:23752661 Sensible application of speed ends when you don't have enough control of the vehicle to stop or turn when you want to or becomes necessary to. After I made a mistake, I adjusted my braking, released the rear one and tightened the front one. I was never in danger of overshooting or (realistically) falling down; it was a technique issue, not a traffic danger. Yellow lights exist for a reason, and you're not supposed to brake directly when a yellow light appears; if you think it would require too heavy braking, it's better to simply ride through it. This is what happened with me, so I was well prepared to brake for the next light shall a need occur, but knowing from experience that the lights are set up so that they have time gaps that allow you to move through a series of them if you go at a reasonable, near maximum allowed speed, I wouldn't need to brake for the next one. There's no danger in getting out of the intersection faster, keeping to the allowed limits. Unfortunately, those ones were shorter, so the yellow one caught me in between them. I had plenty of space and time to brake, and after I made an adjustment the tyre got contact back; the front was doing more than 90% of the braking anyway. Before you judge someone, make sure you really understand what you're talking about. There's a huge difference between reckless driving and driving dynamically whilst keeping to the limits. The limits and light changes require you to use gas and brakes more aggresively if you want to maintain the highest possible allowed speed at all times. And yes, this needs experience that I certainly lack to execute every action perfectly, but I'm well aware of the dangers that might appear and my driving doesn't endanger anyone than, well, it does when you drive keeping to the limits.