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Young Drivers Canada and James Hinchcliffe

Angelo DiCicco: Darren Calabrese pollPoll: How long do you warm up your car for when it is really cold outside Under the law in Ontario, there no signal for Get the hell out of my way, according to Globe and Mail. The Drivers Handbook doesn’t say you can flash your lights to get other drivers to clear a path for you, said Angelo DiCicco, General Manager with Greater Toronto Area section of Young Drivers of Canada. VideoVideo: Inside the Morgan factory where they still make cars by hand We ride along with Canadian IndyCar racer James Hinchcliffe on his way to work in Indianapolis to see how he drives on regular roads and ask why he drives a Mini Globe DriveVideo: Celebrity cars: What Canadian IndyCar star likes more about his Mini than his race car A woman clears snow from a car as a storm hits with strong winds and heavy snow in Toronto on Monday, February 2, 2015. When you’re following somebody who going too slow for you, you could get close or you could flash your high beams because you want to teach them a lesson — but does that actually work on the road There no law that says a slower driver has to get out of the way if you’re going faster than they are, whether you’re flashing high beams or not. You can’t force someone to go faster then they’re prepared to go by punishing them with your high beams. Yes, the law says slower traffic should keep right, DiCicco said. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.