You say this and list all the things they might be thinking of instead of paying attention to their driving. Then you say that you want to increase the number of "crossed path" encounters with such potential inattentive drivers by riding faster than other traffic and repeatedly coming up behind them in their blinder if not blind spots? How does that make sense?
Number of personal light vehicles > number of big trucks > number of bikes. That and inertia kind of imposes certain issues when a speeding truck needs to stop.
Most modern cars are very competitive with bikes when it comes to stopping distance, and even more-so when it comes to margin pavement conditions. Trucks not come in far behind the rest, but their weight means much more damage when they fail to stop in time.
As I said in another recent post...by staying next to a car you chance of an encounter is not reduced but rather it is constant. It is false logic to think by floating next to a car that there is only 1 chance, but rather it is a constant chance as long as they are in relative proximity to you. The speeds I advocate are not extreme differentials and therefor allow for sufficient reaction time. Like I said, 10kph differentials, like driving through a parking lot at 10kph....there is enough time to react to a ball jutting out from between parked cars. Then again, if you were stationary between, could you react to a ball being thrown at you? Which is a greater chance of interaction then.....imagine....
driving down a residential street. Kids playing. Parked cars to the left or right. You driving down the middle at 10 kph. or you completely stationary. A ball will come flying out from between the cars. Which decreases the chances of being hit....proceeding down the street at 10kph, or staying put until a ball comes flying at you?
I argue that if something is to happen it can happen at any moment...be it the car immediately next to you or somewhere else in traffic, but by working your way through traffic to clear openings, you actually reduce that chance. By going 10kph faster, incidents of engagement are more likely from the front, and you can always scrub off 10kph pretty easy to match traffic.
I think it is a lot to trust the cars around you to notice you and therefor you can dismiss any chance of engagement and declare it safe in proximity to them. In fact I might dare say that is complacency and more dangerous to ignore the constant risk of even the car right next to you for the last 5 minutes!
I have personally seen a car flip itself over in a crazy reaction to the van next to it barely enter the lane next to it in a botched blind lane change! It was a big azz white van swerving but never touching the big azz black SUV immediately next to it, in broad daylight!!!
The SUV swerved radically, sent himself into a fishtail and flipped himself on the 427!
I don't trust either idiot to take care of me!!!! I would rather minimize my time spent next to such retards, or be snuck up on by such a driver.
PS I like the poster's bubble strategy.