Walking away from problems in traffic (like when you have a near miss because someone else made a steering mistake) is usually a lot better than getting into a heated argument about what an this other person is for not noticing you even although you had your lights on and everything. Walking away works if you’re not likely to interact with the other person in the future. Walking away also works if you’re not likely to interact in the context of X with the other person in the future.
As always, there is a middle path where sometimes walking away is good and some times it isn’t, but “that will literally never solve the problem” is only correct if you see “the problem” as “the grievance that has just occurred”.
Walking away from problems in traffic (like when you have a near miss because someone else made a steering mistake) is usually a lot better than getting into a heated argument about what an this other person is for not noticing you even although you had your lights on and everything. Walking away works if you’re not likely to interact with the other person in the future. Walking away also works if you’re not likely to interact in the context of X with the other person in the future.
As always, there is a middle path where sometimes walking away is good and some times it isn’t, but “that will literally never solve the problem” is only correct if you see “the problem” as “the grievance that has just occurred”.