We in the state of Western Australia "Down Under" had the same law introduced back in 1996. The advertising campaigns blasted us with "Keep Left Unless Overtaking" (we drive on the left) and the token dozen people were fined in the first month.
Now, 14 years on, no one abides by the law, nor is it enforced. I ended up in a little confrontation with an off-duty police officer last year when I tail-gated him flashing my high beam because he refused to move over on the highway even though he was driving below the limit, and to top it off REDUCED his speed because he knew it would "piss me off" as he put it. He threatened me with a fine until I told him he had better fine himself first for occupying the fast lane when not overtaking, and I had done nothing wrong, I was obviously not speeding as I was stuck behind him (funnily enough tailgating is not an offence here, there are guidelines to minimum safe distances but no laws). Upshot was after he yelled for a while, then I drove off without a fine.
The only place I have driven where people obey this law is in Europe. Seems to work well there as people are generally courteous drivers, and more importantly, don't take driving personally. I don't know how it is in the U.S. but here in Australia if you change lanes in front of someone with any less than about 4 car-lengths of room, you may as well have said something insulting about their mother. Violence originating from drivers not seeing eye to eye is a common occurrence here (the media has coined the term 'road rage'). Many people have been punched, stabbed or attacked with baseball bats (about the only thing we use them for here, no one plays baseball here, but many own the bat for personal protection) over nothing more than someone cut in front of someone else on the road.
So good luck Georgia, I hope the law works out for you better than it did for us.
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