So on say a 5 mile long single carriage road you would not do a life saver until you got to the end, on a headwind day that would put a lot of traffic behind you. I take it you have mirrors.
Headwind, tailwinds, in the eye of a hurricane, sunshine, rain, plagues of frogs, the motorised vehicles will still be travelling faster.
Why will all the traffic stack up behind?
I don't get it that at all, a rearward glance is not needed by drivers as a permission slip to overtake. As long as the other carriageway is free, surely the cars can pass with a cheery wave and a song in their hearts??
Or shall we add a 5 mile tailback into the equation to help try to make a non existent point stick.
The Snake and much moreso Woodhead pass between Manchester and Sheffield is a shorter than M62 route but largely winding, poor to see past others single lane each way with Articulated lorries, these travelling far more slowly than smaller motorised traffic even with their far greater width and length don't build up inordinate queues of cars. They accrue some followers and it can take a few miles (not a few seconds as per OP) to find a safe spot to get by, but they do not ever seem to receive the same level of abuse and opprobrium for the 'inconvenience' they cause.
I'll happily admit to being a Mr Toad if I catch up such a truck, especially on the least overtake friendly bit at the edge of Manchester but never when that has happened have I ever thought it necessary to engage with Internet world to castigate the driver for their driving.