No uniformity
The problem, I think, is there is no uniformity. Since my son now rides safety on a motorcycle has literally become my number one responsibility. The original point of this thread was "motorcycle deaths are up" and that's what I (and I'm sure all of you) are trying to avoid for ourselves, our loved ones, and each other.
Lets start with government, its too big & ineffective. Politics I despise and could not care less about. Debating issues and getting nowhere doesn't seem productive generally and I don't like to partake in it. With that said I would like to see uniformity for driving laws on public roads on a federal level instead of each state deciding what they want to do. The Department of Transportation Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration dictates the laws on commercial transportation and has established Federal safety standards and it seems to function well and (without sparking more debate) generally truck drivers are among the safest group of our drivers in the US.
Instead of the feds "suggesting" we enact state laws that they want (or they'll withhold fed dollars for roads or whatever) quit jacking around and put forth some damn general guidelines across the board. Now I'm not saying I care if you wear or don't wear a helmet or not but if the feds did the following things everyone would be safer and all would benefit from it.
1. No cell phone (talk or text) use while operating a motor vehicle
2. Motorcyclists all where helmets
3. Everyone who drives must take a drivers course when they first get license and a refresher every 4th year for each endorsment they have
4. Every driver wears a seatbelt, every passenger wears a seatbelt
5. You operate a vehicle under the influence you lose license for 2 years and do 30 days jail. Second time its 10 years and 6 months in jail
Simple and easy to follow. You mandate those 5 things and in 30 days you'll find the death rate drop nationwide guaranteed. And isn't a life more valuable than anything else? I could go on and on but those are five simple "influences" the Fed's could mandate that tomorrow that would make a huge immediate impact on safety.
The problem, I think, is there is no uniformity. Since my son now rides safety on a motorcycle has literally become my number one responsibility. The original point of this thread was "motorcycle deaths are up" and that's what I (and I'm sure all of you) are trying to avoid for ourselves, our loved ones, and each other.
Lets start with government, its too big & ineffective. Politics I despise and could not care less about. Debating issues and getting nowhere doesn't seem productive generally and I don't like to partake in it. With that said I would like to see uniformity for driving laws on public roads on a federal level instead of each state deciding what they want to do. The Department of Transportation Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration dictates the laws on commercial transportation and has established Federal safety standards and it seems to function well and (without sparking more debate) generally truck drivers are among the safest group of our drivers in the US.
Instead of the feds "suggesting" we enact state laws that they want (or they'll withhold fed dollars for roads or whatever) quit jacking around and put forth some damn general guidelines across the board. Now I'm not saying I care if you wear or don't wear a helmet or not but if the feds did the following things everyone would be safer and all would benefit from it.
1. No cell phone (talk or text) use while operating a motor vehicle
2. Motorcyclists all where helmets
3. Everyone who drives must take a drivers course when they first get license and a refresher every 4th year for each endorsment they have
4. Every driver wears a seatbelt, every passenger wears a seatbelt
5. You operate a vehicle under the influence you lose license for 2 years and do 30 days jail. Second time its 10 years and 6 months in jail
Simple and easy to follow. You mandate those 5 things and in 30 days you'll find the death rate drop nationwide guaranteed. And isn't a life more valuable than anything else? I could go on and on but those are five simple "influences" the Fed's could mandate that tomorrow that would make a huge immediate impact on safety.
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