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On Aug 11, 2:16�am, "JB" wrote:
Patty Holding a cell phone to your ear keeps you from being able to turn your head to check your blind spots. �This is the #1 thing I watch out for when I see another driver is on the phone and it has saved me again and again. �A mic, you can just drop in your lap when you need to. �Most people I have seen driving with hands-free systems and voice recognition dialing on their cell phones drive no worse than they normally do. That's part of it all right. Another factor is that holding a cell phone has the person driving one-handed all the time. But the biggest difference is psychological. Telephone conversations tend to be two-way (duplex), radio is almost always one-way, and the distraction level is very different. Aside from that, people who have problems with keeping their attention span primarily to the driving, shouldn't drive. That's true, but who decides such things? Almost all of the bad drivers I know think they are good drivers! �You don't have to look at the mic, so it is actually potentially safer than having a passenger in the car. You don't have to look at the passengers while driving, either. I sure don't. It is that simple. �Would you outlaw passengers? � Some of them! (Actually, if a certain passenger is a distraction, I pull over). This always seems to be goal of any discussions like this. Some people seem to be intent on outlawing every thing that somebody else does because they know they can't do it right themselves. �The insurance companies would have nothing to do if people got their license pulled for getting in wrecks rather than outlawing everyone else. I disagree. The problem is that too many people are poor judges of how well they can do something. Particularly in real-life situations. After an accident is too late to do prevention. Pulling the license doesn't bring back the dead or instantly heal the injured. (And some folks will simply drive without the license!) Where I work, we have a saying: "The safety book is written in blood". I have seen boatloads of data that gets overturned by boatloads of different data all the time. Sure. But we have to go with the data we've got, and that data proves over and over that cell phone use while driving seriously reduces driving skills. If someone did a lot of testing, they could probably find certain individuals whose driving skills with an illegal blood alcohol level were better than those of certain other individuals who were stone cold sober. IOW, exceptions that prove the rule. But the law has to be written and applied the same for everyone. �I can tell you that "texting" and typing on a computer keyboard certainly needs to be the job of the co-pilot. Of course! And you would think that everyone would have the common sense to know that. But they don't. That's the real issue - people's lack of self-awareness, good judgement and common sense. Maybe we can't legislate those things, but we can try to prevent some of the obvious bad results. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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