
My formost pet peeve
Re: My formost pet peeve
Bugger the car so it won't work, it that fails bugger to old fogey. 
Your collective inability to acknowledge this obvious truth makes you all look like fools.
yrs,
rubato
Re: My formost pet peeve
Perhaps we as a society should be more concerned with our elderly and take better care of them. Permiting them to drive at an extreme age where the can harm them selves and others should be our responsibility. After all they took care of us as children should we not take care of them in their old age, or are we just too busy with our own lives to think of them.Joe Guy wrote:You're correct, Miles (privilege). Driving is not a Constitutionally protected right but we all are allowed to drive. My point is that elderly people should not be automatically considered inept just because they've reached a certain age. There are plenty of young people that are terrible drivers that may never get a ticket or have a serious accident but they won't be scrutinized until they turn 70 yrs old.Miles wrote:
Driving is not a RIGHT but rather a privledge.
Perhaps we are just a little too concerned with our own lives to consider those who we should pay a little more attention too.
I expect to go straight to hell...........at least I won't have to spend time making new friends.
Re: My formost pet peeve
That's exactly my point.Miles wrote: Perhaps we as a society should be more concerned with our elderly and take better care of them. Permiting them to drive at an extreme age where the can harm them selves and others should be our responsibility. After all they took care of us as children should we not take care of them in their old age, or are we just too busy with our own lives to think of them.
Perhaps we are just a little too concerned with our own lives to consider those who we should pay a little more attention too.
Our government shouldn't be setting age limits for adult drivers. It should be the family's responsibility.
I'd bet that most people who are too old to drive realize it and stop driving without being forced to do so.
All we hear & read about are the exceptions. And that's because it's not something that often happens.
Re: My formost pet peeve
If we could find a way to measure that objectively -- a highly problematic endeavor -- I would take that bet in a heartbeat.Joe Guy wrote:I'd bet that most people who are too old to drive realize it and stop driving without being forced to do so.
In our society, the privilege of driving is a hallmark of functional independence. And recognizing the absence of functional independence is one of the hardest things that the elderly ever have to do.
I have seen people who could no longer toilet themselves insist that they were still competent to drive. People who could not walk unassisted insist that they were still competent to drive. People who could not transfer themselves unassisted from their beds to their wheelchairs insist that they were still competent to drive. People who could not visually distinguish a person from a bedside lamp at a distance of five feet insist that they were still competent to drive.
You can say that those people are the exceptions, but my experience tells me that they are not. So I would take your bet. And I am confident that I would win it.
Reason is valuable only when it performs against the wordless physical background of the universe.
Re: My formost pet peeve
I agree Andrew--for many young men and women getting a driver's license is an important step toward independence and adulthood; giving that up (especially in areas where there is no real alternative to driving to get around) is a pretty tough thing (as many of us don't ever want to admit we are declining in abilities/approaching the ultimate end). My mom was a nurse in a nursing home for years, and she told me of this one man who was in his 90s and blind who kept renewing his license for years (he got help with his mail), "just in case he needed it." He couldn't even find the parking ot (and had no access to a car for years, but he still insisted he could drive.
It's kind of like the tipsy guy insisting he is fine to drive--he's sober enough to know he's not, but he doesn't want to admit he fears he isn't in enough control to drive safely. Just as the families will not/cannot stop these people from driving, they will not stop a determined older driver.
It's kind of like the tipsy guy insisting he is fine to drive--he's sober enough to know he's not, but he doesn't want to admit he fears he isn't in enough control to drive safely. Just as the families will not/cannot stop these people from driving, they will not stop a determined older driver.
Re: My formost pet peeve
I personally am on the verge of giving up my keys and I am only 62. My health has deterorated to the point where I am questioning my abilities behind the wheel. Before I put someone else in danger I will become a passinger not a driver.
I expect to go straight to hell...........at least I won't have to spend time making new friends.
Re: My formost pet peeve
What if the family doesn't exist or doesn't do its job? Society has to step in to protect everyone. Even if most incompetent drivers voluntarily give up their license, there are still many who do not. We read about the tragedies of someone who should have stopped driving, but what about the many close calls caused by the marginally competent to incompetent driver? Traffic safety improvements and the many alert drivers avoid the hazards that the bottom 1-5% of drivers present to the rest of us on a daily basis. For example, I bet everyone of us knows someone who regularly drives at .06 to .12 alcohol, who never get a DUI or cause an accident, but have a fair number of close calls; they're not competent to drive but they manage to get from point A to point B regularly without an accident. The same happens with other types of incompetent drivers.Joe Guy wrote:Miles wrote:
Our government shouldn't be setting age limits for adult drivers. It should be the family's responsibility.
I'd bet that most people who are too old to drive realize it and stop driving without being forced to do so.
All we hear & read about are the exceptions. And that's because it's not something that often happens.
Re: My formost pet peeve
I'm impressed Miles, not that many people are so honest with themselves, nor willing to put the needs of others over their own wants.
Re: My formost pet peeve
Ditto. I'm impressed but not surprised, and, of course, saddened.
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”
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oldr_n_wsr
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Re: My formost pet peeve
Sorry old buddy. While your health me be deteriorating, your mind is as sharp as ever.Miles wrote:I personally am on the verge of giving up my keys and I am only 62. My health has deterorated to the point where I am questioning my abilities behind the wheel. Before I put someone else in danger I will become a passinger not a driver.
Re: My formost pet peeve
You have no older relatives. All of us who do know that the opposite is true.Joe Guy wrote:"...
I'd bet that most people who are too old to drive realize it and stop driving without being forced to do so.
... "
yrs,
rubato
Re: My formost pet peeve
Another bit of hate-free substance from Captain Substance...You have no older relatives. All of us who do know that the opposite is true.
yrs,
rubato



Re: My formost pet peeve
I'd like to echo that sentiment...Sorry old buddy. While your health me be deteriorating, your mind is as sharp as ever.
You're one of the really decent sorts around here Miles; I wish you all the best.



Re: My formost pet peeve
Take care Miles, you can always travel the world from your keyboard 
Re: My formost pet peeve
After reading your post I believe you're probably corrrect. Most elderly people will not likely give up their car keys easily.Andrew D wrote:You can say that those people are the exceptions, but my experience tells me that they are not. So I would take your bet. And I am confident that I would win it.Joe Guy wrote:I'd bet that most people who are too old to drive realize it and stop driving without being forced to do so.
But I do believe that tragic car accidents in which elderly people are to blame are not a major cause of death & destruction on the road.
Both of my parents - and my uncle who lived with them - gave up driving because they knew they were no longer competent drivers. My older brother quit driving when he realized his limitations, even though he was only 61 at the time. My grandparents did the same.
I guess my family's experience was probably very unique and that influenced my initial response.
Re: My formost pet peeve
That and the mass transit system.loCAtek wrote:Take care Miles, you can always travel the world from your keyboard
I expect to go straight to hell...........at least I won't have to spend time making new friends.
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oldr_n_wsr
- Posts: 10838
- Joined: Sun Apr 18, 2010 1:59 am
Re: My formost pet peeve
While I have no statitical evidence, whenever I read of an oldrBut I do believe that tragic car accidents in which elderly people are to blame are not a major cause of death & destruction on the road.
