How many times have you been waiting at a traffic signal and watched the cars driving by and someone on their cell phone talking or looked around at the stopped cars waiting for the light to change and they are texting, talking or who knows what on the their cell phones. On the way to work today I counted eighteen different people doing something on their cell phone and I only live nine miles from my job. 74% of drivers with cell phones report that they utilize them to talk or text while driving. They are mindful of the numerous hazardous circumstances furthermore realize that it is unlawful, however in most cases, ignore
Texting and driving was banned in 2011 in Indiana because of the overabundance of car accidents that involved cell phones and distracted driving. With this law in place, people thought that it would work and that people would stop using them while driving. This was not the case, however. In Indiana with the texting and driving ban there have only been, “fewer than 400 tickets written as of mid-2014” (Gormley 89). This is not surprising because cell phones are so modest that they are easily missed when police drive by cars. Texting and driving bans are used to better driving accidents, but are not always used to their full extent. On page 89 of "Indiana's Texting-While-Driving Ban: Why Is It Not Working and How Could It Be Better?", Gormley stated, “As it stands today, Indiana’s texting while driving statute contains gaping loopholes, which leave drivers free to engage in risky behaviors with little fear of legal repercussions” (Gormley 89). A loophole they have to get around are actually being able to see the driver texting while driving. Texting and driving bans are newer and do not have all the kinks worked out, but if more states begin using them they will become better used. Putting more of these bans into use will be able to work on all the kinks and better them to use to be more effective and save more lives.
Every day there are many that are killed from texting and driving. So many people get injured or even killed because of texting and driving. Several people are addicted to their phones, especially teens. Teens are obsessed with their phones, they are always waiting for some to text them back. Texting and driving is a distraction that everyone should avoid because it can result in injury or death to oneself or others. This may result in property damage, and the probability for one to receive legal consequences.
Advancements in technologies such as the cell phones can help provide many different services such as entertainment and staying in touch with family and friends. Although cell phones are used to keep in touch and for business purposes but using them in cars were not one of the purposes that the phones were made to serve as. While distracting drivers, having a part in killing, injuring people and making it a public concern. Obtaining a cell phone is easy considering that it is inexpensive and affordable and serves as multiple uses such as GPS, calling and even checking the weather outside, it serves as a calculator, and has many other features. "Studies have shown that talking on a phone while driving can increase the risk of an accident, but
Bling…”who’s texting me?” Jane: “Hey, what are you doing?” Brian: “I’m in the car going… oh no!” It’s quite simple for anyone to get into a car accident. Due to the fact that more people are getting phones and behind the wheel. Millions are killed due to distracted drivers. That’s outrageous, seems that a high number of people being killed I believe that no texting while should be a law.
I have been the single most wanted electronic device since 1986. I make it easy to stay connected at all times with friends, news, and entertainment. I also cause 1.6 million automobile crashes each year. I am the number one gateway to porn, cyberbullying, and social misconduct. I am a phone. Cellular phones can be either distracting or essential. While driving, they could be deadly or navigational; in class, they could be distractions or educational tools; and behaviorally speaking, cell phones have negative impacts on young children.
Daily, thousands of accidents are occurring around the world due to distracted drivers. Scientifically proven, distracted driving is almost, if not worse, equivalent to drunk driving. Drunk driving is illegal therefore the use of cellphones while driving should also be illegal and not permitted. There are far too many innocent deaths caused from irresponsible drivers that are selfish to others on the road. Every driver has the opportunity to make their own decision, life, or simple yet life changing, a text. Virginia recently enforced the law of cell phones not being permitted while driving; many have not realized this enforcement. Normally, police officers will not pull someone
Texting while driving is 6 times as likely to get you involved in a collision on the road than drinking while driving. Even simple tasks draw a driver’s focus from the driving lane, which could be deadly. Using various forms of technology with hands on the wheel divides the driver's attention and could cause lethal collisions. Although to teens and young adult drivers, texting could be done safely if knowing when to text in the “right time” while driving, it distracts the driver’s attention from the driving lane and could cause fatal accidents and possible deadly injuries.
Moreover, In the middle of this issue, texting and driving has risen to the point where where people don 't like to see it, but still allow it in their presence. After all of these years of texting, people should feel like as a country there should be a point where it is almost forbidden to do so. To think about It, I don 't think ever when purchasing a cell phone I had my wireless provider representative mention anything about the hazards of texting and driving. As I
Wouldn’t you agree that texting and driving is a big issue nowadays? Many drivers are so caught up in their phones that they risk their lives and the lives of others just so that they could answer a simple text message. Now that this problem is becoming so big, it should have severe consequences. People who text and drive should get license suspension for six months and get $500 for the first violation and $1000 for the second violation.
Officials and large companies are doing everything they can to stop drivers from texting and driving. While driving everyone wants to feel safe and not have to worry about other careless drivers. Car accidents happen every couple of seconds and distracted driving is the top reason why. Texting and driving when you have children in the car only sets a bad example for them. Also, texting and driving puts innocent lives at risk. When you drive, you want to be safe, the world would be a better and safer place if people did not text while driving.
Driving in general can be hazardous. Driving and having such a distraction as a cell phone at ear, or ringing somewhere in a car, is ten times more dangerous. Not surprisingly, drivers who use a cell phone while driving perceive cell phone use by others as less of a threat to their safety as do non-users. A huge number of accidents caused by talking on a cell phone. During the last 5 years texting has become insanely popular. It’s a great and convenient tool because people don’t have to call person to just say ‘ok’ on that dinner invitation. The worst part is that many people still think that texting while driving just that ‘ok’ is ok. Unfortunately, even with traffic police enforcing those ‘no cellphone’ laws, individuals still neglect those simple safety concerns. People need to start understanding themselves how dangerous it is.
In the past few years many people have been victims of being in a accident or have even died from using the cell phone in the car. There has been over 1.6 million car accidents a year caused by texting while driving. Texting, scrolling on Facebook, checking missed calls and answering a call while driving is all apart of being an irresponsible
Four simple letters can either kill or change someone’s life forever. “Don’t text and Drive,” is a phrase we’re all too familiar with. Although we may see and hear about the dangers of it, many of us continue to text and drive. Texting and driving is the leading cause of accidents in the United States. The numbers illustrating the dangers of texting while driving are utterly alarming. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, in 2015, distracted driving killed 3,477 people. In an attempt to decrease the number of accidents and the death toll, due to texting and driving, AT&T phone company launched an “It Can Wait,” campaign. One of the videos used for their campaign shows how great of an impact texting and driving has made on the lives of others. Another company, with the same goal of AT&T, decided to take a different approach to prevent texting and driving. The Wathan Funeral Home, placed a billboard in Toronto stating, “Text and Drive.” This Billboard caused a slew of controversy. Although the two texts take different approaches, they both have the same message, “Don’t Text and Drive.”
Using a phone while driving happens a lot today and it shouldn’t. The problem with being on the phone while driving has been around for awhile but it gets to be a greater problem every year. It’s a very big deal with teens because teens depend on their phone a lot. It’s also a problem with adults as well, but it’s more of a problem with teenagers. Responding to a text or answering a phone is not worth losing our life or someone else’s life. It can wait. If we think it’s an emergency phone call or text then we can park our car somewhere or pull on the side of the road to answer it. Cell phones should be able to be in our vehicle without going on it while driving, a lot of accidents are caused due to people being on their phone and driving.
When cell phone use became prominent at the beginning of the twenty-first century, a new threat to public safety emerged: texting while driving. In 2007, 64% of US adults admitted to using a cell phone to send text messages behind the wheel despite the fact that 89% of the same group approved of laws that would ban the practice (Richtel, 242). Cell phone users, even though they are aware that texting and driving is dangerous, do so anyway. In A Deadly Wandering, released in 2014, Matt Richtel demonstrates that the majority of drivers continue to distract themselves with their cell phones because they simply cannot help it due to the contemporary and inseparable connection between technology and the human mind.