Texting

/ Texting #81  
How the heck can you drive safely if you can't hear what's going on around you?
Oh wait, you can't.

Bill

Deaf people do drive.

I'm not deaf, but close to it. The eyes have to do double duty looking for what may not be heard.
 
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/ Texting #82  
Until our economy does a turnaround I seriously doubt enforcement will have much impact on texting. Our community was already short handed in law enforcement and the 2013 budget cut back in this area even more. There used to be a property crimes unit which was also lost in the 2013 budget. Then there are enforcement priorities. In the entire gamete of crimes I wonder where texting fits in or does it even have a ranking.
Technology and stupid people caused this problem - - let technology and education resolve the problem.
 
/ Texting #83  
Gee, maybe no one should be using interactive communication while a vehicle
is in motion.

As far as deaf people driving, I have severe hearing loss, so any outside auditory
distraction makes my job of driving safely even more difficult. If you're hard of
hearing, you compensate by greater visual attention as Dave said. If you have
normal hearing, your other senses don't compensate, so in a sense, you're driving
with a sound distraction.

Driving is a full time, full attention required job. If you aren't paying full attention,
you're impaired.
 
/ Texting #84  
Deaf people do drive. I'm not deaf, but close to it. The eyes have to do double duty looking for what may not be heard.
blind people drive also, why else would they have braille at drive up teller windows.
 
/ Texting #92  
What I don't get about texting, and these new forms of digital narcissism, is:

Are all these people actually that stupid ?

or

Do they just don't care ?

I don't see to many other options.

Rgds, D.
 
/ Texting #94  
I think there are several reason, some I think are addicted to their device and can not even think of turning it off or waiting to reply. I think others think they can handle it, all while weaving in the road. I also think yes, there are people that just don't care, and yes there are people that are just plain stupid.

And I think that the latter is most likely the case.
 
/ Texting #95  
What I don't get about texting, and these new forms of digital narcissism, is:

Are all these people actually that stupid ?

or

Do they just don't care ?

I don't see to many other options.

Rgds, D.

I think the elected leadership in this country answers your questions.
 
/ Texting #96  
I think the elected leadership in this country answers your questions.

While occasionally I can correctly be accused of over-simplifying, unfortunately the Stupid ? or Don't Care ? bins fill up with the answers to many situations today.

I do distinguish between Stupid and Ignorant. Given the scale of the problem, and ease of access to information today, I can't see how anybody can plead true ignorance of the risks being discussed.

JasG makes a good point about the addiction angle. Rainy day reading for me is to try and track down studies on how and to what extent these constant forms of digital "communication" have morphed people's thought patterns - the general results are publicly notable, so the clinical studies should be fairly advanced by now.

In some respects, these digital communication technologies tend to divide, more than unite. (Ex. - I think most agree that the behaviour on TBN is usually more civil than most boards on the web). At the same time, the younger generations think it is normal to spew all their thoughts and activities publicly onto the web.

Take (Divisive technology) + (social conditioning to be an exhibitionist) + (Mega scale data logging and Search ability) = a vector result well beyond what Orwell penned.

Leads me to believe - only really parents can teach responsible driving habits, I don't expect much correction to be applied elsewhere.

Rgds, D.
 
/ Texting #97  
Never underestimate stupidity! Also don't dismiss the fear of people to confront their problems and just pretend that the obvious truth doesn't exist.

Is there much difference between someone choosing to text on a phone while driving and someone choosing to drink alcohol away from home and not having a preplanned way home that doesn't involve them driving?
 
/ Texting
  • Thread Starter
#98  
Came across this today. Mrs. Cowit hit several cows.

Daisy Cowit, driver, accused of texting after hitting cow herd

Someone obviously didn't watch Werner Herzog's PSA on texting and driving. Witnesses in Mount Hope, N.Y., say the perhaps unfortunately named Daisy Cowit was texting behind the wheel Monday afternoon when she plowed right into a herd of 50 cows crossing the road. Cowit denies she was sending messages she says she merely looked down to check an incoming call, an excuse that isn't satisfying the cows' owner, farmer Mike Hosking. "If you don't see 50 cows in the road, you're doing something [you shouldn't be doing]," he told the Times Herald-Record. Three of the cows were seriously hurt, though Hoskins is grateful the accident wasn't worse. If it were a different time of day, "she could have hit kids who were waiting for a school bus," he said
 
/ Texting #99  
Always scares me.. even if I do pull out my phone to see whos calling, or tune radio, or whatever, I am always looking at the road a heck of a lot more than in the car. As they say, "Eyes out!"
 

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