The Crossroads of Crossings
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We've all seen those jibroni motorists who zoomed past zebra crossings and completely disregarding those pedestrians standing by the side of the roadkerb waiting for them to stop - as if the road-crossers are mere traffic observers with no better things to do in their life but to eschew carbon monoxide for spiritual contentment.
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Luckily however, in general most cars do stop (they better!) and give way to people, and only a few would otherwise consider breaking traffic laws ( and possibly some bones as well, in unfortunate cases ) by speeding past them.
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What happened yesterday, though, takes the cake, and by far, will be the most outrageous thing I've ever seen at a zebra-crossing - that, and the socio-political overtones behind it.
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A curious lot comprising of :
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1. two auntie friends with grocery bags
2. a female jogger
3. a Bangladeshi worker pushing a pathetic old bicycle laden with groceries and stuffs
4. a just booked-out-from-camp NS recruit
5. a middle-age gentleman constantly talking on his handphone
6. and myself,
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came to a zebra crossing all at the same time near a major artery towards Tampines Central.
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Instinctly, the odd company stopped at the side and we all waited for the first car to stop for us to cross.
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And it did.
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Or rather, that first car in front, a black BMW 5 series, screeched to a halt - like the driver was testing the brakes for the same time. It wasn't as if he couldn't see us, but rather I think he was finding us as a mere inconvenience of his precious driving experience, hence that sudden jamming.
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All of us were taken aback by this intentional act of vehicular sarcasm, because he wasn't exactly speeding to warrant that shock of urgency on us. Even the bangla dropped one of his brinjai.
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The aunties looked at him in disgust, gave the driver an icy goddamnit-you-want-to-die-issit? stare and benevolently marched onto the asphalt first with their grocery bags in tow.
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We all followed suit, with the Bangla guy the last to cross - his ancient, laden bicycle continually impeding his wobbly progress towards the other side.
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The uneven load and weight on the bike eventually proved too much for its scrawny frame to take, so much so that in the middle of the crossing, this had to happen : the Bangla guy suddenly lost grip of one handle, and the next moment, he was on the ground sitting on the bicycle with potatoes, brinjals and onions rolling incessantly on all quarters of the road.
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Of course, being good samaritans, most of us backtracked our way to help the poor fella. For the record, I managed to nab a rolling potato and handcuffed three fleeting carrots before they disappeared into the drain.
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It was then that we didn't expect this next thing to happen.
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The gnarling, seething monster behind the wheel - a fat, obnoxious-looking specimen of the human being - began to honk at us. And he kept honking.
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All of us were startled by his incredulous stance, his utter rudeness, and his lack of compassion, inspite of the affluent and state-of-the-art automobile he was in.
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We quickly helped the bangla on his feet - quite shaken by now, I believe - and retrieved most of his sundries before we pushed his bike ( now totally road-unworthy, because the chains were dislodged from the wheels ) back to the same side of the road where we started from.
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The caveman, sensing that the road was clear for him to take off, immediate sped away without the slightest regard for civility and humane gentility, leaving us with a trail of debris and a deep VROOM from his twelve-cylindered, Autobahn-tested, German-precision machine.
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With all the hype about how civilised and cultured we have become in the microcosm of the world, plus the four million smiles we gave to the world in the last week, it seems all had fallen to nought, courtesy of one frigging idiot who simply is too caught-up in his affluent affairs and refuses to see greater things beyond his dense, little world of material comfort.
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In that fleeting moment, I was so ashamed to be called a Singaporean.