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We don´t
That is the short answer.
In the UK it is said that horse-back riders would prefer to pass each other so they could take a swing at each other with a sword. To avoid confusion on bridges a law was passed in England in 1770 ish saying that people must drive on the left. Interestingly in Japan it was the steps leading to a temple there were getting confused! In most colonies they simply followed the English but in other countries they were influenced by different circumstances although it still came down to most of them being right handed. In America it is said that controlling large horse drawn wagons with a whip ( assuming you are right handed ) is much easier if you ride the last horse on the left and drive on the right. Similar situations caused many other countries to switch to the right.
The reason being that you should always have at least one hand on the wheel and when you're shifting your dominant is always on the wheel, presuming driver is right handed.
For this reason, I think driving on left side of the road makes more sense.
However, if you're left handed then better to drive in a country where people drive on the right side of road.
The real problem is countries stuck in the stone age who still use imperial system of measurement. Forget about MPH, there is no good reason not to use KPH when we have SI units. I mean come on, even US military uses metric.
It's just the public who are stupidly stubborn about this. Harking back to tradition. Anyone who has a job that uses units would usually prefer metric and or is already using metric. I mean some of the Imperial units go back to Roman times.
Would you not want to have your strongest hand on the steering wheel, giving you maximum control over your vehicle?