Back in the 1910s, 1920s, the streets in American cities were a gigantic big old mess. You had pedestrians, horses and carriages, vendors, and street carts. It was a melting pot of everybody, which wasn’t great news for people trying to encourage the sale of cars. If you have a great big hunk of lethal metal careering down a street, you don’t want anything in its path.
The American automobile industry had a clever idea to clear their path. At the time, there was a derogatory word, “jay,” meaning somebody who was unsophisticated or naive, especially someone from the country. The automobile industry took that word and invented the term “jaywalker” to imply that anybody stepping into the street was stupid, an idiot, or an unsophisticated person who didn’t understand how cities work.
They created adverts to embed the idea that the pedestrian was the fool if they were the one crossing the road. They got schools and boy scouts involved, and used adverts everywhere to persuade people that the blame for accidents lay on the pedestrian, not the car. They essentially shamed people into leaving the streets to vehicles only.
As time went on, the narrative shifted from rural “idioticness” to illegality. Many American states began criminalizing the act of being a pedestrian in the street outside of a crosswalk. The cultural shift was complete, all because a manufactured word convinced everybody that walking was a crime.
By the way, in case any Americans don’t know, jaywalking is not illegal in Europe.



@abbadon420 @Venat0r
In Germany and Spain (both countries with domestic auto industries - ahem auto-lobbyists :obey: ) jaywalking is illegal and you can get a fine, the Police (cunts) will fine you if you do it, and if someone ends up killing you, well, the Police favour the car drive (of course they do) and the worst Auto murders get is a 3 year driving ban. Germany is car-brained :(
#CarBrain #AutoLobbyismus #ThePoliceAreNotYourFriends
@frechdachs
When did jaywalking become illegal in Germany???
I don’t think it is. Can you point me to the corresponding § in the StVO?
@abbadon420 @Venat0r
I’ve never bothered reading your shitty law but cross the road in front of a cop and you’ll see.
You Germans are really the USians of Europe: god forbid anyone criticises the land of the Übermenschen
@47363 @abbadon420 @Venat0r
§ 7 (4) of the German Road Traffic Regulations (StVO) makes crossing at a red light a fine, other parts suggest if you endanger traffic by not crossing near a designed crossing can be punishable.
Anecdotally, I have been stopped by police for cycling though a (cycle+pedestrian) crossing just after the lights changed. And I know of this happening to people walking as well
I have no idea what you’re referencing.
@frechdachs
I see you’re using a different interpretation of jaywalking from mine (crossing the street [almost] where ever you want).
@abbadon420 @Venat0r
@47363 @abbadon420 @Venat0r
The StVO makes crossing the street anywhere else when a designated crossing is nearby is technically a violation. Depending on how much work the “almost” where you want, means in your definition, it sounds similar. I’m not sure what your point is though.
Do you not think traffic regulations lean in favour of cars in Germany?
@frechdachs
If regulations (or the handling of violations) favour cars is a whole different question from whether jaywalking is illegal.
@abbadon420 @Venat0r
@47363 @abbadon420 @Venat0r
Ok, well if you want to be nitpicky. The regulation doesn’t define jaywalking, rather § 7 (4) makes it de facto the case, however it allows for crossing when there are no crossings nearby, which would mean it is not in all cases a violation.
@frechdachs
… in hardly any.
@abbadon420 @Venat0r
@47363 @abbadon420 @Venat0r A victory for the narcissism of small differences. Here is your medal 🎖️ Well done.
That’s blatantly false
You must not live in Germany. Lucky you.
Can I forward you my fines as proof then? You’re welcome to pay them