An angry woman is collided with a window ring along the road at a busy intersection in the west of Sydney.
The incident took place at the intersection of Memorial Avenue and Remembrance Drive in Liverpool.
The woman, a green P-flattening, opened the side door of her driver as she barefoot and confronted the road on the window washer, who wore a butt and held a rack.
While the confrontation unfolded, the traffic ran backwards in a long line.
The two exchanged words, where the man with his finger in the face of the woman points out.
She then waved at him and landed a blow.
Despite the physical exchange, no police were called and the couple seemed to arrange their disagreement in itself.
Some Aussies speculated that the man had washed her windows without her permission, which caused the collision.

Images conquered a barefoot, green P-plate driver that is involved in an anger confrontation with a window ring with a bumbag with a bumbag

While the confrontation unfolds, the traffic on the busy intersection comes to a halt, where the pair exchanges heated words and escalates the situation
Was along the road in the road is illegal in all Australian states and areas, except for the Australian capital.
There have been many reports of aggression and intimidation aimed at motorists through window rings.
A window ring along the road from Perth showed that he could earn $ 375 a day by waiting for popular intersections.
“I used to do crime to get money, but then my partner showed me this, and it stops me from getting into trouble,” he told Perth in 2018.
“The police are not allowed to us, I don't blame them, they look forward to the safety of people,” he said.
“As soon as I can get a daily daily job, I will probably not do it.”
Many Aussies have called on the police to combat the action.
'I don't want to be harassed in a set of lights. Bad enough to get intimidation from venters in shopping centers, “they said.
A second added: 'I tried one of them to wash my car while he rained. It is more a shakedown than a service, I think it should be stopped. '
“The current group of closing rings that circling are simply common people,” a third said.
“The first time I had interaction with the woman I had no money on me legitically and I told her politely and she just started to swing to me.”
Another said: 'You shake your head to say no, they do it anyway, and then they expect you to pay them.
“Don't try to harm me from cash that I don't wear by giving myself a service that I don't want.”
A fifth stated: 'It is a seriously unpleasant experience that entails the actual risk of injury to people and damage to property.
“We must be free not to communicate with sellers of any nature whatsoever and it is shameful that forcing an unwanted service and the demand of money is permitted for it, let alone at important intersections in the city.”