Yes, people make mistakes everywhere, using the same laws, good or bad roads, lack of or strict enforcement. What's different here doesn't have anything to do with being racist. It's easy to see why things go haywire here, and not only on the roads. It's personal attitudes some people have , especially about driving. The blame starts with the drivers, and accidents stop if THEY did what they're supposed to do. You can have the best rods on earth, safest vehicles and police standing on every road at 1 mile intervals, and people here will still get into accidents. It's on them, first.
Your question is based on assumptions, not facts. Fatal accidents don’t happen just because of reckless drivers—they happen due to a combination of factors, including road design, enforcement, and systemic safety measures.
You claim Thailand has an unusually high number of fatal accidents on ‘straight, dry highways’ but ignore the actual data—statistically, you are less likely to die in a four-wheeled vehicle in Thailand than in the USA. This completely undermines your argument that Thai drivers are uniquely bad.
Furthermore, road construction and design in Thailand often create hazards—poor lane markings, sudden merges, unprotected intersections, and lack of enforcement of speeding all contribute to crashes. If you truly want to understand why accidents happen, you need to look at data-driven causes, not just personal anecdotes and stereotypes.
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