Truck was just trying to make it’s deliveries like it was trained. In their excitement at having a purpose, more recently domesticated trucks forget that anyone else exists when moving about. Truck just needs more training to avoid these things.

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@leashyourvehicle
Truck was just trying to make it’s deliveries like it was trained. In their excitement at having a purpose, more recently domesticated trucks forget that anyone else exists when moving about. Truck just needs more training to avoid these things.
Vehicle only wanted to play. Domestication of these nearly wild beasts can be a hard transition. They often have trouble learning that people can't handle the rough play they are used to in the wild. Source tweet: https://twitter.com/robertorthman/status/730518553443631104
Car just wanted to be part of the family. Cars evolved to have much larger environments than people have built. Remember a little clumsiness is to be expected.
Van just wanted to have a fun first day of day care. New vans can be a little clumsy and just need some help and guidance. In their natural environment they would roam free. Cities don’t often have as much space.
SUV just wanted a warm place to stay for the night. SUV didn’t know its own strength. It’s very hard out there for stray SUVs. Consider adopting an SUV today.
Tired of this garbage. Cars are not sentient. They do not do anything. Drivers crash cars into other cars, sending cars into homes. Report better.
#LeashYourVehicle #news #nbc #nbc10 #philadelphia #car #visionzero #carculture
“A driver was not injured after a car went into the Schuylkill River early Saturday morning.
About 12:10 a.m., the car, with the driver still inside, inexplicably plunged into the Schuylkill River on Martin Luther King Drive near Spring Garden Street.”
Why do news outlets continually give vehicles sentience and fault when reporting crashes? Why is this driver presented as a victim, kidnapped by the car, and thrown into the river?
Read for yourself to see.
This is particularly bad writing, but it happens so often. Take a look at #LeashYourVehicle on Twitter to see what I mean. It is incredibly important that drivers are held accountable for mistakes, especially in headlines and news articles like this. It leads our cultural perception of events.
Wild, unleashed cars are driving themselves into buildings!
Three wild, unleashed vehicles have crashed themselves into buildings in the last week in the Philadelphia area. First story, second story, third story.
Two of the vehicles were contained with police tape, stopping them from causing any more damage. But the one who hit the home in Jersey may still be loose.
How can car owners and the police allow these dangerous, self-driving vehicles to roam free without being fenced in or on a leash when they need exercise? This is irresponsible and clearly shows a lack of respect for the safety of the community.
And I know, many critics of car leash laws will say,
“Why weren’t the buildings wearing helmets?”
“Why were they in the cars’ way and not in the building lane?”
“They were not wearing high visibility house paint, they are just as much to blame as the vehicles.”
And these are just lame excuses for both bad car ownership and also bad vehicular training. But should these vehicles be rehabilitated, or should they just go to the junkyard?
Urban and suburban areas can be hard places for planes to coexist. The heat bubbles, reflections, and lights confuse their natural navigation skills. Plane probably was trying to land to grab a discarded donut or fries.
Excavator never meant to hurt anyone or anything. Excavator’s ancestors roamed the deserts creating our mountains and valleys. City life can be a hard place for such a large creature. We should build more nature preserves for excavators, which by preservationists are called “quarries.”
Dump truck just wanted to roam free and utility pole should have been paying attention. Take a stand against distracted utility poles. Motor vehicles should be allowed to roam free, as nature intended.