Cell-Phone-Free Driving Starts at Home

Emily and Will, I completely agree with you that it’s time to get serious about cell phone use while driving—and I think there’s an interesting generational angle to consider as a crusade, I hope, gets under way. Texting is an ideal impetus for real action: It’s so hair-raisingly obvious why you shouldn’t be doing that at the wheel, plus it’s kids who text more than adults. We tend to like liberty-curtailing crusades better when they focus on youth.

But as the experts will all tell you, it really helps if adults walk the talk—or, in this case, forgo the talk while in the car. And because plain old phoning is not so self-evidently dangerous—after all, no one’s proposing that chatting in the car be prohibited, or that radios and CD players be banned—generating a sense of urgency for the broader prohibition is going to be much harder. We should beware of expecting a lot of high dudgeon about delinquent young texters to do the job—and of letting it blind us to the thornier challenge of getting grownup yakkers to set a stringently good example.

Tags: adults, kids, texting while driving

Ann Hulbert Slate's books editor and the author, most recently, of Raising America: Experts, Parents, and a Century of Advice About Children.

Comments

young drivers

By: im1 | Tue, 07/28/2009 - 18:28

I crashed the family minivan 1 week after getting my drivers license. My younger brother went two weeks after his license before putting the family Saturn into the back of a pick-up (at low speed). When my youngest brother turned sixteen my dad told him he'd get a thousand bucks if he made it to 17 without an accident. My youngest brother is now 26 and still accident free, as well as being a thousand bucks richer. My dad was happy to part with that thousand dollars.