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Car B would be at fault do to the fact that they failed to yield at a traffic light.
The oncoming car curved into the street, hitting me off of my bike.
It wouldn't matter if the oncoming car was speeding. When making a left turn you must always yield to oncoming traffic regardless of their speed.
Blind people can "see" with their ears by relying on them to fill in the gaps caused by their lack of visual perception. For instance, while a blind person cannot see an oncoming car, they can hear it, allowing them to move away from the sound as to avoid getting hit. Blind people cannot literally see with their ears, no one can.
As soon as the oncoming car is in sight.
If you overtake a car on a bend or if there is an oncoming car.
Don't take the risk.
I try to focus on the white line on the right side of the road until the oncoming vehicle passes by.
I'm sorry but you are. Green light left still yeilds to oncoming, only green arrow left does not have to yeild.
Try to swerve around it if you can
As soon as you see a car directly in line towards you, you should go to low beam.
At night a driver should dim his headlights when an oncoming motor vehicle comes within 1,000 feet. You should switch your headlights from full beam to dipped beam when a oncoming car passes. It is unsafe to leave your headlights on full beam as it blinds the driver of the oncoming car.