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Should cell phone drivers be singled out?

3688 messages, Last post on Oct 27, 2009 at 11:39 AM
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don't forget, a cell phone to the ear is one of the few distractions you could observe as you drive by. Many distractions would be below the window line, and you wouldn't be able to see them. And as for the Mythbusters, they should do the same test, only force the non-drunk driver to eat a full Big Mac combo, taking care not to drip on the upholstery. Or drive in an unfamiliar area, and find his destination on a paper map, or use his car's navigation system without voice commands, while driving. All things I regularly see people do. I bet we would find that many of them would be as impaired as a drunk person too. |
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Replying to: snakeweasel (Oct 16, 2006 5:02 pm)
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Replying to: saabgirl (Oct 16, 2006 5:57 pm) Airbags may save lives but they don't prevent accidents. The accident rate per 100 million vehicle mile travelled has continued to decrease during the cell phone age. Would the rate have gone down further? Maybe.
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Replying to: phinneas519 (Oct 16, 2006 8:30 pm) |
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Replying to: snakeweasel (Oct 16, 2006 5:02 pm) I highly recommend the box set. Lots of stuff gets set on fire or blown up. It seems like cell phone usage is just the target-du-jour. I wonder if significantly fewer people are now dying in car accidents since most states passed seat belt laws... the hot issue some 5 years ago.
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Replying to: kirstie_h (Oct 17, 2006 7:10 am) Would agree that seat belt laws have helped. But, consider a whole range of things that have improved over last 5-10 years: vehicle structures to help protect occupants, emt response times, hospital procedures and doctors, vehicle dynamics (tires/susp/steering), numerous air bags (front, side, etc), highway design/lighting/signage/traffic controls/etc, attention focussed on drunk driving by MADD and others and so on. In one way, cell phone usage has probably also helped cut down on accident deaths because most motorists probably have cell phones and they can call 911 when they observe or encounter an accident. The emts can get to the accident quicker than they would have back in pre-cell phone days. This can save lives. Think about how it was 20+ years ago. If you saw an accident happen, had to find a nearby house, store, gas station, phone booth to call emt/911. |
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Replying to: gagrice (Oct 16, 2006 7:16 am) I have heard about this and too wonder about this matter. Don't think there has been anything in the media about this for a couple of years. Cell phone is good when away from home or office for many situations. But, I try to get the vast majority of my calls made the old-fashioned way through hard-wire land lines connected to an end office. Land lines are most always available in a power outage as long as you use old fashioned subsets that don't require connection to AC. Cell phones are vulnerable to limited power reserve at cell tower sites. |
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Replying to: kirstie_h (Oct 16, 2006 4:05 pm) Talking on a cell phone is bad enough. But what about those yahoos you pass who are apparently thumb-typing text messages on their Treos while driving?!? Madness! Eltonron Host- Automotive News & Views
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Replying to: eltonron (Oct 17, 2006 8:08 am) Just think we could be driving around keeping up with the threads here at Edmunds.
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