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-   -   She asked for it ... (https://www.accringtonweb.com/forum/f69/she-asked-for-it-66589.html)

Eric 22-09-2014 18:37

She asked for it ...
 
And she deserved it.

Emily Bernauer died due in part to texting while driving - Windsor - CBC News

And "guardian angel" my ass ... thank god she didn't kill anyone but herself. One less inconsiderate, dangerous idiot on the road.

DAV007 22-09-2014 18:59

Re: She asked for it ...
 
bit harsh

Eric 22-09-2014 19:12

Re: She asked for it ...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by DAV007 (Post 1118351)
bit harsh

Not when you consider that distracted drivers put others at risk ... I don't want to end up in emerg., or on a slab, just 'cause some clown thinks he/she has a god given right to have a bs text conversation with his/her bff ... sorry about the short form;) I don't know how the figures shape up over there, but in Canada, distracted driving is responsible for more fatalities than impaired driving and speeding.

cashman 22-09-2014 19:24

Re: She asked for it ...
 
So someone being killed or maimed by one of these selfish gits aint harsh?:rolleyes:

Shurm 22-09-2014 19:44

Re: She asked for it ...
 
Well I think she's learnt that lesson the hard way without hurting anyone else besides her own Family.

RIP it was no age to leave this world.

Margaret Pilkington 22-09-2014 19:45

Re: She asked for it ...
 
What text is important enough to lose your life for?
And if it was so important then what was wrong with pulling over to text?
I see so many folk making calls whilst driving...and how many are caught and fined?
It should not be a case of a fine it should be the confiscation of the vehicle and a driving ban.(and if the vehicle doesn't belong to the one driving, it should make no difference,the driver should have to make reparation to the owner)
It is OK passing laws, but when they are not enforced then they might just as well never have been passed in the first place.

Accyexplorer 22-09-2014 20:41

Re: She asked for it ...
 
Personally i wouldn't wish death on anyone and regardless of what figures say one death caused by some pillock that's texting while driving is one to many....


....if it was your child or relative it would be.

Crush offenders cars and sterilise them so they don't reproduce.

Margaret Pilkington 22-09-2014 21:25

Re: She asked for it ...
 
I wouldn't wish death on anyone either.....I sometimes wonder if young people take risks because they feel immortal, like death is something that can't happen to them.....or whether they just haven't enough life experience to see the dangers.
Whichever it is, it does not affect the way this girls family will be feeling right now. All that potential lost in an instant of thoughtlessness.

Less 22-09-2014 21:46

Re: Re: She asked for it ...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Margaret Pilkington (Post 1118371)
I wouldn't wish death on anyone either.....I sometimes wonder if young people take risks because they feel immortal, like death is something that can't happen to them.....or whether they just haven't enough life experience to see the dangers.
Whichever it is, it does not affect the way this girls family will be feeling right now. All that potential lost in an instant of thoughtlessness.

It's not just the young that are guilty of this obsession to text whilst driving, it can be observed being done by all ages and classes.
Of course when I say it can be observed, there is a group of people that seem to have a blind spot so far as this crime is concerned, they are the traffic police.

westendlass 22-09-2014 22:24

Re: She asked for it ...
 
I was once a passenger in a car that had a very near miss with someone talking on a mobile whilst driving. Selfish cretin could have killed us, he merely swerved back to his side of the road at the last minute and carried on. Why do people feel the need to constantly talk when they're supposed to be concentrating on something else as important as driving a car?

Eric 22-09-2014 22:49

Re: She asked for it ...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Accyexplorer (Post 1118366)
Personally i wouldn't wish death on anyone


....if it was your child or relative it would be.

I doubt that anyone "wished" her death ... If asked my opinion, I would have wished her a long, happy and fulfilling life.

And she was someone's child and relative; no doubt, she also had friends. They are the innocent victims of, as Cashy accurately observed, her "selfishness."

accyman 22-09-2014 23:00

Re: She asked for it ...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by westendlass (Post 1118385)
I was once a passenger in a car that had a very near miss with someone talking on a mobile whilst driving. Selfish cretin could have killed us, he merely swerved back to his side of the road at the last minute and carried on. Why do people feel the need to constantly talk when they're supposed to be concentrating on something else as important as driving a car?


hands free kits may be expensive when you get factory fitted but you can get a blutooth earpeace for under £10 to use when in your car so theres not much excuse for not sorting something out because if you can afford to own and run a car you should be able to afford a tenner.

mind you another feature i like to employ is getting the kids to answer my phone and stick it on loud speaker but then again there some morons out there that think you shouldnt even speak to anyone next to you in a car when driving which in my opinion would make off road rally rather dangerous

Less 22-09-2014 23:12

Re: Re: She asked for it ...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by accyman (Post 1118389)
hands free kits may be expensive when you get factory fitted but you can get a blutooth earpeace for under £10 to use when in your car so theres not much excuse for not sorting something out because if you can afford to own and run a car you should be able to afford a tenner.

mind you another feature i like to employ is getting the kids to answer my phone and stick it on loud speaker but then again there some morons out there that think you shouldnt even speak to anyone next to you in a car when driving which in my opinion would make off road rally rather dangerous

My lesson was learned in the early 90's, I was always driving somewhere, issued a brick so the boss could keep in touch.

Back then although it should have been, it wasn't obvious about the dangers. (We were learning).
I answered the phone just as I was about to turn right (almost into oncoming traffic), fortunately my passenger squealed in panic and I was able to correct my mistake.
Ever since then, unless hands free connected the mobile in a car is out of reach.
Having said that, even hands free, it can be a distraction.

Eric 22-09-2014 23:30

Re: She asked for it ...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by accyman (Post 1118389)
there some morons out there that think you shouldnt even speak to anyone next to you in a car when driving

Often, it's not the act of conversing, whether with hands free phone or to your fellow travelers, which is dangerous, it's the content of the conversation that decreases concentration and increases risk. If you answer your cell phone (hands free) and someone asks you when you will be home, no problemo. But, if you answer and someone tells you your house is ablaze and your family is trapped inside ... now that kinda takes your mind of driving.

But, in general, I agree that there are limits to what the law can, or should do. Common sense has to enter into the equation. But stricter laws, and enforcement, on texting are a must. Hundreds are dying on the roads ... thousands mourn them .... and many are left to handle the rest of their lives with shattered bodies.

Eric 22-09-2014 23:34

Re: She asked for it ...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by accyman (Post 1118389)
hands free kits


Hands free texting:confused:;)


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