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i need to put my phone out of reach..like in the trunk.
i roll truly hands free. if it rings, i go speaker phone. talking like that, it is just like having a conversation with a passenger in the car. |
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U.S. proposes rules targeting distracted driving - latimes.com |
Its crazy enough the car manufacturers with all this safety crap built in a vehicle are also packing gizmos of nav, communications, climate control, A/V into one. Years ago a vehicle would have control knobs easy to find and one would feel the difference between them. You wouldn't necessarily have to take your eyes off of the road to operate those functions. Believe me, I love technology but despise where manufacturers force it on us. Those all-in-one center dash nav, radio, comm. stuff is 'out of touch' with real safety. It's neither passive or active and more in the danger catagory.
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i cant even hear the phone ring, or hold a conversation in my 911. it's all to loud :D |
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There was recently a double fatality involving a teen in a pickup that hit a tractor trailer. The kid had over 20 texts in the 5 minutes prior to the crash |
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Some day we'll all be looking like this... http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1329506762.jpg |
So we need legislation for that? Seriously? Bring on the nanny state. :rolleyes:
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You already live there:p
Seriously though, you can't expect LEO to try and determine intent, but they should be forced to use a little bit of common sense. I have seen fewer LEO not talking on the phone than the ones that are. The wireless comm companies have a strong lobby, the hands free thing was the compromise. I think the answer is to make phones not work if you are moving faster than someone could go on foot. People are inconsiderate, self-centered a-holes, this stuff is a symptom of the disease. |
I saw some chick eating while driving.
Another couple was arguing while the guy was driving. Another guy had a bunch of stuff piled up in his pickup truck, and posed as much danger to others as the first two. You'd think this was a free country and you just take the good with the bad. What are we craz? We need protection, as much as the system will allow. Protection I say!! Law!! lol...haha |
LEOs make determinations of intent all the time
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Considering the number of ignorant, self-centered and just downright nasty people running around loose, that's probably not a very good idea. I don't think you, or most any other sane person, would want to inhabit a world like that. It would be nice if we could live in a society where the government didn't have to pass so many laws to protect it's citizens from each other. Unfortunately, that's not the world we live in. |
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I just do what my grandpa taught my dad to do, and what I see him do. I go about my business and worry about myself. Can't change the world. Intolerance is a *****. Someone else's *****. |
What I'm saying is that a person should be free to read an email, change the radio station or have a bite of a sandwich at a red light. It's not unsafe to do so, and police should exercise good judgment in handing out such tickets. But the flipside of that, doing so while driving, is extremely dangerous. However all the legislation in the world isn't going to make our streets safer, until drivers honestly start understanding how dangerous certain behaviours are. Look at the progress made with drunk driving over the last 50 years. Most folks now understand and believe it's a dangerous activity, hence few people do it.
Implicit in this, which I think you've missed, is that police can't be trusted to use good judgment. We don't need legislation, we need common sense. |
I'll probably get beat up here for this, but I talk on my phone a lot in the car. I'm in sales and drive 800-1000 miles a week. I have to accomplish a lot of my job behind the wheel.
Then throw in the fact that a couple nights a week (depending on where I am driving home from) my 35 mile drive takes nearly 2 hours, it would kill me if I couldn't catch up with family and friends on my way home from work. I use my Bluetooth/ speaker phone the majority of the time. I've been in exactly zero accidents in 8 years of driving. I am more or less distracted talking on the phone than I am with passengers in my car. Should we outlaw that too? |
Laws against hardware, based on the worst hardware, are not well thought out. That is, just as the roads have 1980 Isuzus and Yugos limping down the road at the same legal speed as a new Porsche 911 (or well set up 944) doesn't mean that all speed limit laws should be centered around some 1980's POS with only one brake caliper working. ...but enough about the 944. (ducking)
Anyway, cell phones are similar. Most all have crappy fidelity from the cell carriers cramming signal thru an ever-crowding bandwidth. All of that is made worse by crappy handsets, and crappy Bluetooth hands-free systems. And if that stack-up of poor fidelity isn't bad enough, our govt has mandated ever-smaller econo-boxes for roads which are neglected (read; very noisy environments) So, many people driving while talking have to 'squint their brains' to decipher what is being communicated to them. --not a good situation. OTOH, plenty of better gear exists. High quality noise-cancelling headsets, for example. Also, having a car/SUV that has a good amount of sound-deadening helps too. Simply concluding that 'cell phones and driving are always a bad mix' is short-sighted. Besides, does anyone think that the local sheriff will stop using his radio when driving? How about we have some education on the topic, rather than just throwing out the baby with the bath-water... (as the bureaucrats would like to do for us) |
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They didn't sell as much. Same as people in the 19th century not using telephones. Tehnological improvements lead to a more efficient and productive economy. Cell phones are part of that.
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