars coming, you cross the street. A good method for weeding out those poor tourists who wait at the corner for the red light to change and inadvertently clog the corners.
Then there's the cases where people cross in the middle of the street cause the corner is too mainstream for them. I do that all the time. =P
So how about you? How's jaywalking in your city/town, and how would you react to a place like New York, or perhaps Seattle, where everyone waits for the green light apparently. Do you think it's a law that should be enforced, or are impatient New Yorkers right to cross when they can?