And how exactly do you imagine you will escape them, since you presumably inhabit the same world as the rest of us?
I'm not going to be "blatting" up and down country lanes in any kind of motor vehicle. Any driver who blats anywhere, however charming their vehicle, is a menace.
If that's what you say you meant, then fair enough, but I find it odd that a vehicle that imposes few demands and restrictions on others and expands the horizons of door-to-door transport would be described as individualistic, while one that shapes our entire society according to its demands and requires that everything get out of its way is seen as somehow convivial. The only things that cars facilitate are the things they have rendered necessary in the first place.
I did notice the bit about hitchhikers, which is all very heartening, but if I'm honest I have to admit to finding the self-portraits of the Look How Polite A Road User I Am And Wouldn't It Be Great If Everyone Were Like Me element a bit tiresome by now. It's the implication that everyone else is behaving inconsiderately that is irritating. Not to mention wrong.
Blimey!
1. I'm not trying to escape what I don't see as corrosive. I quite enjoy living in the early 21st Century in Western Europe.
2. The only way to drive a 1960 roadster is to blat. It makes about 55 bhp and has low gearing, so it does 70mph flat out. we normally drive it at 50, which is scary enough. It is not even a menace to insects. It is also very beautiful and has a lovely exhaust note. Utterly, utterly lovely.
3. I do see what you say about motor vehicles shaping our society, although I quite like the environment they've shaped. This computer was delivered in a lorry. As were the slates on my roof, the food in my fridge.. indeed the fridge itself. My children were delivered in a bed. Almost everything else in a lorry. Eschew the vehicle and you need stout leather on your soles.
4. I certainly don't consider myself particularly polite on the road. I put these things in to defend both myself and motorists in general against real or implied charges of being petrol-fuelled misery-bringers. In truth there has not been a week for about twenty years when I've had fewer than three points on my license. Sometimes it is more. My family laugh openly at my driving.
5. I absolutely don't think that everyone else is behaving inconsiderately. I don't imply it. In the post you first took exception to, I wrote very positively about racers, chaingangs, parents training children and others. I write often on this forum that I think the majority of road users are skilled, courteous and thoughtful. So any implication that everyone else is behaving inconsiderately would be very wrong, as you say. And any inference that I'd been thinking that way would be wide of the mark. It's all there in black and white.
6. However, I do think that dawdling cyclists who ride 2-abreast when they could easily tuck in and passing is tricky are not showing a massive amount of consideration for other road users. I also have an issue with lycra missiles on posh wheels who double up to chat between pieces of work if that doubling up inconveniences other road users. These are the points you first baulked at and I am constant in my views.