Posted on 12/14/2011 8:21:25 PM PST by MinorityRepublican
BTW I can not pass a field sobriety test {chalk line, touch nose, etc} either. Never could even in my youth. I about went to jail over the issue one night. That was back in the late 70's though.
But the Nanny Staters in government aren't through yet. Medications is also on their target list. The fact that like alcohol medications effect persons differently won't matter. Nor will the fact you have taken a medication regularly for nearly two decades and have driven safely.
No need to apologize. I should have used the sarc tag. The world has gotten so crazy full of bad ideas. Up is down. I agree with you on texting. I caught myself in a bad situation when I first got text on a phone and ever since then I pull over and stop if I have to send a text message.
Really nice to meet you on here.
I’m tired of your ignorance and lies. Go ahead and yak on your phone until you kill yourself.
Every day drivers operate far more complex vehicles than a car. They can drive and steer, eat a snack, drink coffee, smoke a cigarette, shift through 8-10 gears, get info talking on a radio or phone, monitor a large cluster of gages, even write down fast information like state line mileage off their odometer and have done so safely for decades. They are truckers.
If you can't talk on a phone hands free and drive at the same time safely then by all means get off the road because you likely are a poor driver under any circumstances. For such drivers removal of cell phone will not improve their driving skills. They have poor driving skills too start with. That is the real problem. Not the phone usage.
If not for his cell phone, I can’t even imagine what might have happened to my husband one day. Driving home from work on the 118 in the San Fernando Valley he was being harassed by another driver in a larger car. (DH does stick to the speed limit, so he probably pissed off one of the insane California drivers.) Anyhow, he was able to call 911 with his cell, and the other driver was dealt with by the police. Turns out this guy had a history of intimidating other drivers, and violence.
The cell phone issue is like anything else; people need to be responsible. As you said, you can’t fix stupid.
As far as old cars being safer, that's only by way of their being heavier. Some new roller skate cars are ridiculous. I looked under a Saturn on a grease rack once and decided never to get in one. The rear undercarriage was more flimsy that the coaster wagon I had as a kid, the tiny rear axle “supported” by 3/8” steel rods. However, new cars are designed to protect the passengers, not the car, and the car self-destructs around the passenger compartment. The car is totaled but the passenger space (usually) remains intact. Look at some old accident photos from the 30’s, 40’s, and ‘50’s. Those ‘40 Fords remained largely intact, but the people inside were reduced to hamburger from being slammed around in a steel cage full of broken glass. Anyway, I drive an extended cab 4x4 Chevy Silverado with airbags and seatbelts (and only carry a cell phone to make emergency calls), so when some kid plows into me while yakking with her friends, I'll probably be OK.
Every profession has idiots. That's why I hated driving Team. One partner could not read a word and another one would not sleep except while driving dropping down into L.A. off the mountain. Most are safe though. I drove OTR for about a year 27 years ago. I liked getting a decent paycheck and being home better so I quit LOL.
A company has $200K- $300K depending on rig invested in tractor and trailer plus the liability of the load which can be several million dollars. Most companies will not hire someone without either some OTR experience of a year OJT or a commercial driving school completion and even then you are teamed for a while with an experienced partner. Biggest issue as far as the driving was fatigue.
Several basic things to know about trucks can save your life. Stay far back unless passing. If a tire is coming apart they can bust through even todays windshields. The same thing with the cap {can} on the trailer air brakes. If you can't see their mirror they can't see you. Riding their draft can get you killed. I would never, ever, pass a rig on the right side on say a six lane interstate unless there was just no other choice.
I had persons ride in my blind spot for several miles. When I would attempt a lane change too my right I did several defensive maneuvers first. First was too signal. Look in the mirror, speed up 3-5 mph, then slow down 3-5 mph, then while looking in mirror slowly move right. That was an attempt to expose any hidden vehicles in the blind spot. I mainly drive a conversion van or pick up with camper cover and still use that method. Next thing you know once the truck moved right the person beside me would suddenly make their presence known.
Some folks tag beside or directly behind trucks to avoid speeding tickets. It can get you killed. Basically anything from the rear trailer tandems forward to the front bumper should be considered a blind spot on the right side of the rig.
Yea I have seen some who tick me off especially one on my bumper knowing I can't get out of the way. Heres a trick. Without actually braking tap the brake pedal to where the lights come on. Keep doing it. They'll get the message. Not many drivers will stick around for that LOL.
With the CB I could usually tell what truckers too watch out for. I'd listen for the one cussing and mouth running 90 miles a minute. Good chance you had a wired driver. Harder to get by with in these days of drug testing. I haven't turned a CB on since 1985.
Last time I turned on a CB(I bought an old Caddy that had a built-in CB), all I heard was Spanish.
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