• @Alexstarfire
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    818 days ago

    In the US? Wouldn’t surprise me if they did.

  • @[email protected]
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    18 days ago

    When I took my driver’s test in the USA, my score was based on a rubric and so I could not be penalized for mistakes that weren’t on the rubric. I managed to stall the car in the middle of the road but that was fine because whoever wrote the rubric must have assumed that no one would take the test in a car with a manual transmission.

    So what I’m saying is that maybe this guy did pass, if there wasn’t an explicit “doesn’t drive off-road” scoring category…

    • @Voyajer
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      418 days ago

      Same for my sister, she borrowed my RAV4 but stalled it twice during the test. The instructor was impressed she showed up in a manual at all apparently.

    • ᴇᴍᴘᴇʀᴏʀ 帝OPM
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      218 days ago

      I got a verbal warning from the guy doing the driving test about driving on the wrong side of the road when there was an oncoming vehicle (it was a long road) and I assume that was because it wasn’t listed as grounds to fail someone. My driving instructor reckoned they all called the tester Nervous Norman and I may have scared him into passing me, so he never had to sit in the same car as me again.

      • @Eheran
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        318 days ago

        Sorry but what the actual fuck is wrong with your country? How can you let people pass like that?

        • ᴇᴍᴘᴇʀᴏʀ 帝OPM
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          318 days ago

          Most of that is my driving instructor giving me a ribbing for passing first time. That’s not actually why I passed. My uncle drive into the back of a bus on his first test but they didn’t pass him to make sure he never endangered the person testing his driving. He didn’t pass until his fifth go.