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Popular Threads
listening to talk or sports radio
listening to the Cubs when the blow a lead
yes, personal grooming is distracting.
but screaming with joy as Santo yells "oh NOOOOOO." one of the most amusing things i've ever heard. and the most distracting. did not get a ticket then but did get one for speeding once as the Bears scored on the Packers......
That's great.
I've spent so much time beating on Dems (and noting how reasonable Tom Cross seems) the last few months I almost forgot what side I should be on.
In response to the question: I think the proposal is pretty stupid. The conduct is covered by other statutes. The idea of listing every possible thing that a driver might do is ridiculous.
I'm just glad that I can blame Republicans for a change.
Studies show that 62% of drivers admit to eating food and/or drinking beverages while driving, and that doing so increases your chances of having an accident by 50%.
In fact, eating and drinking while driving increase your chances of having an accident MUCH MORE than texting or talking on a cell phone, because drivers tend to slow down to safer speeds while texting because it is perceived as being riskier, while many drivers think nothing of barreling down the highway at 75 mi/hr while shoving Taco Bell down their throat.
Let's see if Illinois lawmakers have the guts to stand up to McDonald's, Taco Bell, Wendy's and the rest of Big Fast Food and ban eating-while-driving.
"...listening to the Cubs ..." Should be a Primary Offense.
This is getting goofy. We're legislating common sense.
This bill is stupid. People can be distracted by all kinds of things, where do you draw the line?
"No smoking!"
"No eating!"
"No drinking!"
"No texting!"
"No reading, except for road signage!"
"No loud conversations!"
"No arguing!"
"No crying children!"
"No loud or disruptive music!"
"No movies!"
"No Blackberries or other wireless devices!"
"No fiddling around in your seat!"
"You turn on your windshield wipers - once!"
"You may only use the headlight switch in an emergency! - Otherwise, before you use your transmission, turn on your headlights!"
"No distractions of any kind!"
I suggest we outlaw bright shiny objects in cars or near roads. I often find them very distracting.
Rep. Pritchard? Can you help me out on this one?
Don't we already have a statute that outlaws doing dumb things that cause accidents: reckless driving? If you're doing anything distracting enough to cause an accident, it should ovbviously fall into that category.
No matter. If the cop decides that you did look at it, you'd get the ticket. Total discretion.
I don't know, maybe we'll laugh about it someday, but this "add-on" legislation seems silly. How about debating something you can sink your teeth into...like conceal and carry?
A: Driving.
While I tend to hate this type of Nanny legislation, in the past six months I have had two drivers come across the line while they were texting and put me onto the shoulder. My question is how does one provide the proper signal to drivers that their focus should be on the road?
Practicing the Kama Sutra
Performing surgery
Meditating
Sleeping
Baking
Vacuuming
Sunning
Mooning
Longing
Yearning
Coveting
Somersaulting
Painting
Crying
Proselytizing
Kvetching
Fishing
Slicing
Dicing
Batting
Fielding
Pitching
Embezzling
Boxing
Playing the piano
"So from now on, there will be no more writing instruments allowed around your desk area. If you wish to write when we are practicing writing, you will need to see me first. I will give you a number two pencil that is not sharp enough to injure you if you fall onto it. The pencil is short enough to prevent any of you from accidentially gouging out your eyes in the case of a tornado striking our school building. It will be coated in a soft biodegradeable cover, be lead free, dolphin free and made of recycled wood pulp from wild non-endangered trees."
"While writing, please do not exhale as it produces too many Greenhouse gases which endanger our planet. No farting either. Do not place the writing instrument into your mouth, or any other orafice, unless you have previously contacted Mrs. Dunne, our principal, for a release form characterizing your oral fixation to our writing instrument as a lifestyle or faith-based statement of religious belief."
"Mrs. Applebee?", Billy McMillan aks his teacher, "if we no longer have pencils or pens, what will you use to demonstrate how we unroll a condom?"
I guess that would cover riding with Rep. Black.
And sets up for total selective ticketing/fines. Discretion meaning yeah, one can multi task and the next guy can't. Either make something illegal while driving or don't.
No, personal pleasure.
Maybe the law should include a traffic-school-instead-of-fine option. I've seen fully grown, otherwise hard-to-change people become vastly better drivers after attending on-line traffic school. Make them watch a bunch of gory accident site photos and test them on the details, to make sure they take a close look.
I do have a problem with GPS not being excluded....I use mine constantly...especially while driving in the city.
After reading this, I about posted that they are illegal. After looking it up, however, it's an odd thing that detectors are legal, unless you're driving a commercial vehicle (federal law), but radar jamming devices are illegal. Either way, you can technically be ticketed for having anything in between you and your windshield (detectors, GPS, fuzzy dice, dancing Jesus').
Must also be distracting pretending your Mr. Spock, and you and the crew of the Enterprise are traveling at warp speed to engage the Romulans in the Alpha Nebula :)
Yes, but you'll be in operation of your vehicle. Cops and legislators don't care about small things like whether you're actually driving. Sort of like how you can be given a DUI even though your car's in park, turned off, and your just sitting in it with the keys in your hand.
I used to sit in crawling traffic twice a day during the week. I left home at 7:30 to hopefully get to work by 9:00. What did they expect me to do during that time? At 20 mph, or slower, I was barely moving - barely driving.
Get real! At that speed I could eat, drink, shave, clip my fingernails, pick my nose, listen to the music - at the same time. Passing a law like this would not only be insulting, it would cause more accidents when drivers went into comas from crawling 90 minutes, twice a day in their cars. Without these daily niceties performed while I drive, I would have had nothing to do but speed, tailgate, and go road rage all over the geezers in their Camrys and Accords.
Crashes happen when cars speed, and are then distracted. Outlawing distractions is ridiculous.
Anybody know if his goal is to get plaintiff's an extra jury instruction, or whether the goal is revenue?
The idea that it might be for public safety seems ridiculous.
I was hit from behind by a chatty young thing on a cell phone while standing on a corner in downtown Chicago waiting for the light to change.
She said "scuz me sir, not you Yolanda, the guy I just run into" and then kept on walking and talking. She had a hands free blue tooth thingamagigger in her ear. She kept waiving her hands while talking.
We were both pedestrians at the time!
Outlaw that!
I don't know how the GA will put that into legislation. I do agree, though, that putting all of us back through defensive-driving school periodically would be a good idea. I did it to have a speeding ticket removed from my record about 15 years ago and learned enough to make it not completely worthless.
to be around other people....everyone is dangerous
except for me.
Driving is one of the most complex tasks that we do on a daily basis. We must make several thousand decisions per minute. Most of which are made unconsciously. At 60 miles per hour, a driver has covered the length of a football field in less than 3.5 seconds. AASTHO says that an average driver takes 2.5 seconds to percieve and respond to a complex driving situation - nearly 3/4 the length of a football field (220') is covered before the driver reacts.
Stupid people get hurt in stupid ways (Darwin Awards). Unfortunately, they often take innocent bystanders with them.
So put down the paper, GPS, cell phone, personal hygiene items, keep two hands on the wheel and pay attention to your driving, you might get home safely.
I beg to differ.
Eating while driving doubles crash risk
10 most dangerous foods to eat on the road
Eating while you drive is one of the most distracting things you can do, according to several recent surveys by insurance companies and data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA)....
The top 10 food offenders:
1. Coffee. It always finds a way out of the cup.
2. Hot soup. Many people drink it like coffee. Same effects.
3. Tacos. "A food that can disassemble itself without much help, leaving your car looking like a salad bar," says Hagerty.
4. Chili. Dangerous drips and slops down the front of clothing.
5. Hamburgers. Grease, ketchup, mustard on your hands, your clothes and the steering wheel.
6. Barbecue. Spicey and dicey. There is the temptation to lick your fingers. More grease on the steering wheel.
7. Fried chicken. Ditto. Grease coats everything you touch.
8. Jelly or cream-filled doughnuts. Dangers relate to oozing while cruising. Raspberry jelly stains difficult to remove.
9. Soft drinks. Prone to spills and sudden fizzing if car makes sudden movements. Cola fizz in the nose is perilous while driving.
10. Chocolate. Tempting but treacherous. Try to clean it off the steering wheel and you're likely to end up swerving.
The added fees will generate $9 million more not counting the supervision fees?? where are we headed??