Banning the Use of Cell Phones While Driving
Some people have stated that they believe they have the right to use their cell phones while driving. They do not have that right. British Columbia does not assure its citizens driving privileges, let alone the ability to drive and talk on a cellular phone. Entailing someone to make a call while the car is in park is not an attack on the very concept of democratic freedom. In Canada, we are given to right to live our lives freely. We have the right as parents to thoughtfully and responsibly care for, nurture, and raise our children. These freedoms are the foundations of democracy, and they are worth fighting for. To take away the use of cell phones while driving, is not a loss of freedom. It is simply an inconvenience, a change in habit, one that is for the safety of the people around them. The tiny irritations and convenience issues that may be experienced as a result of this legislation are not as important as the benefit to public safety. So many things can distract us while we are driving, and if we are responsible drivers we would do all we can to limit those distractions. Yet, those distractions do not cause as much driver inattention than does talking and dialing on a ce
In today's society we must legislate because there are people out there who do not take personal responsibility for their own safety and that of others. The Highway Traffic acts already addresses careless driving. Yet we've made the policies anyways. ca/mediaroom/infosheets/info-cellphones. The editors concluded that the question of whether or not a hands-free phone was safer than a hand-held phone was open to further examination, since the study was too small to be definitive. Those laws clearly define particular behaviors as unacceptable leaving no uncertainty for drivers or law enforcement officials. A policy forces people to think about that specific behavior and its consequences. They can then create policy to penalize the offenders doing the risky, dangerous offences. There is always a way to deal with it. Similar penalties apply in other provinces. Once it was realized that people were not wearing seat belts or strapping their children into car seats, it took an act of legislation to force the public to change their habits. We also made policy specifically addressing the behavior of driving while intoxicated.
Common topics in this essay:
British Columbia,
Journal Medicine,
Enforcing Policy,
Traffic Act,
Policy Careless,
North America,
Prevention Magazine,
Ban Phone,
Israel Australia,
Highway Traffic,
phones driving,
cell phones,
cellular phones,
cell phones driving,
cell phone,
personal responsibility,
cellular phone,
careless driving,
legislating personal responsibility,
reckless careless,
england journal,
highway traffic,
england journal medicine,
reckless careless driving,
|