In the Name of Safety, We Must Ban Listening to the Radio While Driving!
For too long, legislators have been avoiding the 800-pound gorilla in the back seat. In the interest of safety, legislators throughout Missouri and across the nation have mandated seat belt use, outlawed alcohol use while driving (obviously, we all agree with that one), banned talking on cell phones, and required children to sit in car seats or booster seats until they are 19 years old (OK, not quite that old). Now, they are banning texting.
All of these laws merely skirt around the edges of the real problem, which is that far too many people are rocking out to music or yelling back at the talk show host while they are driving. This carnage must stop. In the name of safety, and to fully protect the children — whom, as you may have heard — are the future, our leaders must finally take the necessary step to protect us from ourselves by banning the outrageous practice of listening to the radio while driving. It is only right.
(Thanks to Missouri safe-driver-of-the-year John Combest for the links.)





I love the title of this post, and agree completely with the rest. My only question is: Is that gorilla wearing a seat belt?
Comment by Sarah Brodsky — February 3, 2010 @ 4:48 p.m.
I think Lew Rockwell has written the best article on this subject so far
http://www.lewrockwell.com/rockwell/freedom-to-text133.html
Comment by Joe Nonnenkamp — February 3, 2010 @ 11:15 p.m.
I would like the government to ban my child from crying while I drive, to heck with his first amendment concerns. It is truly distracting and makes it harder to concentrate on the task at hand.
Comment by Papillon — February 4, 2010 @ 9:48 a.m.