Aussie drivers say Australian roads have never been more dangerous
Every week, I'm in a different cars for work, from American muscle vehicles like the Silverado to a cute Corolla Cross. But lately, it feels like no matter what I'm behind the wheel of, I'm a moving target for bad behaviour, road rage and a total disregard for basic driving etiquette.
On a typical day this week, I saw a Jeep mounted on a concrete highway divider. You read that right, not next to it, not against it, on top of it while leaning against a car, it was like an off-road adventure gone wrong. A few days before that? A truck collided with a school bus. The same week, a car flew across three lanes and T-boned someone trying to merge.
You might think I'm exaggerating, but I'm not.
Australia's national road toll is the highest it's been in years.
As of this month, 1,329 people have died on our roads in the past year, a 3.3 per cent increase compared to the same period last year.
These numbers are no surprise when you witness what is happening on Australian streets.
This morning, for instance, I was in a Toyota Corolla Cross, cruising along the freeway at 99 in a 100 zone, in the middle lane, just listening to good music. That was apparently too much for the truckie behind me, who decided that tailgating me within an inch of my rear bumper was the best way to say hello. He sat there flashing his lights. I think that's the polite way to tell me to get the f*** out of his way, I didn't.
He then sped up in the left lane, overtook me and slammed on his brakes. Nice one, mate. You won what? An extra five metres? A false sense of masculinity?
Five minutes later, I've got a P-plater in a '90s LandCruiser crawling up my tail. Here we go again. I move over this time, because clearly today I'm a rolling doormat, and as he speeds past, he gives me the finger like I just insulted his beautiful, beaten-up LandCruiser.
Let me write this again…he gave me the finger for doing the speed limit in the middle lane.
I'm sorry, when did being a decent human on the road become something to be punished for?
I began my research, I called a few friends and started scrolling through chat groups.
I'm not the only one fed up. Drivers are saying they're too anxious to drive at night, or the moment they see a truck with a semi trailer, they pull right over into the left lane, and some even avoid the freeway altogether.
Reddit threads on Australian driving have exploded lately with fed-up drivers venting.
For instance, Thomwas1111, who recently moved back to Australia from Denmark, said, 'The absolute state of some of the drivers here is impressively shit compared to there. Zero patience. All rage.'
Knewell82 lost it over bad merging:
'The one that shits me the most is people doing 60km/h on a ramp and only speeding up to 100 once they're actually on the freeway. It's so much more dangerous trying to merge with a 40km/h speed difference.'
It's getting so bad that some drivers admit they've changed how they drive.
MiserablePiano5211 wrote:
'I leave a huge gap in front of me for trucks and psychos, because if they don't see me, I'm the one who's f*****.'
Others go even further, SkelerAries admitted they park far away from the shopping centre just to avoid the 'shit driver who can't reverse without hitting something'.
Then my favourite, Rodza81, who dropped this iconic summary of Australian roads:
'Rule 1: Assume everyone is trying to kill you. Rule 2: Speed cameras aren't for safety. Rule 3: Most drivers never bothered to actually learn the road rules.'
He's not wrong, some Aussie drivers don't signal anymore, they cut across lanes, they tailgate, speed, swerve and treat road rules like they don't even exist.
When something goes wrong? 'It's the other guy's fault'. Of course it is.
Also, why are these people on the road? How do they have a license?
I don't mean to generalise, but I'm going to, because it is always the same people. It's the lifted ute with a massive bullbar, the 4WDs, it's the grey HiLux with one headlight and zero care. It's the P-plater doing 140 down the Monash, or the truck driver who just loves being a bully.
Just last year, my colleague David McCowen wrote a piece similar to this topic it was about how drivers in compact cars are treated with less respect on the road. How he was bullied driving a MG 3 hatch.
So question for all you bullies - where the hell are you all going in such a rush?
If you're consistently risking your life, and mine, to shave two minutes off your trip, maybe the issue isn't traffic, maybe you're the issue, poor time management or perhaps poor manners?
As someone who drives for a living, can we all calm down?
Being a 'good driver' isn't about speed or confidence, or owning the road. It's about not being a jerk.
This isn't the Grand Prix track. If you want that, then go book a driving day with Audi or Mercedes, and go let off some steam in a controlled space.
I'm fed up, and I know I'm not the only one.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

ABC News
an hour ago
- ABC News
Protestors disrupt Bisalloy Steel operations, opposing Israel exports
Protesters have disrupted operations at a Wollongong plant which makes armoured steel in an escalation of protest activity over exports to Israel. Up to 100 protesters used signs and camp equipment to block two main gates at Bisalloy Steel in Unanderra on Sunday night. Bisalloy Steel is Australia's only manufacturer of quenched and tempered steel plates suitable for armour applications. It has previously supplied Israeli arms company, Rafael Advanced Defense Systems. Protesters said they were participating in the action because they believed Bisalloy's steel trade with Israel was aiding the Israeli Defence Force, making the company complicit in the killing of civilians. In a statement to the ABC, a Bisalloy spokesperson said the company only export its product "with the appropriate government approvals". "[Bisalloy] does not manufacture steel products for the use in bullets, missiles or similar weapons," it said. Protest organiser and Palestinian woman, Safaa Rayan, said anticipated shift change overs at 11pm and 7am did not proceed, with no workers attempting to access or leave the site. "It's now 7:02am," Ms Rayan said outside the factory on Monday. The company did not confirm if it altered planned work as a result of the protests. The protest came amid deteriorating conditions for Palestinians in Gaza recent weeks, with major aid agencies sounding the alarm about mass starvation, prompting Israel to open corridors for aid. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on Sunday said Israel was "quite clearly" breaching international law. Bisalloy moved its annual general meeting online in October last year in response to the previous protests at its Unanderra site. In a video of the AGM posted online by financial journalist Stephen Mayne, Bisalloy Steel chief executive Rowan Melrose said sales to Israeli companies over the past three years made up between 0.6 and 1.9 per cent of the company's revenue. "I also will state that we do not manufacture steel for munitions," he told investors. The company did not confirm if it had existing contracts with Israeli companies, except to say its products were sold "both in Australia and internationally". Picket co-organiser Jeremy Kerbel, who last year was arrested during a sit-in at the site, said protesters were demanding the company cease trade with Israel. "A lot of people from across the Illawarra have come here to say that Bisalloy is doing the unthinkable — aiding a genocide — and we want them to stop," he said. The Israeli government has been facing genocide allegations brought by South Africa in the International Court of Justice, but strongly denied its actions in Gaza were genocidal. Arthur Truman and Nicole Milinkovic travelled from Campbelltown to attend the protest. "It was important for us to make even just the littlest bit of impact," Ms Milinkovic said. Long-time Wollongong resident Angela Scott camped out with her partner. She said it was her third time picketing the company. "I think this is the most important issue of our times," she said. Ms Rayan said she was proud of the community for continuing to apply pressure on the company. "I am so proud of my community for coming out, for supporting this picket, for standing with the people of Palestine in saying 'people over profits'," she said.

ABC News
an hour ago
- ABC News
Fourth Townsville police shooting since January prompts call for inquiry
Police have shot four people in Townsville in the past year, but the state's police union is resisting calls for a review into the way shootings are investigated. A 29-year-old man remains in a critical condition after being shot by officers in a shopping centre loading dock in the western Townsville suburb of Thuringowa Central on Sunday. Police said officers from the Special Emergency Response Team were called in as the man was wanted for alleged "serious criminal offences". However, Queensland Police did not share what those alleged offences were or the circumstances leading up to Sunday's shooting, as a police ethical standards investigation was underway. It comes after an officer shot and killed an armed man in the Townsville suburb of North Ward two weeks ago. Police also shot a 17-year-old girl in the abdomen after she allegedly threatened them with a knife in June, and a first-year police officer shot a man "experiencing a mental health episode" three times in January. The Queensland Council for Civil Liberties has repeated calls for a systematic review into police shootings. President Michael Cope said it was "simply not good enough" for the shootings to be referred to the Ethical Standards Command, which only reviewed individual incidents. "We accept that there unfortunately are circumstances in which police have to use their guns," he said. Mr Cope said a royal commission or the Crime and Corruption Commission could conduct such a review. "This may not be anything to do with police conduct, we just simply don't know what the causes are," he said. "It seems to me that any member of the public would want to know why police shootings in Queensland the last few years seem to have been extraordinarily high in comparison with the rest of the country." Queensland Police Union president Shane Prior said every police-involved shooting should be examined individually. "This just demonstrates that police are operating in a work environment that has never been as dangerous as it is right now," he said. "You need to look at each individual incident on its own merits. The fatal shooting in Townsville last week will be referred to the Queensland Coroner. In recent years, multiple people experiencing a mental health episode have been fatally shot by Townsville police, including the case of Steven Angus, who was shot dead hours after hospital discharge. A spokesperson for the Coroners Court of Queensland told the ABC last week it was in discussions with the Queensland Mental Health Commission and the Queensland Police Service about ways to examine systemic issues associated with police-related deaths. Queensland Police would not comment on whether the man shot in Townsville on Sunday was armed. But Mr Prior said the man shot did threaten officers. "I understand that he was hiding underneath a stairwell," he said. "It will be alleged that he made certain threats towards police when he was confronted." Mr Prior added that the male officer who fired the shot had five years' experience in the Special Emergency Response Team. Queensland Police media also declined to comment on the circumstances of the shooting. The Queensland Crime and Corruption Commission will have oversight of the Ethical Standards Command investigation.

ABC News
an hour ago
- ABC News
Protesters disrupt Bisalloy Steel operations, opposing Israel exports
Protesters have disrupted operations at a Wollongong plant which makes armoured steel in an escalation of protest activity over exports to Israel. Up to 100 protesters used signs and camp equipment to block two main gates at Bisalloy Steel in Unanderra on Sunday night. Bisalloy Steel is Australia's only manufacturer of quenched and tempered steel plates suitable for armour applications. It has previously supplied Israeli arms company, Rafael Advanced Defense Systems. Protesters said they were participating in the action because they believed Bisalloy's steel trade with Israel was aiding the Israeli Defence Force, making the company complicit in the killing of civilians. In a statement to the ABC, a Bisalloy spokesperson said the company only export its product "with the appropriate government approvals". "[Bisalloy] does not manufacture steel products for the use in bullets, missiles or similar weapons," it said. Protest organiser and Palestinian woman, Safaa Rayan, said anticipated shift change overs at 11pm and 7am did not proceed, with no workers attempting to access or leave the site. "It's now 7:02am," Ms Rayan said outside the factory on Monday. The company did not confirm if it altered planned work as a result of the protests. The protest came amid deteriorating conditions for Palestinians in Gaza recent weeks, with major aid agencies sounding the alarm about mass starvation, prompting Israel to open corridors for aid. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on Sunday said Israel was "quite clearly" breaching international law. Bisalloy moved its annual general meeting online in October last year in response to the previous protests at its Unanderra site. In a video of the AGM posted online by financial journalist Stephen Mayne, Bisalloy Steel chief executive Rowan Melrose said sales to Israeli companies over the past three years made up between 0.6 and 1.9 per cent of the company's revenue. "I also will state that we do not manufacture steel for munitions," he told investors. The company did not confirm if it had existing contracts with Israeli companies, except to say its products were sold "both in Australia and internationally". Picket co-organiser Jeremy Kerbel, who last year was arrested during a sit-in at the site, said protesters were demanding the company cease trade with Israel. "A lot of people from across the Illawarra have come here to say that Bisalloy is doing the unthinkable — aiding a genocide — and we want them to stop," he said. The Israeli government has been facing genocide allegations brought by South Africa in the International Court of Justice, but strongly denied its actions in Gaza were genocidal. Arthur Truman and Nicole Milinkovic travelled from Campbelltown to attend the protest. "It was important for us to make even just the littlest bit of impact," Ms Milinkovic said. Long-time Wollongong resident Angela Scott camped out with her partner. She said it was her third time picketing the company. "I think this is the most important issue of our times," she said. Ms Rayan said she was proud of the community for continuing to apply pressure on the company. "I am so proud of my community for coming out, for supporting this picket, for standing with the people of Palestine in saying 'people over profits'," she said.