An opinion…
I tend not to use cyberspace as a soap box
for spouting my opinions mainly because I don’t find other people’s opinions
all that interesting and thus, believe others are not interested in mine. In fact, that’s why I didn’t renew my subscription
to Maclean’s (Canada’s news magazine). I
found it contained altogether too many editorials and opinion pieces.
I want the news media to just give me
facts. Then, I want to form my own
opinions. However, earlier this week on facebook, I shared this article
Woman who would have ruled the blogsphere. My
daughter had forwarded me the link. It’s
about ten historic woman who wrote letters, diaries, books, memoires, essays
(before the Social Networking age ) to make tremendous changes to their
world.
I figured that perhaps, I too, with my raging
opinions, could make a difference. We're gonna give it a try right here.
I want to opine about Alberta’s recently
enacted Distracted Driving Law. I want
to question why the heck we need such a law.
Citizens complain about there being too many laws, about too much government interference, about the cost of law-enforcement, etc., etc. yet these same citizens behave
in such a manner as to require a law like this?
Laws against murder, theft, fraud, illicit
drug use, etc. are more or less there so we know how to deal with people who do
such things. I mean, everyone knows it’s
wrong to murder, law or not, and the vast majority of us don’t murder.
However this law, this Distracted Driving
legislation is for the majority of us—to let us know we ought not to text while
driving, that it’s dangerous and illegal.
??????
I’m serious. A few years ago, before the law came into
being, I listened to a police officer incredulously relate how people would
admit to such distracted behavior—as if it were a valid excuse, not realizing they were incriminating
themselves. “Sorry, sir. I didn't mean to kill anyone. I was on the phone with my wife and didn’t
see the kids playing street hockey…”
Like someone telling the investigator, “Sorry,
Sir, but I really needed the life-insurance policy to pay off my drug debts so
I murdered him.” (You'll forgive me, right?)
Negligent driving, driving without due care
and attention, has always been illegal.
That we have to be specifically told that this includes texting,
phoning, programming GPS’s, surfing the net, reading, applying mascara….
How intelligent are we as a race?
I suggest we smarten up and, while we're at it, teach our kids
some commonsense. If not, the government may soon feel compelled to enact
laws forbidding us from wearing black at night when walking on dark streets, from
over-eating, from smoking, from drinking while pregnant, from falling asleep in the sun when it's +30C…from jumping off tall
buildings…
There.
That’s my rant. I don’t know
about you, but I feel better.
Eileen Schuh Author of THE TRAZ, Schrödinger's Cat
Sample/purchase THE TRAZ: http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/60190 http://www.amazon.com/dp/B005199RFE
Web site: http://www.eileenschuh.com
Blog: http://eileenschuh.blogspot.com
Sample/purchase THE TRAZ: http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/60190 http://www.amazon.com/dp/B005199RFE
Web site: http://www.eileenschuh.com
Blog: http://eileenschuh.blogspot.com
Come join me on the brand new Famous FivePlus website (I'm one of the original Famous Five). This band of international indie authors of
all genres has attitude and ideas. We intend to take the entire world by storm.
5 comments:
Nice blog, Eileen. I feel the same way about stuff. We just passed the same kind of law with the texting. It's crazy.
Thanks for dropping by. Yes, it is crazy.
Eileen, I agree with you. Legislation is a poor substitute for common sense. I think it's due to the idea on the part of politicians that they can look good by "helping" with some hot-button topic when there are, as you say, already laws that cover the situation.
Actually, law-enforcement was very much on side with the new law. It will be easier to get convictions. Previously, police would have had to prove that texting was negligent driving, or that putting on mascara contributed to the accident. With this law in place, they just have to proof that these distracted driving actions occurred. Also, amazingly enough, enacting the law seems to have been very educational--something the cops predicted. Many people have ceaased these behaviours now that they are illegal. i.e. my children no longer answer my calls if they're driving
I think it's just plain sad that we even need these kinds of laws. But there are just too many stupid people out there.
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