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Cell-phone law tough enough? Ask New Jersey (NJ Police say WA State law is toothless)
The Everett Herald (Washington State) ^ | June 30, 2008 | Yoshiaki Nohara

Posted on 06/30/2008 3:33:50 PM PDT by Stoat

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To: Stoat

What so many Freepers are confessing here is that none of their conversations are important enough to just stop the car.


41 posted on 06/30/2008 5:43:38 PM PDT by Misterioso
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To: jonrick46

Well then just chop down the towers. You can’t use a cell phone without a tower.


42 posted on 06/30/2008 5:56:40 PM PDT by Pikachu_Dad
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To: Misterioso
What so many Freepers are confessing here is that none of their conversations are important enough to just stop the car.

Well the cops sure don't have to so why should I? BTW I use a headset. Cops have phone glued to ear.

43 posted on 06/30/2008 5:57:58 PM PDT by cva66snipe ($.01 The current difference between the DEM's and GOP as well as their combined worth to this nation)
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To: Misterioso
So traffic laws are all about income for the city? Or State? There’s a rationalization for you.

Color me cynical, but when I found out about the stop light cameras in San Diego, where they were not making enough revenue and decided to shorten the yellow light, I started to see they were willing to sacrifice safety for the almighty buck. In addition, most of the people they get are late into a yellow light, which is not what causes the bad wrecks and could happen to anyone.

I do not personally care about the cell phone issue, since I never talk on it while driving, but I follow State Patrolman every other day down I-5 doing 10 or more over the speed limit, and I usually get a speeding ticket every ten years or so by just going with the traffic flow.
44 posted on 06/30/2008 6:02:36 PM PDT by microgood
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To: Stoat
Handsfree phone use can still be extremely distracting.

Heck, it's hard enough to find and answer my cell phone when I'm home, much less driving. If I have to jam some gizzy into my ear at the same time, there goes the one eye and hand I was keeping on the road, not to mention unbuckling the seat belt so I can feel around the beer cans all over the floor and under the rear seat, and WTH would I going to do with my pancake syrup?

It's a good thing I have a sunroof, cause I hear they're ticketing for throwing things out the window.

45 posted on 06/30/2008 6:42:35 PM PDT by 4woodenboats (50 degrees to 90 in 2 weeks - who took our spring?)
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To: xDGx
one good thing about (the people's republic of)NJ...
um, it's close to the ocean?
46 posted on 06/30/2008 7:05:01 PM PDT by Aut Pax Aut Bellum (I haven't voted "for"anybody since Ronald Reagan, just have voted against...)
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To: Misterioso; All
If it is about “revenue,” then why did it take so long for the legislation?

I'm not so sure that the speed of any associated legislation would have been expedited if the underlying motive force was one of a desire for enhanced safety.....Leftist Leviathan Legislators being what they are.  The California law which is due to be implemented at the same time as Washington's allows for text messaging, after all, which I believe most people would find FAR more distracting for far more people than talking on the phone is.

What so many Freepers are confessing here is that none of their conversations are important enough to just stop the car.

I'm hesitant to consider myself qualified to divine the motives of why people do things in terms of extremely broad brushstrokes, particularly in a matter such as this where a person's individual abilities, comfort zone and life scenarios play a central role in the success or failure of a safe mobile call, but speaking only for myself I never talk on the phone while driving anyway because

To be clear, I don't welcome laws such as this because it insinuates The State in a matter that, in my view, really should be up to a person's good judgement.  A cell call can indeed be made or received safely given the satisfactory merging of numerous factors...among them:

Could a calm and serene former F-16 pilot who is driving on an arrow-straight and flat Montana road with no intersections for fifty miles on a beautiful sunny afternoon make a safe cell call of less than a minute's duration to his loving and devoted wife just to remind her that he loves her?

Sure, why not?

Should a particularly high-strung, emotionally unstable meth addict consider making a cell call to his Mob "Enforcer" to beg with him for an extra 24 hours to come up with the cash while driving in a major city's downtown rush hour during a thunderstorm?

Probably not.

In either case, if they cause an accident either person will still be legally liable if they end up having made the wrong decision.

47 posted on 06/30/2008 7:09:44 PM PDT by Stoat (Rice / Coulter 2012: Smart Ladies for a Strong America)
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To: Stoat

Where do you do most of your driving, if I may ask. My animus toward cell phone use while driving stems from my daily experience in traffic. I have no ability to foresee an accident that might be caused by driver inattention so my dismay is the effect it has on traffic flow. It is not possible for an alert motorist not to observe the disruption—and concomitant hazards—caused by irregular speeds and slow starts typical of the phone impaired driver. Not to mention dangerous maneuvers like sudden lane changes (when they discover they have gone a little too far) and/or the quick u-turns as the remedy. If you live where traffic is lighter than the Los Angeles Westside area, then you’re lucky.


48 posted on 06/30/2008 8:24:01 PM PDT by Misterioso
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To: olivia3boys

“I’m in CA and I know that it will be far more distracting for me to struggle to turn on the speakerphone feature and answer my phone instead of just flipping it open and answering it.”

“I find my 4 young children in the backseat far more distracting than my phone anyway. FAR more.”

How about not answering the phone while you are driving and already partially distracted by kids in the back?


49 posted on 06/30/2008 8:39:48 PM PDT by Grunthor (Your results may vary)
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To: nmh

“It’s just the LEFT wanting to control you.”

I disagree. Other comments talk about the money - and I disagree.

The people that want these laws I think are genuinely concerned for our safety (I’m not sure if this cell-phone law was a referendum or not). Just like the trans-fat laws, the menu/ingredient laws, the smoking laws, etc. - they are doing it for our own good.

That is even scarier I think than if it was just for control or for money. (Although those are two obvious outcomes).

Personally I get distracted while talking on the headset too. The kids in the backseat or my wife or a passenger next to me I typically ignore - which my wife points out to me numerous times! ;) But just the other day I was next to a gal that was going too slow and kept weaving across the line. Waving her hands and looking at her passenger while gabbing away.


50 posted on 06/30/2008 9:03:16 PM PDT by 21twelve (Don't wish for peace. Pray for Victory.)
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To: 21twelve
You are free to believe whatever you wish.

What I have noticed is the LEFT simply wants to control you. It matters not if it doesn't make sense. Very few accidents have been caused by people talking on their cell phones. More accidents are caused by kids, distracting the driver, reading, yes reading in the car and things like that.

51 posted on 06/30/2008 9:07:43 PM PDT by nmh (Intelligent people recognize Intelligent Design (God).)
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To: Misterioso
Where do you do most of your driving, if I may ask. My animus toward cell phone use while driving stems from my daily experience in traffic. I have no ability to foresee an accident that might be caused by driver inattention so my dismay is the effect it has on traffic flow. It is not possible for an alert motorist not to observe the disruption—and concomitant hazards—caused by irregular speeds and slow starts typical of the phone impaired driver. Not to mention dangerous maneuvers like sudden lane changes (when they discover they have gone a little too far) and/or the quick u-turns as the remedy. If you live where traffic is lighter than the Los Angeles Westside area, then you’re lucky.

If a person is driving in the conditions you describe, then I would prefer that an individual's good judgment guide them into not using a cell phone at that time, and for their judgment to be aggressively enforced by the preexisting legal framework, which is extensive..

Again, laws such as this presuppose that

Given that billions of safe mobile cellphone calls are made every day, should all of this end because an extremely small number of people use poor judgment?

Or, should we instead aggressively enforce the multitude of laws already on the books which address the results of such improper judgments, such as but not limited to:

I share your visceral animus toward lousy drivers and inattentive drivers who make the wrong choices...I also see them every day and I would like very much for it all to stop.  I work in prehospital emergency medical services and I see the results of their poor choices every darned day, in the form of broken or dismembered bodies and destroyed lives and families.

I tend to stop short, however, when it comes to using the sledgehammer of The State to deprive ALL people of a freedom that only a few are abusing.  Such laws frequently have a cascade effect of sorts, in that they embolden legislators to make similar laws....and soon we look back and wonder where all of our freedoms have gone.

Don't it always seem to go
That you don't know what you've got till it's gone?
 

52 posted on 06/30/2008 9:09:18 PM PDT by Stoat (Rice / Coulter 2012: Smart Ladies for a Strong America)
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To: 4woodenboats
Handsfree phone use can still be extremely distracting.

Heck, it's hard enough to find and answer my cell phone when I'm home, much less driving. If I have to jam some gizzy into my ear at the same time, there goes the one eye and hand I was keeping on the road, not to mention unbuckling the seat belt so I can feel around the beer cans all over the floor and under the rear seat, and WTH would I going to do with my pancake syrup?

ROTFLMAO!!!

It's a good thing I have a sunroof, cause I hear they're ticketing for throwing things out the window.

I am absolutely delighted that you are enjoying and making full use of The Great American Superhighway

 

img83/2927/svf6.jpg

 

Cultural Catholic - Vatican Rules of the Road

 

Vatican Rules of the Road

   

Ten Commandments of Driving

I. You shall not kill

II. The road shall be for you a means of communion between people and not of mortal harm

III. Courtesy, uprightness, and prudence will help you deal with unforeseen events

IV. Be charitable and help your neighbor in need especially victims of accidents

V. Cars shall not be for you an expression of power and domination and an occasion of sin

VI. Charitably convince the young and not so young not to drive when they are not in a fitting condition to do so

VII. Support the families of accident victims

VIII. Bring guilty motorists and their victims together at the appropriate time so that they can undergo the liberating experience of forgiveness

IX. On the road, protect the more vulnerable party

X. Feel responsible towards others

 

 

 68 Firebird

 

   

******************************************************************

and WTH would I going to do with my pancake syrup?

Whenever in doubt about any issue pertaining to pancakes, it's important to consult The Source:

 

 Photobucket

 Photobucket Photobucket

53 posted on 06/30/2008 9:59:48 PM PDT by Stoat (Rice / Coulter 2012: Smart Ladies for a Strong America)
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To: Stoat
Ooh, I just got to get me a set of those spice figurines - I got a spot on my dashboard that'd be perfect for 'em - fill one with mustard, another with relish, and the 3rd with syrup.

I could even rig some velcro to stick the phone & ear plug on to a couple of 'em. Or just lend my truck to the boy and his friends for the weekend, I probably wouldn't need the velcro...

I hope they're bobbleheads

54 posted on 07/01/2008 12:45:07 AM PDT by 4woodenboats
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To: Misterioso

Hey, I’m all for more laws. The mo’ the better.

And if we’re looking at distractions while driving, heck, there ought to be a law against women starting serious conversations while I’m driving.


55 posted on 07/01/2008 9:47:05 AM PDT by swarthyguy (Osama Freedom Day: 2500 or so since September 11 2001! That's SIX +years, Dubya.)
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To: 4woodenboats
Ooh, I just got to get me a set of those spice figurines - I got a spot on my dashboard that'd be perfect for 'em - fill one with mustard, another with relish, and the 3rd with syrup.

I'm not one for knickknacks (the stoat cave is already full to bursting with rock and roll records, emergency medical equipment and books), but those Aunt Jemima figurines are obviously essential items.  Perhaps some can be found on eBay?  Your condiment choices are eclectic and an excellent guide for all.

I could even rig some velcro to stick the phone & ear plug on to a couple of 'em.

Your engineering skills are awesome  :-)

Or just lend my truck to the boy and his friends for the weekend, I probably wouldn't need the velcro...

"snort"

I hope they're bobbleheads

If they aren't, my guess is that anyone who can turn them into cellphone holders using only velcro, a blowtorch and some teenagers will have no problems whatsoever converting them to bobbleheads   :-)


56 posted on 07/01/2008 10:45:16 PM PDT by Stoat (Rice / Coulter 2012: Smart Ladies for a Strong America)
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To: 4woodenboats

Addendum....I assume you know that if you end up moving forward with your stellar Aunt Jemima Dashboard plan that you’ll never be able to drive through King County again?
Such a magnificent display would absolutely drive the White Left here around the bend, if you’ll pardon the pun :-)
The more reasonable black folks would probably have a chuckle over it, but the white leftists would probably chase you down and set your car on fire with you in it....and then the Seattle P.I. would congratulate them for their “noble fight against racist oppression”


57 posted on 07/01/2008 10:51:49 PM PDT by Stoat (Rice / Coulter 2012: Smart Ladies for a Strong America)
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To: 4woodenboats
304 results for "Aunt Jemima" at eBay  :-)

Aunt Jemima, Cultures, Ethnicities, Housewares Kitchenware items on eBay.com

58 posted on 07/01/2008 10:57:14 PM PDT by Stoat (Rice / Coulter 2012: Smart Ladies for a Strong America)
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