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... many South Africans flatly ignore the law which says you may not cross a solid white line.
But back then the lines were still drawn correctly. Today its hit & miss on whether it reflects road logic. I'd hate it if they enforced that.When I was a student they used to hide behind trees with walky talkies and nail people doing this.
The indicator thing is a mindset problem. I made a conscious decision to always use them, so a couple years of driving later its 100% automatic.I've made the observation that many South Africans flatly ignore the law which says you may not cross a solid white line. This is especcialy dangerous when combined with not indicating when changing lane.
I've actually also been thinking about this issue of people ignoring solid white lines. I believe the best solution would be for traffic management authorities to build some kind of concrete or steel barriers embedded in the tar that are raised about 15 centimeters to stop people crossing solid white lines and yellow chevrons. They should construct them in such a way so as to guarantee maximum destruction to your tyres should you try to cross them.