In this dashcam footage compilation, an ordinary day turns unpredictable fast—clear video turns opinion into facts when split‑second choices nearly become a car crash or full‑blown car accident. Watch the full video:
It starts with an orange Mustang cutting across without a head check, followed by a textbook red‑light run in front of Palace Station in Las Vegas where a dark sedan gets tagged by an SUV that had the right‑of‑way. Parking lots aren’t safe havens either: leaving Walmart, one incident escalates into a drivable‑but‑damaged mess; elsewhere, a driver who also ran a red admits fault on the curb—his tire shredded, the filmer’s bumper torn off—and both exchange insurance, grateful that everyone walked away.
Freeways supply their own chaos. On the 101 S in Los Angeles, a hard swerve gets forwarded to LAPD in case it became someone else’s claim; in Oregon, a 16‑year‑old with no license, no insurance, and three underage passengers crashes while a motor officer is just behind; on I‑70E merging to 170, a brown Chevy Bolt rockets up and slices between lanes, clipping the cam car (insurance now working the file). Back on the surface streets, “two‑for‑one” bad decisions unfold—a big passenger van swings a right turn too wide as another driver tries to “pass” the STOP sign—and somewhere a snowbird drifts into a Lincoln because attention lagged a beat.
Signals and lane rules get ignored on repeat: a red light “that meant nothing,” a roundabout someone treats like a suggestion, a driver on Highway 69 in Beaumont disputing an improper‑lane‑change ticket after a tangle, and another who “felt a vibration” and lost control—no mechanical fault found, so distraction or fatigue is the likely culprit. At 45 mph a right‑side driver pulls out blindly into a left‑side through lane; in Las Vegas, the filmer is hit mid‑conversation about dangerous driving (possibly by someone trying to pass in turn lanes); in Knoxville, a Silverado blasts a red while a Hyundai simultaneously turns left from a straight‑only lane—video heads straight to the Sheriff. A stop‑sign non‑stop from a Ford Explorer ends exactly how you’d expect, while an impatient tailgater earns instant karma from police on Autoroute 40.
There’s plenty of everyday recklessness, too: someone backs into another car and strolls away while the victim sits inside; a driver pulls out without looking and nearly clips a passing car; a box truck cuts off, then brake‑checks; and in a 25‑mph residential zone lined with kids and school‑bus stops, a Caliber Auto Glass van turns into the intersection without so much as a glance—hard braking and a steady wheel prevent a neighborhood fender bender. Through it all, the camera never blinks, the timeline stays honest, and the claims process gets a lot simpler.
Takeaway: space and scanning buy you options. Treat every move as mirror → signal → shoulder check, never assume a blinker equals permission, and protect intersections by looking both ways—even on a fresh green. Don’t force last‑second exits or red‑light gambles; if you miss it, take the next turn. Slow for rain, roundabouts, and school‑zone side streets; leave a real following gap so someone else’s panic stop doesn’t become your car crash. And when things do go sideways, preserve the original dashcam footage, note the time and location, and share it with police or insurers—clear video is your best witness after any car accident.

