In another post you said "if I am doing the speed limit or slightly above", so which is it? I don't see 10 miles over as the speed limit or slightly above
. I know you said you would laughing when someone who passed you got a ticket, but would you be laughing if the person who passed you on the right then had an accident right in front of you and your family, because the traffic to the right was going slower(and in the lane they should be in?) What about that family who had moved over for the faster drivers that you just put at risk?
Here are some blurbs from Wikipedia about the far left lane and its purpose...
"Common practice and most law on United States Highways is that the left lane is reserved for passing and faster moving traffic, and that traffic using the left lane must yield to traffic wishing to overtake. The United States Uniform Vehicle Code states:
Upon all roadways any vehicle proceeding at less than the normal speed of traffic at the time and place and under the conditions then existing shall be driven in the right-hand lane then available for traffic ...
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology's website on "Keep Right Laws" points out that:
This law refers to the "normal" speed of traffic, not the "legal" speed of traffic. The 60 MPH driver in a 55 MPH zone where everybody else is going 65 MPH must move right..."[3]
It is also illegal in many states in the U.S. to use the "far left" or passing lane on a major highway as a traveling lane (as opposed to passing), or to fail to yield to faster moving traffic that is attempting to overtake in that lane. For example, Colorado's "Left Lane Law" states:
A person shall not drive a motor vehicle in the passing lane of a highway if the speed-limit is sixty-five miles per hour or more unless such person is passing other motor-vehicles that are in a non-passing lane...[4]"