
I'm 100% Positive That Everyone Agrees That If You Do Even One Of These Things, You Are The WORST Type Of Driver
If you...
1. Drive with a 20-foot beam sticking out of your car:
Facebook
2. Attatch things that should NOT be attatched to your car:
3. Like, c'mon:
reddit.com
My goodness.
4. What are we doing here?
5. Just throw a Christmas tree on top of your car all willy-nilly:
6. Keep things on the roof "secured" like this:
7. Just completely ignore being able to see anything behind you:
8. Drive with a car full of bricks as if you're a cartoon character:
9. Leave a mountain of snow on top of your car:
10. Act like the cars on the left:
11. Smoke next to a bunch of flammable gas:
reddit.com
12. Put your appendages out the window:
reddit.com
13. Have beams of wood sticking out of your car:
14. Drive without lights in the rain:
15. Drive with an EXTENDED ladder:
16. Drive the world's slipperiest car:
17. Or drive on basically nothing at all:
18. Put on a seatbelt like this:
19. Drive with something that increases the size of your car two-fold:
u/kitsf / Via reddit.com
20. Play a game of Car Jenga:
u/darthjayjub / Via reddit.com
21. Use one tiny cord to secure a bunch of heavy mattresses:
u/kendrid / Via reddit.com
22. Forget the entire purpose of a truck:
u/LordStark_01/ / Via reddit.com
23. Secure things to your car like it's a train:
u/suprovation / Via reddit.com
24. Drive with a bunch of rock ammunition:
u/yasumki / Via reddit.com
25. Or tires that could bounce out at any moment:
u/shayneux / Via reddit.com
26. Drive with a car that cannot handle the amount of stuff you are putting in it:
u/kerosene_dreamer / Via reddit.com
27. Drive with an open trunk full of projectiles:
reddit.com
28. Completely ignore any and all tire safety:
u/poopyheadpieface / Via reddit.com
29. Drive a car with a dang SNOWMOBILE on top of it:
Facebook
30. Drive on the eye of Sauron:
reddit.com
31. Bring your car where it is not meant to go:
u/planetoftheatheists / Via reddit.com
32. And completely ignore what consitutes a road:
Facebook
I'm sorry, you are the worst type of driver.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
New York police officer and Good Samaritans save 68-year-old woman from vehicle engulfed in flames
Two "passing motorists" helped a police officer save an elderly woman trapped in a burning vehicle following a crash in Chester, New York, about an hour outside New York City. Chester police were dispatched to the scene of a rollover crash on Kings Highway around 4 a.m. Sunday. "While they were responding, updates were given that the operator was trapped in the vehicle and the vehicle was on fire," police wrote in a Monday Facebook post. "Officer Nicholas Contino was the first police officer to arrive on scene. He gave his fire extinguisher to a passing motorist and worked to locate the operator in the vehicle." In video footage of the police response posted to Facebook, one of the Good Samaritan motorists can be seen quickly putting out flames with the fire extinguisher. Dramatic Bodycam Footage Captures Police Rescue Of Trapped Firefighter From Illinois House Explosion Contino broke through the glass sunroof to pull the driver out of the engulfed vehicle. The Good Samaritans can be seen helping the officer get the woman to safety once she is out of the blazing vehicle. Read On The Fox News App Indiana Woman Found Alive 6 Days After Crashing Her Car "With the assistance of two passing motorists and a paramedic from Empress EMS, she was removed from the vehicle and away from the fire," Chester PD said. "The operator of the vehicle was identified as a 68-year-old female resident of Warwick, NY." The victim suffered third-degree burns and was transferred to a local hospital, where she remains in stable condition. Hero Police Officer Rescues Unconscious Driver From Blazing Wreckage "Officer Contino's effort greatly increased the motorist's chances for survival, and he is commended for a job well done!" police article source: New York police officer and Good Samaritans save 68-year-old woman from vehicle engulfed in flames


Indianapolis Star
4 hours ago
- Indianapolis Star
Corvette goes airborne in dramatic drag race crash video
A drag racer walked away from a harrowing crash after the Corvette he was racing at World Wide Technology Raceway in Illinois went airborne. The video, taken during a high-speed test run on May 31 for the VP Racing Fuels Heads-Up Shootout Series, shows driver Jason Hoard's car lift off the ground and crash into the track and tumble onto the embankment on the side of the raceway. "Everything was fine absolutely until the second that it wasn't," Hoard said in a June 4 YouTube interview on "The Wes Buck Show." "I was fine, then it literally felt like the car was going backwards. And I (made) myself small in the seat and I immediately thought this is not good.' Drag racing outlet Extreme 660 Drag Racing, which captured the video and posted it to Facebook, called it "the worst wreck we've filmed." Hoard credited the car's safety gear for walking away with minor injuries following the crash. He noted in the interview that the impact left him unconscious. "I'm super sore, and if you saw me moving around, I'd look like a 95-year-old dude," Hoard said. He added that he had searched the internet for concussion symptoms. "I've been in a bit of a brain fog this week ... I have some floaters in my right eye. I went to the eye doctor, and she said there's some bruising," Hoard said. NewsNation reported that track staff and the National Hot Rod Association have launched an investigation into the crash. Drag Illustrated reported that the crash took place during a test pass at non-NHRA sanctioned event, though it took place at an NHRA-sanctioned facility. "Each WWT Raceway drag racing event features an ALS (Advance Life Support) Ambulance Unit staffed by paramedics specially trained in responding to racing crashes," a statement provided to the network reads. "The WWT Raceway Safety teams were rolling to the crash site while Jason was still rolling and were at the scene of the crash less than 30 seconds after it occurred."


Indianapolis Star
4 hours ago
- Indianapolis Star
Corvette goes airborne in dramatic drag race crash video
A drag racer walked away from a harrowing crash after the Corvette he was racing at World Wide Technology Raceway in Illinois went airborne. The video, taken during a high-speed test run on May 31 for the VP Racing Fuels Heads-Up Shootout Series, shows driver Jason Hoard's car lift off the ground and crash into the track and tumble onto the embankment on the side of the raceway. "Everything was fine absolutely until the second that it wasn't," Hoard said in a June 4 YouTube interview on "The Wes Buck Show." "I was fine, then it literally felt like the car was going backwards. And I (made) myself small in the seat and I immediately thought this is not good.' Drag racing outlet Extreme 660 Drag Racing, which captured the video and posted it to Facebook, called it "the worst wreck we've filmed." Hoard credited the car's safety gear for walking away with minor injuries following the crash. He noted in the interview that the impact left him unconscious. "I'm super sore, and if you saw me moving around, I'd look like a 95-year-old dude," Hoard said. He added that he had searched the internet for concussion symptoms. "I've been in a bit of a brain fog this week ... I have some floaters in my right eye. I went to the eye doctor, and she said there's some bruising," Hoard said. NewsNation reported that track staff and the National Hot Rod Association have launched an investigation into the crash. Drag Illustrated reported that the crash took place during a test pass at non-NHRA sanctioned event, though it took place at an NHRA-sanctioned facility. "Each WWT Raceway drag racing event features an ALS (Advance Life Support) Ambulance Unit staffed by paramedics specially trained in responding to racing crashes," a statement provided to the network reads. "The WWT Raceway Safety teams were rolling to the crash site while Jason was still rolling and were at the scene of the crash less than 30 seconds after it occurred."