English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

If you feel that you are being denied a right in some way please give details. Alternatively justify the use of a mobile phone when driving a car. Should devices be fitted compulsorily to cars to make it impossible to use mobile phones by jammimg the microwave transmission and reception?

2007-03-03 02:26:27 · 16 answers · asked by BARROWMAN 6 in Cars & Transportation Safety

It might surprise a lot of you that there are trials ongoing with cars fitted with jamming devices that will make it impossible to receive or transmit mobile phone messages as long as the engine is running. This will make the present law irrevalant.

2007-03-03 06:34:42 · update #1

16 answers

Its illegal to drive while on the phone in Aussie too.

I have had a few near misses from twits who think themselves above the law, while talking & texting when driving.

If involved in an accident while texting & talking on mobile phone, the driver can expect to be charged with reckless driving, loss of demerit points, and a few orther charges, especially if someone was injured or killed due to text & talking, possibly even jail time. Add alcohol and other drugs to this scenario things could be a lot worse, for the driver, and they deserve to have the book thrown at them.

Most laws are in place to protect us all, and should not be flaunted by some people who think they are super beings, or they think its the their "right" to do the oppersite of the rest of us.

If someone injures or kills a person due to reckless behaviour, then suffer the concequences.

2007-03-03 19:40:14 · answer #1 · answered by neadles61 3 · 0 0

You may have a hands-free kit but it doesn't stop you using the phone in the conventional way. Get a print of your phone usage to prove you weren't on a call at the time. In the end it will be a matter of you and what you can prove against the policeman's word. Having said that, a colleague of mine was stopped yesterday for the same reason, which surprised her as she doen't have a mobile at all! Between them, she and the policeman decided she must have been fiddling with her ear-ring (which she does unconsciously quite often) and that was what he saw . . .

2016-03-28 22:15:10 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It IS dangerous, but not illegal in every state... Florida for example. There is no infringement on the part of the Government when it comes to regulating where or how we talk on the phone, especially when it comes to driving. I feel that other motorists who feel compelled to talk on the phone are infringing on everyone's right to travel safely. Keep in mind the highway speed limit is 70mph here, which means most people drive about 80mph... the one person who is distracted driving 55 in the center lane normally can cause the highway to shut down for hours after an accident.

2007-03-03 03:06:56 · answer #3 · answered by Porterhouse 5 · 1 1

It is NOT illegal to use a mobile phone when driving, in spite of what the campaigners tell you.

It is perfectly legal to use a hands-free device.

There is the bague and unenforceable provision that those who are deemed to be distracted to the point that driving sufferes, or if it can be demonstrated that an accident resulted from the use of even a hands-free conversation, there may be a case for the prosecution.

In reality, the latter part is just so much twaddle, because it would be largely impossible to prove.

The government took the most sensible action, and reached a compromise; thus leaving the Police and Taxi Drivers to chat away as they feel fit.

2007-03-03 05:44:34 · answer #4 · answered by musonic 4 · 0 4

Human Rights!!! Are you real? What has Human Rights got to do with driving a car, sometimes at speed with one or no hands?
Victims of accidents have rights too! The right to live and not be crippled by morons. Get off the HR bandwagon. It does not impress!

2007-03-03 02:40:25 · answer #5 · answered by Tallboy 4 · 2 0

if , sorry when i see people talking on their mobile phones while driving ,i just want to ram them of the roads it makes me
so angry , roads where a lot safer before them damn things where invented and i would jam all the airwaves through out uk to "kill of mobile bloody phones"they are everywhere i was even at a funeral and one went off, not to mention i saw somebody talking on a mobile ,while texting on another with an OTHER MOBILE AROUND HIS NECK RINGING(THANKFULLY NOT DRIVING A CAR ) or he would be in a ditch

2007-03-03 10:00:08 · answer #6 · answered by andrew g 3 · 0 0

No, your rights are not being infringed. Your "rights" are yours to use as long as they DO NOT HARM OTHERS. Multiple studies already show that cellphone-using drivers have a worse reaction time than drunk drivers. Is your right to drink being infringed upon when DUI is illegal? It's a safety issue, not a rights issue.

2007-03-03 09:53:56 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

how can this be an infringement on human right if it saves lives. We all coped well enough before mobile phones, lets just get over it and get on with our lives - so we cant use them while driving - so what!?

2007-03-03 02:37:03 · answer #8 · answered by carlyjayne 2 · 1 1

I suppose you have the "human right" to kill yourself if you wish, but you aren't half infringing the "human rights" of the poor sod you hit while you're on the phone!

2007-03-03 03:33:09 · answer #9 · answered by champer 7 · 1 0

Pweople who chatter endlessly on the phone just for the sake of it are empty headed attention seekers.

2007-03-03 04:32:00 · answer #10 · answered by fred35 6 · 1 0

fedest.com, questions and answers