Texting while driving
Texting while driving
This is a public service video about the dangers of texting while driving. If you have kids that drive it may be helpful to have them watch it. The video is graphic...
Bee
Bee
This brings to mind a fairly recent article I saw - actually it was covered by a number of news sites, but here's one example:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/techn ... xting.html
The figure may be less for car drivers, but still, 23 is a very big number.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/techn ... xting.html
The figure may be less for car drivers, but still, 23 is a very big number.
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I'll give you my 18 wheeler loaded with bricks and a car plow.Canuck wrote:Most of the accidents I have avoided recently are young kids texting while driving. Followed by a-hole drivers from the City and tourists second, with wildlife third.
- Tunnelcat
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Do any of you remember the old driver's education scare films they used to show? These were films that showed real accident scenes and the aftermath carnage, uncensored and graphic. 'Signal 30' and 'Highway of Agony' are a couple that come to mind. I had to watch the 1959 movie 'Signal 30' in high school driving class. Old, cheesy and nasty! Part 1 if you dare.
I don't text or talk while I drive if I can help it. It's saved me numerous times to not be distracted by my phone, but it's pissed me off when some slow poke or inattentive idiot cuts me off because they're on the phone. If they do that, I honk the horn, and in my mom's Accord, it's a nice, loud BEEP!
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Doesn't matter. It's the headphones or ear buds that may not be allowed in your area. Changing the track on your MP3 player is no different than changing the radio station. If your MP3 player is playing through ear buds or headphones ... then it may be illegal. If the MP3 player is playing over the speakers in your vehicle ... then it's only illegal if the volume violates a noise ordinance.Top Wop wrote:I did not say headphones, I said mp3 players. If you look down to change the track someone might wrongly interpret that as texting.
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This makes no sense, if you can't hear traffic conditions, you can't hear traffic conditions. Irregardless if you are listening via headphones, earbuds, 16" subs, what difference is it?TechPro wrote:Doesn't matter. It's the headphones or ear buds that may not be allowed in your area. Changing the track on your MP3 player is no different than changing the radio station. If your MP3 player is playing through ear buds or headphones ... then it may be illegal. If the MP3 player is playing over the speakers in your vehicle ... then it's only illegal if the volume violates a noise ordinance.Top Wop wrote:I did not say headphones, I said mp3 players. If you look down to change the track someone might wrongly interpret that as texting.
Personally I listen to talk radio, at a reasonable volume, I don't text or use a cell while driving, and I expect people in my car to be at a reasonable volume. It takes eyes, ears, and yes, touch to properly "drive" a motor vehicle.
I've been driving for 40 years + now with NO accidents.
It's never good to wake up in the shrubs naked, you either got way too drunk, or your azz is a werewolf.
You're right. It doesn't make sense, but that's the way the road laws are. Having your music too loud to hear the traffic conditions is not against the law (it's OK, AFAIK).
Here's your chance to get the laws changed. Can't wait to find out how many people complain about it taking away their rights to go deaf.
Here's your chance to get the laws changed. Can't wait to find out how many people complain about it taking away their rights to go deaf.
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So you're under 21 and think you "know how to text right"? Stay off of the highways in my neighborhood. I don't want to be dodging your lamebrain driving.Ezri wrote:Texting while driving just got banned (on like August 28, 2009) in the State of Missouri for people under the age of 21 (if your 21 or over, you can do it, which is gay, since those people are the ones who get in car crashes because of it because they are old and don't know how to text right).
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loi, agreed. The fact that he uses 'gay' to describe something that is non-biological doesn't help either.TechPro wrote:So you're under 21 and think you "know how to text right"? Stay off of the highways in my neighborhood. I don't want to be dodging your lamebrain driving.