It’s not just the UK and their former colonies. Other countries, such as Indonesia, Thailand and Japan also drive on the left even though they were never British colonies. Fun fact: Mozambique is a former Portuguese colony, but they drive on the left because most of their neighbours do so; it is also a member of the Commonwealth of Nations
In West Africa it is the other way round. The former French colonies drove on the right so the former British colonies have changed to right side driving (more or less)
@@arisishmaelselain belanda mah bentar doang penjajahannya, itupun daerah kekuasaannya gk sebesar indonesia/hindia-belanda, secuil doang yg dijajah portugis, inggris ama perancis. Selain belanda, mungkin cuma portugis yg masih ada pengaruhnya ke indonesia
@@arisishmael Apparently the Dutch at one point also drove on the left, but then Napoleon came and forced them to drive on the right. However, this did not affect their colonies Indonesia and Suriname; the latter is one of only two countries in South America that drive on the left, the other being Guyana.
@@robertgrey6101 Only roadsigns and violent OAP's call a Pavement "footpath", because it's not even accurate XD. (as funnily enough only Snails and amputees have just one "foot", and push chairs, mobility scooters, wheel barrows & much more don't have any)
In Ireland we drive in the middle of the road because we're well balanced and we like to follow the dotted line. Much kinder for cyclists as well. In Dublin, where we drive on the left by day, and on the right at night, a pedestrain is knocked down every 20mins....and he's getting bloody sick of it.
@@cutieb00tie You need to listen to the video again! And if you consider ignoring violent dictators like Napoleon and Hitler, traditionalism, then I am all for it.
The first automobiles in the US had the steering wheels on the right side. We have a photo of my great grandparents in their 1906 Caddy with the steering on the right.
It's worth noting that the reason the woman always walks on the right of the man is to minimise the risk of him slashing her when he draws his sword, which is usually on his left side.
I thought the steering wheel on the right hand side of the car was more natural as you could use your right hand for the steering and left hand to change gears. Most people are right handed and steering is more important than changing gears so the dominant hand is always on the steering wheel.
@@jorgej8855 Sorry that doesn't make any sense. Flying a Boeing 747 is nothing whosoever like driving a car. It doesn't matter which side of an airplane cockpit a 747 pilot sits on because not only are they very highly trained, but the person flying only flies the plane with both hands on the yoke and the copilot adjusts the thrust.
U.S. Customary Units*. The UK and Canada aren’t fully metric, they pretend to be. Other countries also still use inches and pounds. Inches for screen size and pounds for grocery shopping, but also weight. Feet and knots (non-SI-units) are also used in aviation worldwide. Several industries in the United States have adopted the metric system and students usually know the metric system.
@@VieleGuteFahrer that was a joke, but if you are being pedantic, the foot/mile and pound used in the US are actually standardized to metric. Other nations do use foot or other non-metric units commonly, but the nationwide standards are strictly defined using SI. Scientists and engineers in the US have learnt to use metric the hard way, after multiple mishaps. But until the US quotes distance in miles, I am not convinced that America is not stuck in the 19th century.
@@VieleGuteFahrer imperial length are mostly used in construction and furniture related industry, but never encountered weight or volume in imperial units outside of us, Canada and UK. Edit: also their temperature.
@@manumukhesh6116 Germans still use Pounds (Pfund) to weigh their meat sometimes. A pound is 500g. Inches are always used to measure the size of a screen. I've never heard someone say "That screen is 125 centimeters!". It may be included in stickers or in the product description, but nobody really measures it with centimeters.
Can you calculate how many in total of people in the world who drive on left vs on right side of the road? Is that percentage of 65% based on total population or total countries? I'm Indonesian and fully support driving on the left (right steer) Stand with UK, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, India, Malaysia, Thailand, South Africa etc. We'll never change! 😄
It is little bit difficult change it. In sweden they had change it In one night In 1967. Sweden is between Finlandia and Norway. It was not nice to drive Finlandia to Norwey trought sweden. There was not very much People and traffic.
In Egypt, they tend to drive somewhere in the middle, occasionally switching to the left or the right hand side of the road, depending on what mood they’re in that day.
Yes, I noticed that too when I visited. In Cairo, 3 lane roads had 4 lanes of traffic, and out of the cities, people just drive where they want. I saw an old man get knocked over, right in front of a policeman directing traffic. The man just got up with help from the officer, and then they all just carried on. No details taken, no insurance claims, no suing anyone. Such fun!
Why do the Americans drive on the right? Why do the Americans use a measuring system that was invented by people who married their own cousins? Why do the Americans spell kilometre “kilometer” Why do the Americans believe the virus is fake? Why do the Americans think the earth is flat? It’s all very hard to explain. We’ve all got wacko cousins that we try to accept.
@@stevenstart8728 1. Because old transmissions needed strength to shift . 2. Because we have no real need to change it, and it’s more intuitive when you’re not using math. 3. Because we use older rules of English that aren’t influenced by French. Latin uses -er and -or whereas old French uses -re and -our. 4. Most Americans don’t, hell most of us already caught it. 5. Americans don’t think the earth is flat. The pictures most people show to flat earthers were mostly taken by NASA. Why do brits always think they are right despite having perpetually incorrect information?
the biggest mystery is why the uk is singled out on this issue ? why do all other countries drive on the side they do ? why has the uk to be acountable and no one else is ?
I learned to drive in the U.S. but lived in UK from age 19 to 21. I didn't find adapting to be difficult. I had more difficulty when walking and remembering to look right first for oncoming traffic when crossing the street.
Well, in the UK we're taught to look right, then left, then right again. Not just in one direction, even on a one-way road, as there can be contraflow bicycles/buses or vehicles just going the wrong way. 😉 Although personally, I often look left first at the opposite site of the road, to see if it's even possible to start crossing without being stuck in the middle anyway, before looking right for nearby vehicles (although peripheral vision means you can see a bit to both sides already).
I notice there was no mention of the right foot - the stronger leg - being used for the lever-brake of carriages, which would necessitate the driver sitting on the right. This would result in a clearer view of oncoming traffic passing in the right hand lane. Pretty sure this is the case for stage-coaches and wagons in all the Westerns I've seen.
In Japan we drive as British. I drove so often in UK, it was so easy. But when I wanted to make a turn, instead of indicator, window wipers started working. We operate the indicator by the finger of left hand, wiper by right hand. I also drove in US. Sometimes I confused when I rushed to the crossing and turn to left. So I always keep in mind not to be aggressive at the crossing, keep go slowly.
I've seen indicators on both left and right of the steering wheel, i think it depends on the manufacturer. Most commonly though left side indicators i think in the UK, wipers on the right
Also for the same reason, most people are right handed so it makes sense to accommodate the majority and train the minority to adapt. Left handed warriors in the UK were forced to fight right handed, Boney forced his armies to fight left handed out of vanity because he was left handed and he lost because of it.
British built cars in the 1960s and 70s had the indicator/dip on the right. It makes sense to be able to operate the turn signal or headlight dip while the other hand may be involved with changing gear. However the extinction of the UK-owned motor industry and economies of scale means that all steering columns are made for left-hand drive cars and shifted over to the right for UK cars. Here in the UK at least.
Here in India Ford used to supply vehicles which have wiper buttons at right to the steering wheel. But now they've changed it like others to the left of steering wheel. Not no confusion at all.
Driving on the left is the natural way and driving on the right because of Henry Ford is incredibly childish. If you look at all westerns, the stagecoach drivers always sit on the right.
When I was 16 I visited the Cayman Islands. My brother in law and sister rented a car. I was in the back seat and noticed he was on the right side. I said: "Isn't this a British owned island and we should be on the left?" As soon as he moved over a car came down the road. He turned to me and said: "I knew you were good for something". Getting backhanded compliments from alcoholics is awesome!
It gets a lot more trippy in countries/territories like the Cayman Islands, British Virgin Islands etc, because although they drive on the left, importation and use of left-hand-drive vehicles is very common because of geographical proximity to north America. Rentals however tend to be right-hand-drive, as not to confuse tourists on which side of the road they should drive on
I was born n raised in Hong Kong, a former British colony. I have been to many Asian countries such as Singapore, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh n Japan. They all drive in same British direction. So that is the “Normal” way
It’s easier to drive with your left hand on the steering wheel, while holding your sword out of the window with your right hand. That’s why we’ve had cars named Rapier, Scimitar, Sabre. The yanks had a Cutlass but it proved difficult to charge.
And we have both the Challenger and the Charger; the present iterations also have insanely powerful V8 options, even the basic V6 models can hit 0-100 MPH/160 KPH in under 30 seconds.
@@illyasvielemiya9059 Yes, just like the stupid medieval system of measurements that they use which they only share with Myanmar and Liberia and the values in Myanmar are even different to the US and Liberian ones. The rest of the world uses the very logical and simple to understand metric system. They also think that tipping is compulsory in places such as restaurants so you don't pay the menu price but must pay extra. Another astonishing fact is that when you see something advertised for sale for, say, five dollars in a shop that it is a given that it will actually cost you more than five dollars. 'Weird' does not explain it. Fun fact, the last country that changed driving sides was Samoa who changed from driving on the right to driving on the left.
@@fifthof1795 IF that's accurate, and I'm going out on limb here, maybe it was the influx of American vehicles and influence which fixed it in place afterward?
Driving on the left made so much sense to me when I did my driving lessons in Kenya. I learned to drive on a manual transmission and using my dominant right hand to steer and left hand to change gears felt natural. I can't imagine doing it the other way.
I drove on the wrong side 6 months in Australia, gear shifter was easy driving on left was not. Getting home I had to learn the right side all over again😃🇨🇦
It’s exactly the opposite. You need your dominant hand for shifting gears and be faster and more accurate. You are supposed to keep both your hands on the wheel when going through a bend. Gear shifting are done before approaching a bend and not during.
In earlier times in Australia we were taught as children to keep to the left even when walking on a footpath. But to walk on the right shoulder of the road if there was no designated footpath as the pedestrian would be walking facing approaching traffic which was deemed a safer practice.
We were taught the same in England, by our mothers and by the infant schools. It IS safer. It's not taught now, though, and people seem to be too dull-witted to see it. They persist in walking on pavements to the right of oncoming people, so that those people are forced to keep to the dangerous kerb-edge with their backs to the traffic. Perhaps it's an instinct for those who have never given a thought to the subject, in that those who are seeing traffic coming towards them tend to keep across, as far away, in as safe a place, as they can. But of course that requires putting others into unnecessary danger. Personally I think western peoples are being dumbed-down by current education and culture so much that they are losing whatever ability they once had to think clearly.
@@robwilde855 I too grew up in Britain, and went on country hikes with my parents. This is one of the first rules driven into me: face oncoming traffic. And if you thinkabout it, it is absolutely logical. For the same reason here in Greece where I live, I walk on the left, to keep to the same rule.
I am an Englishman living in The Philippines, and I have the greatest difficulty convincing my wife to walk on the left, facing the traffic. Incidentally, although left-hand drive vehicles may be driven in Australia under certain conditions, there is a 50,000 peso fine for driving a RHD vehicle in The Philippines, so vehicles are not stolen to order from countries where driving on the left is the rule of the road.
@@littleblacksambo8447 My opening phrase - 'In earlier times' was to say that that norm seems to have fallen away these days, in many instances, and was to suggest that what we were taught way back when may now not be being taught and emphasized in the current school system and family life. It wasn't to imply that what stood true and safer as a better practice in time past should now not be followed. -- I often go walking for exercise in urban areas and see many fellow walkers on the shoulder or nature strip on the wrong side of the road. [Possible exception : There are times where vegetation, terrain or road infrastructure design doesn't allow for walking facing oncoming traffic but to do that should be the exception to the rule and extreme caution exercised to avoid being run over.]
Fun corollary: because the UK was enshrining LHD as railroads were emerging, it also meant that the railroads also adopted this practice of running trains to the left where two tracks of opposing directions ran. When British rail expertise spread to nations such as France and Japan, they **also** started running their trains on the left too. This set up an odd mix in France where wagons and later autos standardised to run on the right, but trains continue to run on the left (The Paris, Lille, and Rennes Metros are exceptions in France where they run on the right; Lyon Toulouse, and Marseilles run on the left). In Japan, car practice followed from train habits so despite the emergence of a US auto industry in the early 1900's, it was just easier for the Japanese to drive on the left as their own car market developed.
@@callingbell-ix5se Well that's true but our earliest cars were imported by Noble elites during British rule in India so I guess maybe that's a factor too???
@@davidkamen erm, not really before the 21st century. If you see western news reports from the 2000s you'll see that most young people back then had bad English and with an awkward Nepali accent. Before 2000s we watched only our movies and Bollywood.
Today there is no 'safety' reason to drive on one side of the road or the other except for the law each country has decided on. But most of the world' citizens still shake hands using their right hands which came about for the same reason people drove on the left.Offerring your right hand to show you were not holding your sword or able to draw your sword meant you came in peace. Maybe just maybe Napoleon , Hiltler and Henry Ford were left handed!
@@alandean6930 Awesome understanding.. even when we have drinks we say cheers.. same reason as u mentioned... after cheers host must drinks first... so that guest can trust u
When this Brit lived and worked in Brazil, he drove on the right. Now he’s back on the left. He loved it best when he worked on a farm and drove a thumping great tractor down the middle of the road with gear sticks between his legs and the pedals either side of the drive shaft. With a fork on the front he felt like a knight in armour. Now he drives a Vauxhall Mocker!
Japan, Thailand, India, South Africa , Bangladesh, New Zealand and many other countries also all drive on the left. Interesting that some people in Switzerland, whilst driving on the right, prefer a steering wheel on the right so they can more easily avoid the rocks and barriers on mountain roads. I realise that for Americans these small things can be confusing when they are "visiting" other countries.
In South East Asia, many of the countries follow their former colonial masters with some exceptions. Singapore and Malaysia drive on the left because they were former UK colonies. Indonesia is a exception because it also drives on left even though it was a former Dutch colony. Thailand drives on the left as well, its the former French colonies surrounding it like Vietnam and Laos which drive on right
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You were half correct regarding the sword arm. You didn't mention mounting the horse, the sword would be on your left hip so you would mount to horse on the left so you could swing your right leg over the horse without the sword getting in the way. This would mean the horse would be standing on the left side of the road, so when you set off, you would start on the left.
Driving on the left makes much more sense tbh. Given that predominantly most people in the world are right handed, the steering wheel should be controlled by the right hand since it involves more precise inputs and shifting gears can easily be accomplished by one's weaker left hand.
I've tried to explain this to a US bloke, - they don't listen, they're convinced that they're correct and that they independently "discovered" that driving on the right was "safer" In reality,they simply followed their new best friends -the French and Napoleon 1. They'll never admit this, they'll cling onto some BS explination.
How is turning a wheel a precise input? Writing, sorting et al need relatively precise inputs. Also look rallye cars. They need to get through some tight spots, yet the steering wheel is on the left side. There's other more important reasons for this, but it shows that the dominant hand thing is laughable and doesn't matter
@@celticwinter rally cars are driven by professional or very experienced drivers. They practice driving either seated right or left. The general subject matter is the mass of ordinary road using drivers.
@@toonmag50 it was implied that right/left handedness is a factor for humans. That may be, but its influence is highly exaggerated here. In a sport where every every second, shift and degree matters, this should at least have some small effect. It doesn't though. Because it doesn't matter that much. It won't even matter if the drivers aren't professionals. (There's also a big amateur rallye scene. They aren't professionals by definition.)
@@celticwinter I'm not disagreeing with you about rally cars, it's one example where a lot of practice mitigates the dominance of the right brain , right visual, and right handedness. We are taking about Joe Blogs average non professional drivers.
What is completely glossed over is that the “shotgun” position for western stagecoaches was the right hand seat, again since most people shoot right-handed. Placing the shotgun position on the right gives the shotgun man a better shot to the left (in front of the driver) even while seated. If the shotgun man was in the left seat, he’d have to stand or lean well in front of the driver to shoot to the right.
Driving on the left for Americans in the UK is very dangerous, they turn out of military bases and kill motor cyclists, then leave the UK under diplomatic immunity and get away with it. So much for us being allies.
Noooo, you don't say. Next thing you're gonna tell us is that you didn't watch the video where it mentions former British colonies part. I wonder when a Kiwi will enlighten us that they too drive on the left? Or maybe some one from the Bahamas or Cayman Islands will also chime in...
I remember reading a scientific paper long ago that stated that when a person is instinctively reacting to oncoming danger, avoidance by moving to the left was the most used direction, from punches and everything else. I assumed this was thinking for the natural tendency to avoid by turning towards a pavement (sidewalk) where the danger (to the driver) was reduced.
There is evidence that this is why the island structure on aircraft carriers is on the right, because most pilots tended to veer left if the landing went wrong. The Japanese tried putting the island on the left, once... and never did it again.
...that does not fit here. I mean water taps , the left one is the cold and the right hot. It would make sense if the right one is cold as most people are right handed. So in terms of car steering, the right hand has relatively more in control than left hand if you are right handed that is. So in the UK steering is on the right, leaving your left hand free to change gears or radio control . I had be interested in reading this scientific study or paper if possible.
Having learnt to drive on the right, yet now I live in a country where we drive on the left, it has been my observation that as long as we all keep to the same side of the road, everything will be fine.
In Japan, people drive on the left. And if that is not confusing enough, they walk on the right. (Because of the occupation/) And people on bicycles don't really know WHICH side to ride on.
Ultimately it doesn't matter because we in the UK will never change- it would cost way too much. There's numerous intersections which are asymmetrical, e.g. to help traffic leaving town more than it coming in. All those would have to be re-engineered, as well as the signage thing. Also, as someone who has driven over 100 000 miles with a RH drive car on the right in France and Spain, I can definitely say that having the steering on the kerb side is no real problem. Good luck to you guys in India, and why does nobody mention Japan?
If everyone in the UK was forced to drive on the other side of the road, the right side, even in their current RHD cars. It would cost NOTHING!!!!! (you just said above, just for you, you have no problem driving a RHD car on the right side of the road in Spain fgs!) Then make a law that only LHD new cars are to be imported by car manufacturers to the UK. Again costing NOTHING. (and would save car manufacturers millions!). ...think about all the lives that will be saved on our roads, just making a decision COSTING NOTHING!!!!
Sitting on the right-hand side of a car is more ergonomic. Most people are right-handed. When you sit on the right-hand side of a car you can use your non-dominant left hand to operate the gear shift, which is a simple fixed 'H' pattern. This leaves your dominant right hand free to make the precise and constantly variable adjustments to the steering wheel needed to change directions.
Thats true, and I agree but it isnt that significant in gear change when in an automatic.Which is what most Americans have. But that said as you say having the driver on the right- hand side and most people right- handed helps vehicle control. I suppose in electric cars they may be easily moveable to either side?
@@robharris8844U You're right about most people driving auto's these days, and it does level the playing field when you don't have to change gears. I hate auto boxes myself as I enjoy having full control over the car, and driving an auto is a very detached and unengaging experience for me. Gets you from A to B is suppose, but where's the fun in that? Cheers.
@@supraman100 I think we are saying bye bye to car driving ownership and pleasure in driving in someways. EV cars will on the whole be rental or on lease and you will get aboard them type in a GPS coordinate and it will take you to your destination. The pleasure of driving taken away, will be replaced with pleasure of watching the view like all passengers and more free interaction with them. So you will still have pleasure but displaced. Thats progress for you ! Cheers
Am in total agreement with you-this is exactly what I think. 90% of folk are right handed so the best hand is doing the most difficult and important task when the steering wheel is on the right (correct!) side of the vehicle.
I am basically from Pakistan residing in Dubai. In Pakistan there’s left hand drive and in UAE it’s right, I visit Pakistan once a year and it’s never been a problem for me to adapt and switch quickly but that being said there’s always one problem and that is opening a wrong door for driving seat.
@1:48: As an American, I reject this reasoning. Regardless of the side of the road, people would still be able to "see the other wagons" and avoid them if everything was uniform. For instance driving in the left seat, and the right side of the road yielded the same advantages of driving in the right seat, and the left side of the road. Everything else is spot on. Road maneuvering started out as a way to simply protect yourself, during feudal times, while travelling. Stop there. Feudal countries just never gave it up as it just evolved with their society. It makes total sense, and one way is no less safe than the other.
We like driving on the left if that's okay with you? Why should we change when it was you lot that did? It isn't too much an issue to drive on the opposite way from time to time. If I come to America I drive on the right with no problems so why would you have a problem visa versa?
@Jeff Guse Rubbish! Also I'd rather my British Sports car any day over a gas guzzling American barge that cannot take the corners with no handling what so ever. Surprised you haven't got steel bumpers along the sides as well as you slide off the road. Finally Queen Elizabeth vs President Biden as head of state? At least Elizabeth isn't gone senile and still can go up and down stairs without falling over three times.
@Jeff Guse actually ,the truth is Brits are quite happy and capable of driving on either side of the road, as are most Europeans. You see, we regularly drive in other countries unlike most Americans who can’t even point to other countries on a map.
Left hand driving, with the driver on the right is easier, because most people are right handed, so easier to hold the steering wheel with right hand, and shift gear or pull parking brake using left hand..but of course it may no longer an issue with many automatic transmission car nowadays..oh and also motorcycle or bike rider always mount/dismount from the left side, so it's easier and safer to stop and dismount or join traffic from the left side of the road..
That is the hardest part of driving a left hand drive car. Making your hands do the tasks in opposite ways, right hand for gear shift and left hand for steering. Even worse is driving a right hand drive car in a right hand side country. Your view for over taking is minimal, even dangerous.
Propably its a matter of what you are used to, but I would find it much harder to shift gears with the left hand. As you usually shift gears before and after a cirner, but not in the corner, you still can use both for steering around a corner.
motorcycle or bicycle rider always mount/dismount from the left side, so driving from the left is logical, it's easier to stop or join the traffic from the left side of the road..
See, now you know why they colonized India. Actually they wanted China, but after getting too many tickets for riding on the wrong side the british decided thats too expensive.
It's good to have nationalism but it looks stupid when you are talking non-sense. Before British came along, we didn't even have pucca roads and lanes is not something that was even thought of by then. So no, ppl in India didnt ride on left before British rule
@@keerthichandra376 Who Told You India didn't have roads India Had GT Road Also Known As Uttarapatha Or Sadak-E-Azam Connecting All The Major Cities Like Kabul,Peshawar, Lahore,Delhi,Taxila,Mathura, Banaras,Prayag,Patna, Dhaka Etc Kurukshetra Also Comes Under GT Road
*According to historians, going to the left comes from the time of Greece, Egypt and Rome. Most humans are right-handed, a rider holds a reins with his left hand or drives a chariot with his left hand and his right hand is free to greet the opposite or ready to draw the sword to fight or protect yourself when needed. From that habit, going on the left became the tradition and was later made into law. The rule to the left applies from Roman times. By 1300 BC, Pope Boniface VIII had demanded orders to force all pilgrims to come to Rome on the left side of the road. The way to move also deviates gradually to the right because people no longer carry weapons when traveling on the road. By the end of the 18th century, chariots in the United States and France began using pairs of horses to transport farm produce. These vehicles do not have a seating position for humans so drivers must sit on the back of the last horse to the left so that the right hand is whipped. Because of sitting on the left, you will want people going against you to go to your left to easily observe the collision. Therefore, you must go to the right of the road. In 1792, a law requiring road users to travel to the right of the road was enacted in the US state of Pennsylvania. In later years, other states also adopted this law. After the French Revolution of 1789, Napoleon ordered his subordinates to go to the right and go in a line, after which this rule also applied to vehicles. The Netherlands, Germany, Switzerland, Poland, Italy and Spain, all of the countries allied with France, also set their right path. In Austria, the vehicles in each city have different modes of transportation, but then the country has agreed on the right way. Both Korea and North Korea, after escaping Japanese occupation in 1946, also moved to the right. Later, Czechoslovakia, Sweden also chose to go to the right. In the United States, people initially chose to go to the left but then moved to the right. In the UK, since 1773, the government has set a standard for driving on the left side of the road. Both Britain and France adopted their own driving style with colonial countries. So far, some former British colonies still keep the tradition of riding on the left, such as India, Indonesia, ... African countries choose to move to the right or the left due to the influence of neighboring countries. Some of the former British colonies had moved to the right along the former neighbors that were French colonies. Several other countries that once belonged to Portugal changed their neighbors' movements, which were British colonies. In countries that drive on the left, cars also design a steering wheel accordingly, that is, on the left. But in some parts of the world, like the US Virgin Islands, the British Virgin Islands, the Cayman Islands, the Turks & Caicos Islands and the Bahamas, despite driving on the left, there is a steering wheel on the left due to most vehicles. Shipping is all imported from USA and Brazil. Where driving laws are applied on the left Despite going against the trend of the world, driving on the left is still a tradition and regulation in a foggy country. Apart from the UK, many other countries are still applying this provision.*
Makes sense as to why the stubborn Japanese are still on the left then. They could have changed when Commodore Perry and the black ships showed up and the Meiji Restoration Period took place... Even after WWII, when Japan lost and the Americans rebuilt their electrical grid in the west at 100V 60Hz while the Germans rebuilt the eastern grid at 100V 50Hz (this is another story worth a UA-cam video).
Countries that Drive on the Left: UK India Japan Sri Lanka Australia Bangladesh Pakistan Indonesia Mayalsia Singapore Thailand Macau Hong Kong New Zealand Botswana South Africa Eswatini Lesotho Kenya Uganda Malta Ireland Myanmar Nepal Bhutan
@@jamesgowing3856 smiles It's easier in UK, Australia, NZ, India, Japan etc etc rather than say " it's right driving on the left", to say "driving on the left is correct"!
I can't even imagine that feeling natural.. you must feel awkward everytime you're driving. But then again 🤔 if you're driving manual you're still pushing gear 1 away from you like normal so I guess it's okay..
Most people right handed. Early cars manual transmission, driver keeps dominant hand on steering wheel. Driving on left is far superior for this reason alone - dominant hand maintains steering.
I just spent over six months in Ireland and the U.K. It is very natural to drive on the left with the driver’s side and steering wheel on the right. You also go the opposite way on turnabouts. Seems like it is so much easier to see what is coming at you.
Canada's westernmost province, British Columbia, drove on the left until the start of the 1920s. The Interior switched to right-hand driving in 1920 and Vancouver and the coast switched in 1922. A number of other provinces also drove on the left initially, with Newfoundland, previously a British colony, being the last to switch in 1947, two years before joining Canada.
@@histguy101 All UK road signs are in miles. The imperial system is still well routed in our society but more in our descriptive language than practically.
It is such fun to see a RHD British car on the road. A bit disorienting to drive at first, but you get used to it, and bring a bit of the old world here. Everyone loves the cars, and they are a conversation piece.
Sweden changed over from left to right in the 60's (I think) and there was chaos. They tried changing all the road-signs overnight but it was too big a job. We can't change in Britain now because the road network, especially motorway slip roads and stuff like that, is designed for driving on the left. Where I come from in the northern highlands of Scotland, we have some single track roads, the width of a car, with passing places, so I suppose we drive in the middle.
"We can't change in Britain now". Why would the UK change? The left hand side is clearly safer and causes less accidents, as has been proven. Just because some countries drive on the right does not mean the UK has to follow like Lemmings.
Sweden shifted from left to right in 1967 Saturday night at 4:50 everyone stopped: drove carefully over to the right side and stopped again: At 5:00 the traffic continued. special gloves with a red left and green right glove to remind the motorist to drive on the right side. It was imagined that it would be quiet in the middle of the night, but everyone who had a car would join and everyone else was on the streets to see how it went and help direct the cars. A complete chaos but that is exactly why it all went so slowly that it was safe.
@@Lktravel1 Probably 99 % of all cars in Sweden had the steering wheel tp the left prior to changing. As an example, my mother bought her first car - a Renault - in 1952 (or 1951) and it only came with steering wheel on the left in Sweden. By the way the change to right hand traffic was on 3rd of September 1967.
Thanks for answering a question that I've had for about sixty years. Sweden switched sides from left to right around the 1960's. Oddly, Volvo's and Saabs were made only with steering wheels on the left. Dangerous to pass.
Yeah, i think more or less all cars here in Sweden had the steering wheel on the left when people were still driving on the left side, i was born a few years after but my mother experienced the change to driving on the right side.
@@Stefan- I remember reading about the transition. All the necessary signs for right side of the road driving were installed and covered. On the night of the change, no one was allowed on the road except for emergency vehicles as the new signs were uncovered. They had some tiered program of who could drive again and when.
In the Republic of Ireland, they developed a plan to switch driving from the left to the right. They were to do it in stages: the first week trucks and buses would switch to the right. The following week, cars and motorcycles would follow.
Are you testing the readers' intelligence ? Trucks and buses driving on the right and at the same time cars and motorcycles still driving/riding on the left. The trucks and buses would have won that smash up hands down , Er , which hand ?
Driving on the left is also safer. When surprised by something coming at you, the majority of people (right-handed), instinctively turn to the left. When driving on the right, doing that with a steering wheel in your hand will pull you into oncoming traffic. Also, Henry Ford put the steering wheel on the left because he hated the British and would do the opposite to the British on principle.
While most territories in Germany waived laws, in 1862 Bavaria required all wagons to swerve to the right of oncoming wagons. As the streets became more and more crowded, the German Empire adopted this regulation in 1910
Japan drives on the left too. Almost get killed when I'm in Tokyo, looking up the street to my left, seeing nothing coming at me, stepping off the curb and not seeing the car coming from the right. There's an espionage memoir of WWII by a British spy who looked the wrong way in Germany stepping off a curb, and the police spotted it. "I Looked Right," I think it was called.
Living in the UK but frequently driving in Europe, I find it easier to switch from driving on the left to driving on the right, than vice versa. For some reason when I return to the UK I have to concentrate much more before my automatic memory cells catch up. Maybe it's because the roads in southern UK are much more congested.
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In India, we drive on whatever is left of the road.
So true🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
💀
😂
😂😅
Copied statement
I once asked a guy from Trinidad what side of the road did they drive on. His reply "man, we drive in the shade"
🤣😂🤣😂
That joke is told about Malta, too.
@jack lal Hello buddy
Could someone help me with this joke?
@@josdinjose5844 me too
India has joined the chat.
I am joining the chat wait
Asia joined the chat.
South Africa 🇿🇦
Suriname 🇸🇷
Singapore has joined the chat.
It’s not just the UK and their former colonies. Other countries, such as Indonesia, Thailand and Japan also drive on the left even though they were never British colonies.
Fun fact: Mozambique is a former Portuguese colony, but they drive on the left because most of their neighbours do so; it is also a member of the Commonwealth of Nations
In West Africa it is the other way round. The former French colonies drove on the right so the former British colonies have changed to right side driving (more or less)
Well... Before Netherland we Indonesian was colonized by england & Portuguese ...even spain & France...
@@arisishmaelselain belanda mah bentar doang penjajahannya, itupun daerah kekuasaannya gk sebesar indonesia/hindia-belanda, secuil doang yg dijajah portugis, inggris ama perancis. Selain belanda, mungkin cuma portugis yg masih ada pengaruhnya ke indonesia
@@arisishmael Apparently the Dutch at one point also drove on the left, but then Napoleon came and forced them to drive on the right. However, this did not affect their colonies Indonesia and Suriname; the latter is one of only two countries in South America that drive on the left, the other being Guyana.
In the UK I drive on the left unless Im near an American air force base, then I drive on the pavement to be safe.
Especially if your on a Motorbike!
You’re always driving on the pavement. You mean the sidewalk.. 🇺🇸
@@HailAnts
Pavement or "FOOTPATH" you uneducated what ever.
@@robertgrey6101 Only roadsigns and violent OAP's call a Pavement "footpath", because it's not even accurate XD.
(as funnily enough only Snails and amputees have just one "foot", and push chairs, mobility scooters, wheel barrows & much more don't have any)
@@HailAnts No, he's speaking English, not American.
India, Japan & Oz has joined the chat!
Indonesia joined already
Thailand?
Nepal joined long time ago
Actually, most Asian countries, South Africa, and Suriname ride on the left hand side of the road.....
Mauritius 🇲🇺 too
Shouldn't the video title be "why do the US drive on right" since driving in left dates back to hundreds of years?
We had cars hundreds of years ago? News to me!
@@bltvd yes, we did, mostly horse driven.
Then it will be much shorter video.
Don't worry, they'll will make video about "why some countries use metric system"
@@bltvd yeah we had
In Ireland we drive in the middle of the road because we're well balanced and we like to follow the dotted line. Much kinder for cyclists as well. In Dublin, where we drive on the left by day, and on the right at night, a pedestrain is knocked down every 20mins....and he's getting bloody sick of it.
No the reason we drive in the middle of the road is to follow the grass down the middle of the road.
To be sure, to be Sure.......Follow me , I’ll be right behind you.
🤣🤣🤣
😂🤣😂👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Cool !
So driving on the left is historically correct, safer and more practical. Glad to have that confirmed.
Went to a car muzium in Mulhouse France. Saw many early European brand cars there have their steering on the right.
@@cutieb00tie You need to listen to the video again! And if you consider ignoring violent dictators like Napoleon and Hitler, traditionalism, then I am all for it.
@@cutieb00tie It is an American site.
@@cutieb00tie your wrong but sure.
Whole world drives left expect for America I guess 😜
In Australia we drive upside down, so technically we drive on the
Right.
You're a funny guy!
According to flat earthers
Oh, wait. Australia is a conspiracy and it doesn't exist according to flat earthers.
The US is wrong driving on the right.
@@AshayGupta If I don't exist, then how am I type on youtube
The first automobiles in the US had the steering wheels on the right side. We have a photo of my great grandparents in their 1906 Caddy with the steering on the right.
The actual question is "Why do you drive on the right"?
Yeah driving on the left has a deep history.
Well.. FORD.!
@@amllemans Really, the clip just goes to show that 65% of countries are WRONG.
Napoleon would kick you in the balls if you didn't.
@@jimfiggerty833 He might bite me there Jim, or kick me in the shin!!
India is the largest country with left hand driving rules.
Country only No rules
@@r.arulkumar7349 Fools don't follow rules. People do follow
@@lokeshwaranvr but fools are even citizens 😂.
@@atwunz and fools are majority too... 😄😴
@Mubashshir Rizwan lol.
In the UK even today it's important to keep one's sword hand free and nearest the point of attack, given the standard of some driving :-)
It's worth noting that the reason the woman always walks on the right of the man is to minimise the risk of him slashing her when he draws his sword, which is usually on his left side.
@gavmusic it's still better than the US
🤣😂
In the US, that would be the pistol hand. :)
Especially the Drivers of Audi 3 & BMW 1 Cars !!
I thought the steering wheel on the right hand side of the car was more natural as you could use your right hand for the steering and left hand to change gears.
Most people are right handed and steering is more important than changing gears so the dominant hand is always on the steering wheel.
One can steer with belly or elbow, but not change gear.
@@jorgej8855
Sorry that doesn't make any sense.
Flying a Boeing 747 is nothing whosoever like driving a car.
It doesn't matter which side of an airplane cockpit a 747 pilot sits on because not only are they very highly trained, but the person flying only flies the plane with both hands on the yoke and the copilot adjusts the thrust.
I concur
@@sonnylatchstring
I'd like to see you try to quickly steer out of the way of an animal running out in front of you using your belly or elbow lol.
America: Majority drives on the right. Why are British wrong?
Also America: Uses Imperial measurements.
U.S. Customary Units*. The UK and Canada aren’t fully metric, they pretend to be. Other countries also still use inches and pounds. Inches for screen size and pounds for grocery shopping, but also weight. Feet and knots (non-SI-units) are also used in aviation worldwide. Several industries in the United States have adopted the metric system and students usually know the metric system.
@@VieleGuteFahrer that was a joke, but if you are being pedantic, the foot/mile and pound used in the US are actually standardized to metric. Other nations do use foot or other non-metric units commonly, but the nationwide standards are strictly defined using SI. Scientists and engineers in the US have learnt to use metric the hard way, after multiple mishaps. But until the US quotes distance in miles, I am not convinced that America is not stuck in the 19th century.
@@VieleGuteFahrer imperial length are mostly used in construction and furniture related industry, but never encountered weight or volume in imperial units outside of us, Canada and UK.
Edit: also their temperature.
@@manumukhesh6116 Germans still use Pounds (Pfund) to weigh their meat sometimes. A pound is 500g. Inches are always used to measure the size of a screen. I've never heard someone say "That screen is 125 centimeters!". It may be included in stickers or in the product description, but nobody really measures it with centimeters.
@@VieleGuteFahrer There’s a reason why metres exist. No one would normally say 125 centimetres. It’s commonly 1.25 metres.
As a South African, I agree. Everyone else is driving on the wrong side.
Exactly! Hulle ma se poes!
As an Indian I agree too.
Right?
@@talatsonsurong3238 Right
Choon dem
Can you calculate how many in total of people in the world who drive on left vs on right side of the road?
Is that percentage of 65% based on total population or total countries?
I'm Indonesian and fully support driving on the left (right steer)
Stand with UK, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, India, Malaysia, Thailand, South Africa etc. We'll never change! 😄
Thank you for staying on the left side of the road Indonesia, the proper side. 🥰
Some people get geared up over the silliest things.
Pakistan, Bangladesh and many more Ex colonies of Commonwealth 🙂
I'm waiting for Myanmar to change back to the left side of the road
It is little bit difficult change it. In sweden they had change it In one night In 1967. Sweden is between Finlandia and Norway. It was not nice to drive Finlandia to Norwey trought sweden.
There was not very much People and traffic.
In South Africa you also drive on the left and pass on the Right.
In Egypt, they tend to drive somewhere in the middle, occasionally switching to the left or the right hand side of the road, depending on what mood they’re in that day.
Donkey and cart?
That's much the same as in Malta and Gozo, although there it's mostly to stay in the shade
I lived in Vietnam for 3 months, and rode a scooter for most of that time.
I still have no idea what side of the road they’re supposed to drive on.
@@Natashahoneypot Yes, it's a well know fact that the rest of the world only use donkeys and carts. 🙄
Yes, I noticed that too when I visited. In Cairo, 3 lane roads had 4 lanes of traffic, and out of the cities, people just drive where they want. I saw an old man get knocked over, right in front of a policeman directing traffic. The man just got up with help from the officer, and then they all just carried on. No details taken, no insurance claims, no suing anyone. Such fun!
The frustration watching this as a Brit.
I want a video with the title: Why do Americans drive on the right?
The real question is why the Brits are so obsessed with sword fighting that anything from their roads to their parliament are designed for it.
@@Taladar2003 because it's cool duh
Why do the Americans drive on the right?
Why do the Americans use a measuring system that was invented by people who married their own cousins?
Why do the Americans spell kilometre “kilometer”
Why do the Americans believe the virus is fake?
Why do the Americans think the earth is flat?
It’s all very hard to explain.
We’ve all got wacko cousins that we try to accept.
@@stevenstart8728
1. Because old transmissions needed strength to shift .
2. Because we have no real need to change it, and it’s more intuitive when you’re not using math.
3. Because we use older rules of English that aren’t influenced by French. Latin uses -er and -or whereas old French uses -re and -our.
4. Most Americans don’t, hell most of us already caught it.
5. Americans don’t think the earth is flat. The pictures most people show to flat earthers were mostly taken by NASA.
Why do brits always think they are right despite having perpetually incorrect information?
Jimmy Mcjimmy now that’s a question us Aussies ask as well.
the biggest mystery is why the uk is singled out on this issue ? why do all other countries drive on the side they do ? why has the uk to be acountable and no one else is ?
I learned to drive in the U.S. but lived in UK from age 19 to 21. I didn't find adapting to be difficult. I had more difficulty when walking and remembering to look right first for oncoming traffic when crossing the street.
When in London, plenty of the curbs are painted "look right." It's just too easy to forget where you are. You look left and get run over. :/
And what did you think about roundabouts?
@@roachtoasties that is not just useful for overseas visitors as a lot of roads are one way.
I heard a story of a British spy in World War II Germany who gave himself away by instinctively looking first to the right.
Well, in the UK we're taught to look right, then left, then right again. Not just in one direction, even on a one-way road, as there can be contraflow bicycles/buses or vehicles just going the wrong way. 😉
Although personally, I often look left first at the opposite site of the road, to see if it's even possible to start crossing without being stuck in the middle anyway, before looking right for nearby vehicles (although peripheral vision means you can see a bit to both sides already).
I notice there was no mention of the right foot - the stronger leg - being used for the lever-brake of carriages, which would necessitate the driver sitting on the right. This would result in a clearer view of oncoming traffic passing in the right hand lane. Pretty sure this is the case for stage-coaches and wagons in all the Westerns I've seen.
In Japan we drive as British. I drove so often in UK, it was so easy. But when I wanted to make a turn, instead of indicator, window wipers started working. We operate the indicator by the finger of left hand, wiper by right hand. I also drove in US. Sometimes I confused when I rushed to the crossing and turn to left. So I always keep in mind not to be aggressive at the crossing, keep go slowly.
Australian vehicles (RIP), like Japanese vehicles, also had indicator stalks on the right.
I've seen indicators on both left and right of the steering wheel, i think it depends on the manufacturer. Most commonly though left side indicators i think in the UK, wipers on the right
Also for the same reason, most people are right handed so it makes sense to accommodate the majority and train the minority to adapt. Left handed warriors in the UK were forced to fight right handed, Boney forced his armies to fight left handed out of vanity because he was left handed and he lost because of it.
British built cars in the 1960s and 70s had the indicator/dip on the right. It makes sense to be able to operate the turn signal or headlight dip while the other hand may be involved with changing gear. However the extinction of the UK-owned motor industry and economies of scale means that all steering columns are made for left-hand drive cars and shifted over to the right for UK cars. Here in the UK at least.
Here in India Ford used to supply vehicles which have wiper buttons at right to the steering wheel. But now they've changed it like others to the left of steering wheel. Not no confusion at all.
Why ride on the left?
- Coz it's right.
No its
-Because they’re right
Two ways of driving:
On the right side of the road.
On the correct side of the road.
Driving on the left is the natural way and driving on the right because of Henry Ford is incredibly childish. If you look at all westerns, the stagecoach drivers always sit on the right.
Because they are wrong. Its not like you would want to have your dominant arm doing all of the work or anything.
If steering wheel on the right, i can handle the car better with right hand, and left hand on the shifting stick
When I was 16 I visited the Cayman Islands. My brother in law and sister rented a car. I was in the back seat and noticed he was on the right side. I said: "Isn't this a British owned island and we should be on the left?" As soon as he moved over a car came down the road. He turned to me and said: "I knew you were good for something". Getting backhanded compliments from alcoholics is awesome!
You can tell by where the driver sits.
It gets a lot more trippy in countries/territories like the Cayman Islands, British Virgin Islands etc, because although they drive on the left, importation and use of left-hand-drive vehicles is very common because of geographical proximity to north America. Rentals however tend to be right-hand-drive, as not to confuse tourists on which side of the road they should drive on
@@Cyril_Squirrel
Except on Myanmar's busses which are right hand drive and force passengers to disembark into traffic.
"He turned to me..." Typical spam driver, doesn't keep his eyes on the road!
Why do Americans care so much about others’ alcohol consumption?
I was born n raised in Hong Kong, a former British colony. I have been to many Asian countries such as Singapore, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh n Japan. They all drive in same British direction. So that is the “Normal” way
India too
I come from a former British colony where driving in the left is still the norm. To me, US driving seems disorienting.
Every time I drive into the traffic in the US, my mind will scream, "We are on the wrong side of the road".
I know right
The US is just weird brooo
@@maheskumaarra4773 That's the rest of us trying to drive in the UK or territorys.
0:06 yeah, exactly
It’s easier to drive with your left hand on the steering wheel, while holding your sword out of the window with your right hand. That’s why we’ve had cars named Rapier, Scimitar, Sabre. The yanks had a Cutlass but it proved difficult to charge.
Great comment - well done :-)
And we have both the Challenger and the Charger; the present iterations also have insanely powerful V8 options, even the basic V6 models can hit 0-100 MPH/160 KPH in under 30 seconds.
Brilliant! 🤣🤣🤣
@@piercehawke8021 Woosh...
@@wessexdruid7598 Ngeeeeeeouw!
you talk as though practically no one else drives on the left, when it's still 1/3rd of countries
this video is intended for American who think what they did is normal thing and any other countries who didn't follow them are an oddball
@@illyasvielemiya9059 Thank god for that. I was about to worry which third of this country I was in and where I'm meant to drive.
@@illyasvielemiya9059 Yes, just like the stupid medieval system of measurements that they use which they only share with Myanmar and Liberia and the values in Myanmar are even different to the US and Liberian ones. The rest of the world uses the very logical and simple to understand metric system. They also think that tipping is compulsory in places such as restaurants so you don't pay the menu price but must pay extra. Another astonishing fact is that when you see something advertised for sale for, say, five dollars in a shop that it is a given that it will actually cost you more than five dollars. 'Weird' does not explain it. Fun fact, the last country that changed driving sides was Samoa who changed from driving on the right to driving on the left.
A third of the worlds population still drives on the left. Even countries in Europe, pre WW2 , drove on the Left.
@@fifthof1795 IF that's accurate, and I'm going out on limb here, maybe it was the influx of American vehicles and influence which fixed it in place afterward?
Driving on the left made so much sense to me when I did my driving lessons in Kenya. I learned to drive on a manual transmission and using my dominant right hand to steer and left hand to change gears felt natural. I can't imagine doing it the other way.
That’s why the us has automatic cars
I drove on the wrong side 6 months in Australia, gear shifter was easy driving on left was not. Getting home I had to learn the right side all over again😃🇨🇦
Currently doing my driving lessons in Kenya
@@DielaAlbert All the best bruv 👍🏽
It’s exactly the opposite. You need your dominant hand for shifting gears and be faster and more accurate. You are supposed to keep both your hands on the wheel when going through a bend. Gear shifting are done before approaching a bend and not during.
Kenya is one of the Country where we still drive on the Left. The rule is Keep Left unless when overtaking :-)
Overtaking who, the government or traffic ?
Because it was a british colony
Same as Australia
Same here in Trinidad
Same as in most of Southeast Asia... 6 of 11 countries.
"Driving on the right comes from Napoleon Bonaparte and Hitler"
Well that was unexpected
@Carl Carter i meant right sorry
@Carl Carter Yes he did . He said Hitler forced two countries in Europe to drive on the right .
@@sebastianbernabe3800 Do not apologise, you are correct . Hitler forced two countries to drive on the right .
@Carl Carter Bro can u listen? He litteraly said FORCED
As a Malaysian (who drives on the left), that was expected
In earlier times in Australia we were taught as children to keep to the left even when walking on a footpath. But to walk on the right shoulder of the road if there was no designated footpath as the pedestrian would be walking facing approaching traffic which was deemed a safer practice.
We were taught the same in England, by our mothers and by the infant schools. It IS safer. It's not taught now, though, and people seem to be too dull-witted to see it. They persist in walking on pavements to the right of oncoming people, so that those people are forced to keep to the dangerous kerb-edge with their backs to the traffic. Perhaps it's an instinct for those who have never given a thought to the subject, in that those who are seeing traffic coming towards them tend to keep across, as far away, in as safe a place, as they can. But of course that requires putting others into unnecessary danger. Personally I think western peoples are being dumbed-down by current education and culture so much that they are losing whatever ability they once had to think clearly.
@@robwilde855 I too grew up in Britain, and went on country hikes with my parents. This is one of the first rules driven into me: face oncoming traffic. And if you thinkabout it, it is absolutely logical. For the same reason here in Greece where I live, I walk on the left, to keep to the same rule.
I am an Englishman living in The Philippines, and I have the greatest difficulty convincing my wife to walk on the left, facing the traffic.
Incidentally, although left-hand drive vehicles may be driven in Australia under certain conditions, there is a 50,000 peso fine for driving a RHD vehicle in The Philippines, so vehicles are not stolen to order from countries where driving on the left is the rule of the road.
Why in earlier times? The same advice holds good today.
@@littleblacksambo8447 My opening phrase - 'In earlier times' was to say that that norm seems to have fallen away these days, in many instances, and was to suggest that what we were taught way back when may now not be being taught and emphasized in the current school system and family life. It wasn't to imply that what stood true and safer as a better practice in time past should now not be followed. -- I often go walking for exercise in urban areas and see many fellow walkers on the shoulder or nature strip on the wrong side of the road. [Possible exception : There are times where vegetation, terrain or road infrastructure design doesn't allow for walking facing oncoming traffic but to do that should be the exception to the rule and extreme caution exercised to avoid being run over.]
Fun corollary: because the UK was enshrining LHD as railroads were emerging, it also meant that the railroads also adopted this practice of running trains to the left where two tracks of opposing directions ran. When British rail expertise spread to nations such as France and Japan, they **also** started running their trains on the left too. This set up an odd mix in France where wagons and later autos standardised to run on the right, but trains continue to run on the left (The Paris, Lille, and Rennes Metros are exceptions in France where they run on the right; Lyon Toulouse, and Marseilles run on the left). In Japan, car practice followed from train habits so despite the emergence of a US auto industry in the early 1900's, it was just easier for the Japanese to drive on the left as their own car market developed.
Lies again? MILF Division Google Drive
Hitler : drive on the right.
America: understandable, have a good day.
Like in WW2 till the day they were attacked 😂
Henry Ford...Nazi sympathiser...now I understand.
Y’all are a bunch of idiots ! In America traffic kept right long before there was a Henry Ford or a Hitler !
@@hereintranzit yeah yeah, America was formed by Nazis and Hitler lived in Brazil after his fake death, Bill gates is a Satan worshipper.
I blame Trump..
Meanwhile British / left drivers,
Why does Americans drive on the right? 😂
Americans are just being awkward just like they are with the English language both in grammar and spelling
Should be why are Americans unable to drive manual cars?
Even in Nepal we drive on the left and we weren't even colonised
Its because India had big influence on Nepal until recent days and most of cars in nepal were imported from India I guess
@@callingbell-ix5se Well that's true but our earliest cars were imported by Noble elites during British rule in India so I guess maybe that's a factor too???
We tried and failed so we just recruit from you instead.😊
You watched too many British movies !
@@davidkamen erm, not really before the 21st century. If you see western news reports from the 2000s you'll see that most young people back then had bad English and with an awkward Nepali accent. Before 2000s we watched only our movies and Bollywood.
The question should be, “why does much of the world NOT drive on the left?”.
the majority of un member states drive on the left. 114 left, 78 right.
As someone who drives on the left in Australia and drives on the right in Italy, I can definitely say that driving on the left is more natural for me.
Cuz im not British
@Inkasso Meddl Interesting. Nobody in Australia has any problem driving a manual car.
We have rights and you don't
It's a joke
They drive on the proper side of the road.
you could say they drive a car by sitting on the "right" side of the car...
Today there is no 'safety' reason to drive on one side of the road or the other except for the law each country has decided on. But most of the world' citizens still shake hands using their right hands which came about for the same reason people drove on the left.Offerring your right hand to show you were not holding your sword or able to draw your sword meant you came in peace. Maybe just maybe Napoleon , Hiltler and Henry Ford were left handed!
Gotta keep your whip hand free!
No, WE drive on the right side...
@@alandean6930 Awesome understanding.. even when we have drinks we say cheers.. same reason as u mentioned... after cheers host must drinks first... so that guest can trust u
I will keep my sword ready in my right hand in case some one attacks.
😏🗡️😏☑️🗡️
Ur such an anime
In gurgaon you need to
I keep mine in its scabbard (cane actually).
I'm left handed so this doesn't work
Obviously being British we are completely normal and always wondered why you lot drove on the right but thanks - very informative😊
Because the British think they are special, they feel different from the European continent or the world. That's it
@@tomorrowtomorrow8525being British, I can confirm this.
@@tomorrowtomorrow8525the British are superior
@@tomorrowtomorrow8525 We don't think we are special , but we do know Americans are stupid.
When this Brit lived and worked in Brazil, he drove on the right. Now he’s back on the left. He loved it best when he worked on a farm and drove a thumping great tractor down the middle of the road with gear sticks between his legs and the pedals either side of the drive shaft. With a fork on the front he felt like a knight in armour. Now he drives a Vauxhall Mocker!
Brits drive on the proper and natural side of the road ,in a CLOCKWISE DIRECTION. See their roudabouts!
Japan, Thailand, India, South Africa , Bangladesh, New Zealand and many other countries also all drive on the left.
Interesting that some people in Switzerland, whilst driving on the right, prefer a steering wheel on the right so they can more easily avoid the rocks and barriers on mountain roads. I realise that for Americans these small things can be confusing when they are "visiting" other countries.
Australia also...
In South East Asia, many of the countries follow their former colonial masters with some exceptions.
Singapore and Malaysia drive on the left because they were former UK colonies. Indonesia is a exception because it also drives on left even though it was a former Dutch colony. Thailand drives on the left as well, its the former French colonies surrounding it like Vietnam and Laos which drive on right
For Americans? For anyone visiting another country, which is why British people are confused as well in the comment section
This kinda recommendations are what i love.
I learn new things each day.
❤️💙
Great to hear that💚💙
Just thought I'll share something interesting I watched recently 🤗
ua-cam.com/video/-a739VjqdSI/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/2Co6pNvd9mc/v-deo.html
Hope you like it 😊
Let me know
You were half correct regarding the sword arm.
You didn't mention mounting the horse, the sword would be on your left hip so you would mount to horse on the left so you could swing your right leg over the horse without the sword getting in the way.
This would mean the horse would be standing on the left side of the road, so when you set off, you would start on the left.
Plus try jousting .... then it crystal clear.
He did mention something about mounting horses, or the scabbard not getting in the way?
If we drove on the right we would collide with the oncoming traffic .!
He's right y'know....
LOL!
Driving on the left makes much more sense tbh. Given that predominantly most people in the world are right handed, the steering wheel should be controlled by the right hand since it involves more precise inputs and shifting gears can easily be accomplished by one's weaker left hand.
I've tried to explain this to a US bloke, - they don't listen, they're convinced that they're correct and that they independently "discovered" that driving on the right was "safer"
In reality,they simply followed their new best friends -the French and Napoleon 1.
They'll never admit this, they'll cling onto some BS explination.
How is turning a wheel a precise input? Writing, sorting et al need relatively precise inputs.
Also look rallye cars. They need to get through some tight spots, yet the steering wheel is on the left side. There's other more important reasons for this, but it shows that the dominant hand thing is laughable and doesn't matter
@@celticwinter rally cars are driven by professional or very experienced drivers.
They practice driving either seated right or left.
The general subject matter is the mass of ordinary road using drivers.
@@toonmag50 it was implied that right/left handedness is a factor for humans. That may be, but its influence is highly exaggerated here.
In a sport where every every second, shift and degree matters, this should at least have some small effect. It doesn't though. Because it doesn't matter that much. It won't even matter if the drivers aren't professionals.
(There's also a big amateur rallye scene. They aren't professionals by definition.)
@@celticwinter I'm not disagreeing with you about rally cars, it's one example where a lot of practice mitigates the dominance of the right brain , right visual, and right handedness.
We are taking about Joe Blogs average non professional drivers.
What is completely glossed over is that the “shotgun” position for western stagecoaches was the right hand seat, again since most people shoot right-handed. Placing the shotgun position on the right gives the shotgun man a better shot to the left (in front of the driver) even while seated. If the shotgun man was in the left seat, he’d have to stand or lean well in front of the driver to shoot to the right.
This makes more sense then everything in the video.
So that’s where the term “riding shotgun” came from….!
Thanks for that little bit of innocuous info…👍
Interesting! Thanks for sharing this
Americans and their Guns
In South Africa we drive on the left but the taxis drive wherever there's a gap on the left or right, even over pavements to get through traffic.
😂😂😂👍
“Why do the British drive on the left? Well why does the American drive on the right?
There American what do you expect
@@SeanBoyle2016 Italian
@@SeanBoyle2016 oi I respect brits but
@@RandomMemes2009174561322 nobody likes Americans
@@SeanBoyle2016 some people do some people don't it's their opinion and I will accept it.
"professionals have standards"
-brits, probably
This video should have been called ‘why does the US drive on the right’.
Others: Why does 60% of the world drive to the right?
@Steve Solomon So true
😂Africa
@Ocean Blue Canada is part of the British Commonwealth, but drives on the right (like the neighbouring USA).
@@heronimousbrapson863 they fought and won their freedom
Napoletler effect
How nice, to see an unbiased analysis. Thank you. Driving in the U.S. for us pommies though, is not that difficult.
Driving on the left for Americans in the UK is very dangerous, they turn out of military bases and kill motor cyclists, then leave the UK under diplomatic immunity and get away with it. So much for us being allies.
In Australia you drive on the left as well.
Noooo, you don't say. Next thing you're gonna tell us is that you didn't watch the video where it mentions former British colonies part. I wonder when a Kiwi will enlighten us that they too drive on the left? Or maybe some one from the Bahamas or Cayman Islands will also chime in...
I thought you guys driving upside down 🙄
@@FirstLastOne Britain even colonized USA. They right sided.
I thought upside down😅😅😅
@@FirstLastOne Canada is also part of the commonwealth, but drives on the right. I believe Gibraltar drives on the right as well.
Not only Britain, but many African country’s, Australia, New Zealand, Japan India Cyprus, Malta, and many more,
I remember reading a scientific paper long ago that stated that when a person is instinctively reacting to oncoming danger, avoidance by moving to the left was the most used direction, from punches and everything else. I assumed this was thinking for the natural tendency to avoid by turning towards a pavement (sidewalk) where the danger (to the driver) was reduced.
For the vast majority of people, the leading eye is the right one. So having that looking down the centre of the road makes sense too
There is evidence that this is why the island structure on aircraft carriers is on the right, because most pilots tended to veer left if the landing went wrong. The Japanese tried putting the island on the left, once... and never did it again.
And of course needing our right hands to hold our swords! 😂
...that does not fit here. I mean water taps , the left one is the cold and the right hot. It would make sense if the right one is cold as most people are right handed. So in terms of car steering, the right hand has relatively more in control than left hand if you are right handed that is. So in the UK steering is on the right, leaving your left hand free to change gears or radio control . I had be interested in reading this scientific study or paper if possible.
Being left handed and driving manual cars I like living in the UK!
Manual is so difficult
@@rome316ae3 Not if you are left handed, teehee!
Manuals are almost no longer available in new cars :(
Having learnt to drive on the right, yet now I live in a country where we drive on the left, it has been my observation that as long as we all keep to the same side of the road, everything will be fine.
Hello how're you doing?
In Japan, people drive on the left. And if that is not confusing enough, they walk on the right. (Because of the occupation/) And people on bicycles don't really know WHICH side to ride on.
Also escalators still go up on the right side 😐
Ultimately it doesn't matter because we in the UK will never change- it would cost way too much. There's numerous intersections which are asymmetrical, e.g. to help traffic leaving town more than it coming in. All those would have to be re-engineered, as well as the signage thing. Also, as someone who has driven over 100 000 miles with a RH drive car on the right in France and Spain, I can definitely say that having the steering on the kerb side is no real problem. Good luck to you guys in India, and why does nobody mention Japan?
If everyone in the UK was forced to drive on the other side of the road, the right side, even in their current RHD cars. It would cost NOTHING!!!!! (you just said above, just for you, you have no problem driving a RHD car on the right side of the road in Spain fgs!)
Then make a law that only LHD new cars are to be imported by car manufacturers to the UK. Again costing NOTHING. (and would save car manufacturers millions!).
...think about all the lives that will be saved on our roads, just making a decision COSTING NOTHING!!!!
Just start going around the roundabouts counter clockwise. The rest will work itself out.
@@rich7447 You mean Anti-Clockwise
@@GrahamWalters No I really don't.
All countries of commonwealth which is more then 3 billion people drive on the left
Sitting on the right-hand side of a car is more ergonomic. Most people are right-handed. When you sit on the right-hand side of a car you can use your non-dominant left hand to operate the gear shift, which is a simple fixed 'H' pattern. This leaves your dominant right hand free to make the precise and constantly variable adjustments to the steering wheel needed to change directions.
Thats true, and I agree but it isnt that significant in gear change when in an automatic.Which is what most Americans have. But that said as you say having the driver on the right- hand side and most people right- handed helps vehicle control. I suppose in electric cars they may be easily moveable to either side?
@@robharris8844U You're right about most people driving auto's these days, and it does level the playing field when you don't have to change gears. I hate auto boxes myself as I enjoy having full control over the car, and driving an auto is a very detached and unengaging experience for me. Gets you from A to B is suppose, but where's the fun in that? Cheers.
@@supraman100 I think we are saying bye bye to car driving ownership and pleasure in driving in someways. EV cars will on the whole be rental or on lease and you will get aboard them type in a GPS coordinate and it will take you to your destination. The pleasure of driving taken away, will be replaced with pleasure of watching the view like all passengers and more free interaction with them. So you will still have pleasure but displaced. Thats progress for you ! Cheers
Am in total agreement with you-this is exactly what I think. 90% of folk are right handed so the best hand is doing the most difficult and important task when the steering wheel is on the right (correct!) side of the vehicle.
If you sit on the left you will become left handed (or both handed) at steering the wheel. It is dependent on your choice.
I am basically from Pakistan residing in Dubai. In Pakistan there’s left hand drive and in UAE it’s right, I visit Pakistan once a year and it’s never been a problem for me to adapt and switch quickly but that being said there’s always one problem and that is opening a wrong door for driving seat.
yes, the problem of going to the wrong side when one has both vehicles 😀
@1:48: As an American, I reject this reasoning. Regardless of the side of the road, people would still be able to "see the other wagons" and avoid them if everything was uniform. For instance driving in the left seat, and the right side of the road yielded the same advantages of driving in the right seat, and the left side of the road.
Everything else is spot on. Road maneuvering started out as a way to simply protect yourself, during feudal times, while travelling. Stop there.
Feudal countries just never gave it up as it just evolved with their society. It makes total sense, and one way is no less safe than the other.
We like driving on the left if that's okay with you? Why should we change when it was you lot that did? It isn't too much an issue to drive on the opposite way from time to time. If I come to America I drive on the right with no problems so why would you have a problem visa versa?
@Jeff Guse Rubbish! Also I'd rather my British Sports car any day over a gas guzzling American barge that cannot take the corners with no handling what so ever. Surprised you haven't got steel bumpers along the sides as well as you slide off the road.
Finally Queen Elizabeth vs President Biden as head of state? At least Elizabeth isn't gone senile and still can go up and down stairs without falling over three times.
@Jeff Guse actually ,the truth is Brits are quite happy and capable of driving on either side of the road, as are most Europeans. You see, we regularly drive in other countries unlike most Americans who can’t even point to other countries on a map.
Left hand driving, with the driver on the right is easier, because most people are right handed, so easier to hold the steering wheel with right hand, and shift gear or pull parking brake using left hand..but of course it may no longer an issue with many automatic transmission car nowadays..oh and also motorcycle or bike rider always mount/dismount from the left side, so it's easier and safer to stop and dismount or join traffic from the left side of the road..
That is the hardest part of driving a left hand drive car. Making your hands do the tasks in opposite ways, right hand for gear shift and left hand for steering. Even worse is driving a right hand drive car in a right hand side country. Your view for over taking is minimal, even dangerous.
@@jgdooley2003 It's easier for those who are used to it. It's really not a big deal.
@@jgdooley2003 Well, I'm English and I've often driven in mainland Europe. It's not difficult at all.
I will never drive an automatic in my life I refuse😂
Propably its a matter of what you are used to, but I would find it much harder to shift gears with the left hand. As you usually shift gears before and after a cirner, but not in the corner, you still can use both for steering around a corner.
Being an Indian, it feels great to be different from the crowd.
Indian is most of the crowd. lol
@@raviking6572 hH
Japan too I believe drives this way. Why are people not asking why the Japanese drive on the right?
Indonesia too 🇮🇩✌️
40% of the world drives on the left. What a misleading title
Actually 30% of countries in the world drive on the left.
‘Why do the British drive on the left’ - Because on the right the cars are coming towards you!! lol
Even more telling: the trucks and buses are also coming straight at you!
Driving on the left side of the road is awesome
Left is logical. Reading goes from left to right and clock hands come round the clock face from left to right.
Keep that logic for yourself.
Your logic is illogical.
motorcycle or bicycle rider always mount/dismount from the left side, so driving from the left is logical, it's easier to stop or join the traffic from the left side of the road..
May be life is also a clock for you brother doing same shit all the time
@@mueezqureshi2701 you mean arabic?
Also in Japan, South Africa. Australia and New Zealand ............plus the Mediterranean Islands of Malta & Gozo 😊
Lol
Even in india before British n mughals
People used to ride in Left side only😂🤣😂
See, now you know why they colonized India. Actually they wanted China, but after getting too many tickets for riding on the wrong side the british decided thats too expensive.
😂😂
@@jeanyluisa8483
😂
It's good to have nationalism but it looks stupid when you are talking non-sense. Before British came along, we didn't even have pucca roads and lanes is not something that was even thought of by then. So no, ppl in India didnt ride on left before British rule
@@keerthichandra376 Who Told You India didn't have roads
India Had GT Road Also Known As Uttarapatha Or Sadak-E-Azam
Connecting All The Major Cities Like Kabul,Peshawar, Lahore,Delhi,Taxila,Mathura,
Banaras,Prayag,Patna, Dhaka Etc
Kurukshetra Also Comes Under GT Road
*According to historians, going to the left comes from the time of Greece, Egypt and Rome. Most humans are right-handed, a rider holds a reins with his left hand or drives a chariot with his left hand and his right hand is free to greet the opposite or ready to draw the sword to fight or protect yourself when needed.
From that habit, going on the left became the tradition and was later made into law. The rule to the left applies from Roman times.
By 1300 BC, Pope Boniface VIII had demanded orders to force all pilgrims to come to Rome on the left side of the road.
The way to move also deviates gradually to the right because people no longer carry weapons when traveling on the road. By the end of the 18th century, chariots in the United States and France began using pairs of horses to transport farm produce. These vehicles do not have a seating position for humans so drivers must sit on the back of the last horse to the left so that the right hand is whipped. Because of sitting on the left, you will want people going against you to go to your left to easily observe the collision. Therefore, you must go to the right of the road.
In 1792, a law requiring road users to travel to the right of the road was enacted in the US state of Pennsylvania. In later years, other states also adopted this law.
After the French Revolution of 1789, Napoleon ordered his subordinates to go to the right and go in a line, after which this rule also applied to vehicles. The Netherlands, Germany, Switzerland, Poland, Italy and Spain, all of the countries allied with France, also set their right path. In Austria, the vehicles in each city have different modes of transportation, but then the country has agreed on the right way.
Both Korea and North Korea, after escaping Japanese occupation in 1946, also moved to the right. Later, Czechoslovakia, Sweden also chose to go to the right. In the United States, people initially chose to go to the left but then moved to the right.
In the UK, since 1773, the government has set a standard for driving on the left side of the road.
Both Britain and France adopted their own driving style with colonial countries. So far, some former British colonies still keep the tradition of riding on the left, such as India, Indonesia, ...
African countries choose to move to the right or the left due to the influence of neighboring countries. Some of the former British colonies had moved to the right along the former neighbors that were French colonies. Several other countries that once belonged to Portugal changed their neighbors' movements, which were British colonies.
In countries that drive on the left, cars also design a steering wheel accordingly, that is, on the left. But in some parts of the world, like the US Virgin Islands, the British Virgin Islands, the Cayman Islands, the Turks & Caicos Islands and the Bahamas, despite driving on the left, there is a steering wheel on the left due to most vehicles. Shipping is all imported from USA and Brazil.
Where driving laws are applied on the left
Despite going against the trend of the world, driving on the left is still a tradition and regulation in a foggy country. Apart from the UK, many other countries are still applying this provision.*
Makes sense as to why the stubborn Japanese are still on the left then. They could have changed when Commodore Perry and the black ships showed up and the Meiji Restoration Period took place... Even after WWII, when Japan lost and the Americans rebuilt their electrical grid in the west at 100V 60Hz while the Germans rebuilt the eastern grid at 100V 50Hz (this is another story worth a UA-cam video).
There were no popes in 1300 BC
How is pop in 1300bc ?😂
Countries that Drive on the Left:
UK
India
Japan
Sri Lanka
Australia
Bangladesh
Pakistan
Indonesia
Mayalsia
Singapore
Thailand
Macau
Hong Kong
New Zealand
Botswana
South Africa
Eswatini
Lesotho
Kenya
Uganda
Malta
Ireland
Myanmar
Nepal
Bhutan
*Malaysia
Cyprus....
Barbados, Trinidad and all other commonwealth countries except Canada
And how many except Europe, South Asia and Australia are well developed?
Papua New Guinea
Plus changing gears is easier when the gear stick is on your left.
No!Most people are right with their arm,so they prefer the stick on the Right.
Truly excellent, informative explanation. This is the best evaluation of this phenomenon that I have ever seen. Well done and thank you.
I was thinking the same thing. Quite well researched
Driving on the left is driving on the right side of the road.
You miss understand when he says driving on left he's talking about left side of road not car.
-----> ----->
@@garyalexander7674 Him and me are on the same page then. Lol
@@jamesgowing3856 smiles
It's easier in UK, Australia, NZ, India, Japan etc etc rather than say " it's right driving on the left", to say "driving on the left is correct"!
So the right side of the road is wrong? But it's called the right side for a reason.
@@greatwavefan397 yes stay right away from that side or you will cause an accident.
We drive on the left in South.A🇿🇦great since I'm left handed changing gears ain't a hassle😂🤞🏾
I can't even imagine that feeling natural.. you must feel awkward everytime you're driving. But then again 🤔 if you're driving manual you're still pushing gear 1 away from you like normal so I guess it's okay..
@@lephepha now that I think about its weirder to drive on the right😂😂I'd be confused af!
@@kido_k exactly 😂 we are driving on the correct side! It's perfect for both right and left handed! It's the natural side!
Right handed Aussie and have no trouble changing gears with my left hand.
Most people right handed. Early cars manual transmission, driver keeps dominant hand on steering wheel. Driving on left is far superior for this reason alone - dominant hand maintains steering.
I just spent over six months in Ireland and the U.K. It is very natural to drive on the left with the driver’s side and steering wheel on the right. You also go the opposite way on turnabouts. Seems like it is so much easier to see what is coming at you.
Turnabouts ? you mean Roundabouts dont you
@simon0674😂😂😂😂
@@simon0674 he means circles! ✌️
Canada's westernmost province, British Columbia, drove on the left until the start of the 1920s. The Interior switched to right-hand driving in 1920 and Vancouver and the coast switched in 1922. A number of other provinces also drove on the left initially, with Newfoundland, previously a British colony, being the last to switch in 1947, two years before joining Canada.
Can you imagine the traffic accidents near the Canada-US border if Canada had never switched to driving on the right?
@@MichaelScheele I mean, this is the case with China and Hong Kong and there aren't that many accidents
@@TheJonesdude, they must have fewer terrible drivers then.
The big question should be, why do Americans igonore the metric system? 😨
meh....they slowly start to include it in their education.
Americans are taught both Metric and U.S. in school(and they've been doing so for at least 23 years), and both are used.
...and both are useful.
@@histguy101 still they always say pounds/miles/
@@histguy101 All UK road signs are in miles. The imperial system is still well routed in our society but more in our descriptive language than practically.
Wasn't it the British who invented the metric system
It is such fun to see a RHD British car on the road. A bit disorienting to drive at first, but you get used to it, and bring a bit of the old world here.
Everyone loves the cars, and they are a conversation piece.
Old World 😂😂😂😂😂😂
Sweden changed over from left to right in the 60's (I think) and there was chaos. They tried changing all the road-signs overnight but it was too big a job. We can't change in Britain now because the road network, especially motorway slip roads and stuff like that, is designed for driving on the left. Where I come from in the northern highlands of Scotland, we have some single track roads, the width of a car, with passing places, so I suppose we drive in the middle.
"We can't change in Britain now". Why would the UK change? The left hand side is clearly safer and causes less accidents, as has been proven. Just because some countries drive on the right does not mean the UK has to follow like Lemmings.
CHANGE?????? WHY SHOULD WE CHANGE?... AMERICA CHANGED FROM DRIVING ON THE LEFT TO DRIVING ON THE RIGHT, THAT DOESN'T MEAN WE HAVE TO.
@Alan Tatham The native Indians always knew it was there
Sweden shifted from left to right in 1967
Saturday night at 4:50 everyone stopped: drove carefully over to the right side and stopped again: At 5:00 the traffic continued.
special gloves with a red left and green right glove to remind the motorist to drive on the right side.
It was imagined that it would be quiet in the middle of the night, but everyone who had a car would join and everyone else was on the streets to see how it went and help direct the cars.
A complete chaos but that is exactly why it all went so slowly that it was safe.
Well I heard it costed Sweden a couple of million dollars to do so persuading other countries thats its not worth the time and effort to do so.
How about the cars, were they already right hand steering wheels? Did Sweden then change to left hand steering wheels?
Nigeria and Ghana also switched from left to right I'm the 60s or 70s
@@Lktravel1 Probably 99 % of all cars in Sweden had the steering wheel tp the left prior to changing. As an example, my mother bought her first car - a Renault - in 1952 (or 1951) and it only came with steering wheel on the left in Sweden. By the way the change to right hand traffic was on 3rd of September 1967.
I don’t really mind which side of the road I drive on. But it would be neat if we made a global effort to all drive on the same side of the road.
As a right handed person, always found RHD a lot easier when reversing (if turned to look out of back window).
Thanks for answering a question that I've had for about sixty years.
Sweden switched sides from left to right around the 1960's. Oddly, Volvo's and Saabs were made only with steering wheels on the left. Dangerous to pass.
Yeah, i think more or less all cars here in Sweden had the steering wheel on the left when people were still driving on the left side, i was born a few years after but my mother experienced the change to driving on the right side.
@@Stefan- I remember reading about the transition. All the necessary signs for right side of the road driving were installed and covered. On the night of the change, no one was allowed on the road except for emergency vehicles as the new signs were uncovered. They had some tiered program of who could drive again and when.
So it’s about the sword and the whip?
A good way to keep road rage manageable for centuries.
Oh you kinky bugger You. ! !
Lots of countries drive on the left, lots.
In the Republic of Ireland, they developed a plan to switch driving from the left to the right. They were to do it in stages: the first week trucks and buses would switch to the right. The following week, cars and motorcycles would follow.
Super interesting stuff!
No Ireland still drives in left
Are you testing the readers' intelligence ?
Trucks and buses driving on the right and at the same time cars and motorcycles still driving/riding on the left.
The trucks and buses would have won that smash up hands down , Er , which hand ?
Why didn't anyone get this was humour? Sad.
Nah it would be hard for us to switch to the left specially when crossing the border to the north
Driving on the left is also safer. When surprised by something coming at you, the majority of people (right-handed), instinctively turn to the left. When driving on the right, doing that with a steering wheel in your hand will pull you into oncoming traffic. Also, Henry Ford put the steering wheel on the left because he hated the British and would do the opposite to the British on principle.
Title should be, "Why do the British drive on the correct side of the road?" !!
While most territories in Germany waived laws, in 1862 Bavaria required all wagons to swerve to the right of oncoming wagons. As the streets became more and more crowded, the German Empire adopted this regulation in 1910
Japan drives on the left too. Almost get killed when I'm in Tokyo, looking up the street to my left, seeing nothing coming at me, stepping off the curb and not seeing the car coming from the right. There's an espionage memoir of WWII by a British spy who looked the wrong way in Germany stepping off a curb, and the police spotted it. "I Looked Right," I think it was called.
Living in the UK but frequently driving in Europe, I find it easier to switch from driving on the left to driving on the right, than vice versa. For some reason when I return to the UK I have to concentrate much more before my automatic memory cells catch up. Maybe it's because the roads in southern UK are much more congested.
I have experienced the very same problem.
Maybe that's because you're left eye dominant.