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 Post subject: Re: U.S. Drivers beware: Black boxes mandatory in new cars
PostPosted: December 10th, 2012, 12:00 pm 
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Arya wrote:
Nate wrote:
Burks wrote:
Nate wrote:
If you do it on the street then you are willingly putting other people's lives at risk. If that's the case, I hope you get caught.


Oh the naive.....

I've evolved beyond wiping with my bare hand and racing on the streets. $15 gets me all the legal racing I (or should I say, my tires) can stomach and women in skimpy clothes. Yup, I'm content.


I don't understand what this is supposed to mean :?:


Means he spends 15 bucks to race on that track and the women there are like the women you see on T.V. at Race tracks, or dressed like it at the least.



I'm not sure how it works in the US, but in the UK on private land you don't need insurance to drive, so it wouldn't be an issue. Though they understandably may be concerned that you race your car, I'm fairly sure they wouldn't be able to raise your bill as a result.

Furthermore, roads belong to the Government, and it's the Government's responsibility to keep road users safe. If you don't like they way they go about it, don't use them.

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 Post subject: Re: U.S. Drivers beware: Black boxes mandatory in new cars
PostPosted: December 10th, 2012, 1:06 pm 
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Arya wrote:
Boa wrote:
I'd love to ask you if you would like that to be the situation we face here in America, and I'd go so far as to ask you: If the Chinese were occupying bases around our country, killing innocent people, occupying all major cities, taking over our government, assassinating our leaders, changing our laws and forcing us into agreements, do you think that a single American would stand up and fight back? Yes? Do you think some Americans would take the fight to the Chinese, no matter how crude the method? Do you believe that they'd be justified in doing so? And would you be part of the force that fights back, or one of the people who acquiesces? If you'd fight back, congratulations on living in the United States! Because if you were Ap al-Dekwest (get it?) of Baghdad, I think you'd be dead by now and labeled an insurgent.


I'm game ~.^.

Everyone I know would answer "Hell Yeah!" or " :bunny: Yeah!" to taking back our country if someone (Chinese in this case) is attempting to take over. We are not push overs. Also depending how far they go will determine just how far we would go to have what is ours. Every American would be justified in doing so, and :bunny: yeah I would apart of it.

The thing is that people don't seem to associate what we are doing overseas as aggressive invasion akin to the Chinese aggressively invading us. Live a day in those people's shoes and tell me our government is doing good things and protecting not just us but human rights on the whole.

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Furthermore, roads belong to the Government, and it's the Government's responsibility to keep road users safe. If you don't like they way they go about it, don't use them.

Nothing belongs to the Government except those things that belong to the body of the citizenry as a whole, but this is very different than being owned by the government. I can see how you might think this, living in a land owned entirely by one person. I can quote court cases where people have won regarding their right to travel using an automobile on the "government" roads without the obtaining of a Driver's License, because our country works differently and we have a fundamental right to travel in any way we please. The system of law our government is modeled on should mean that criminality is restricted only to cases where actual harm is done, not theoretical potential harm (as in the case of speeding, driving without a license, etc.; you have not technically committed an actionable crime unless you have harmed another person or infringed upon their rights. Malicious intent used to be a requirement for conviction, more or less).

What I'm saying is that our government does not legally have the option to say "My way or no highway" in this country so long as they adhere to the structure of their system of law that the states within set up to protect their sovereignty from the Federal Government. Your country must be pretty crappy about pleasing the people if your idea of a "solution" is "if you don't like it, don't travel". I can not legally be forced to give up any of my rights as a requirement to travelling, in an automobile or anything else. This is why the TSA is an assault on our freedom an unconstitutional. This is why highway checkpoints are an assault to our freedom and technically illegal. This is why I have the right to refuse to be tracked in any situation, and should I be in an accident I have the right to not give up information. If the other driver wants this system to protect themselves legally, great, maybe it should show in court that they were not at fault and successfully get "me" convicted. Regardless, the fact is that we have the right to know what information is gathered, for how long, for who, and most importantly the ability to halt this data collection at the judgment of the citizen. If you disagree, you fundamentally misunderstand common law, rule of law, and the US Constitution.

You must realize that even though they do not seem that different in their present manifestations, the very basis of our government is the antithesis to the way in which yours functions. You can't try to apply your world view, because even if public perception in the US is that the government owns and operates the roads and that highway checkpoints protect the innocent more than they harm the innocent the fact remains that both of these statements are blatantly untrue.

Think about this: We have the right to go out to a store and purchase almost any kind of firearm and ammunition without requiring a license. We can, completely unlicensed, carry firearms with us in vehicles. You see, in legal terms, a license is permission to do something that you do not have a right to do, permission to break the law. It's illegal for you to own a shotgun, but you can become licensed to have limited access to certain kinds of shotguns. In fact, to use anything but an air-gun you need a firearms certificate.

Let me re-apply this legal knowledge. Court cases have been won over here confirming that in states like Ohio and Pennsylvania the legal system recognizes that locomotion is an inalienable (can not taken away or given away in any measure) right and that therefore it is unlawful to require a license for the purpose of leisure travel (any travel that is not for commercial gain through the use of the public freeways). Feel different than what you experience over there?

Are you starting to understand the basis of liberty? The idea of Liberty is the idea that you own yourself. You own your body, it is your property, and it is unlawful for anyone else to dictate to you what is appropriate as far as your own body and your own choices. We have here a body of elected citizens who are (supposed to be) no different than any ordinary or average citizen, and have no more power than any citizen, but are merely there to represent our best interests. Liberty is like a bubble of rights around you that protects you from invasion by the government. The people are supposed to protect each other from the government penetrating this bubble, while the government protects people from having their bubble penetrated by others.

If I were required to have a tracking device in my vehicle in order to use a vehicle as my right on the roads belonging to my community, that is the government saying that my bubble's "travel layer" no longer applies to them - that I do not have to penetrate someone else's bubble in order to be considered a criminal, but that a facet of my bubble is no longer protected. They are breaking the contract that was signed between states as a condition for creating a central government to oversee interstate affairs. If I'm arrested for smoking pot, that is the government saying that it has the ability to dictate what decisions I make about what I ingest or what state of mind I am permitted to be in (thought police, anyone?). If I break current Federal Law by taking a bottle of Raw Milk across state lines, that's the government telling me which foods are and are not appropriate for me to eat or drink, and precluding my judgment on issues of health to say "No, trust us, THIS is what you want for your health".

It's starting to sound like slavery instead of freedom, and THAT is why I am taking the time to make sure that people understand not just the issue itself but what about it makes it an issue in the first place. I can spout off pages of examples just on how the FDA (the board of directors consisting mostly of ex-employees of the pharmaceutical industry), by being brought into existence with one law, has repeatedly failed to protect the people or serve their interests. In fact they've taken actions repeatedly that are direct public health dangers to the people for the profit of Monsanto and their buddies, and I'd contend it's because of the conflict of interest of the people running the agency.

(Applequest: HERE is where I would insert the slippery slope argument. I just listed one tiny set of legal developments over the past hundred years that paint a slope before your eyes and lube it up.)

[/epicrant]

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 Post subject: Re: U.S. Drivers beware: Black boxes mandatory in new cars
PostPosted: December 10th, 2012, 1:59 pm 
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In this day and age, its just unrealistic for government to maintain as small a role as you would like Boa. In theory, yes it would be wonderful, same as communism, but in today's modern complex world, the government has to be responsible for protecting the population. The TSA might not go about things in the right way, but we need to be protected. Same goes for patrolling against drunk drivers, and to some extent for monitoring the seconds before a crash. I understand your constitutional based arguments, but again, a lot has changed since 1776. It just seems to me a very quaint idea that government should do THAT little. And believe me, I am not a big government guy, but I expect my quality of life to be protected from stupid/malicious people, and I expect the government to meet that need.

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 Post subject: Re: U.S. Drivers beware: Black boxes mandatory in new cars
PostPosted: December 11th, 2012, 10:00 am 
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Boa wrote:
Think about this: We have the right to go out to a store and purchase almost any kind of firearm and ammunition without requiring a license. We can, completely unlicensed, carry firearms with us in vehicles. You see, in legal terms, a license is permission to do something that you do not have a right to do, permission to break the law.


Have not thought about that :o

Boa wrote:
The idea of Liberty is the idea that you own yourself. You own your body, it is your property, and it is unlawful for anyone else to dictate to you what is appropriate as far as your own body and your own choices.


VERSUS

Applequest wrote:
a lot has changed since 1776. It just seems to me a very quaint idea that government should do THAT little.

Applequest wrote:
I am not a big government guy, but I expect my quality of life to be protected from stupid/malicious people, and I expect the government to meet that need.


You both are making a good point on what is constitutional and what has changed/ what they should be doing for us.

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 Post subject: Re: U.S. Drivers beware: Black boxes mandatory in new cars
PostPosted: December 11th, 2012, 11:02 am 
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bluecoat wrote:
(for now).


Abc News wrote:
Lt. Gov. Timothy Murray of Massachusetts found out the hard way last year.

He crashed a car he was driving and told police that he was wearing a seatbelt and was not speeding at the time of the crash.

However the black box installed in his car revealed he was actually speeding at 75 miles per hour in a 65 mile per hour zone, before accelerating to more than 100 miles per hour.

According to Scott Ferson, a spokesman for the lieutenant governor's campaign, Murray believes he either fell asleep or hit black ice.

The lieutenant governor was not issued a ticket at the time of the accident. However, after police examined the vehicle's black box they handed Murray a $555 ticket for speeding in excess of 100 miles per hour.


Mandatory Black Boxes in Cars Spark Controversy Watch Video
Ferson says that Murray did not dispute the findings of the black box investigation and elected to pay the fine in full. He also said the lieutenant governor reimbursed the state for the cost of the vehicle he crashed, which was government owned.

The data recorders track a number of items, including vehicle speed, whether a driver tried to step on the brakes before a crash, information about engine throttle, air bag readiness before a crash, and whether seat belts were buckled.


http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/feds-b ... Mdjr-Oe-YU

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 Post subject: Re: U.S. Drivers beware: Black boxes mandatory in new cars
PostPosted: December 11th, 2012, 10:42 pm 
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If you want to complain about people tracking your every move, I think cellphones and internet tracking software are much more worrying that those black boxes.

I think having a device that can allow for a better understanding of an accident is a good thing. The only risk is that it starts overriding any other evidence in the eye of the law, which is kind of what happened with DNA testing.
Obviously I'm against having tracking devices implemented into cars, but as far as I understand that's just speculation at this point.

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 Post subject: Re: U.S. Drivers beware: Black boxes mandatory in new cars
PostPosted: December 12th, 2012, 10:08 am 
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ZxC wrote:
The only risk is that it starts overriding any other evidence in the eye of the law, which is kind of what happened with DNA testing.


Works most of the time, but still has its drawbacks

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 Post subject: Re: U.S. Drivers beware: Black boxes mandatory in new cars
PostPosted: December 19th, 2012, 11:00 pm 
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To shut down the whole blablabl defense spending blablabla

Black boxes are almost already industry standard.
*thunder*

Buick has been putting them in their cars since like...2000.

What does this law do?
Makes something into law that most cars already do.

The you think "ok why a law" because every single company uses a different format...... and then to analyze each crash, you'd need to go buy another reader for the box from that particular dealership.

So the law basically takes a look at the industry standard and say

"ok guys... these are valuable sources of information with infallible proof but it's killing the police budget buying 20 readers.. lets make one standard so we can protect people better"

Honestly, when I scrolled past the 100% irrelevant defense spending graph I figured I'd shut this down.

This law doesn't cost a ton of money, it just standardizes the recording boxes that most manufacturers already use. /thread]

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 Post subject: Re: U.S. Drivers beware: Black boxes mandatory in new cars
PostPosted: December 20th, 2012, 8:07 am 
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That post about the spending could mostly be about anything and everything else, and everything costs money what about the vehicles that don't have the manufacturer "recording boxes".

The car dealerships that put in those boxes are able to remotely disable your car if you don't make the payment. that still leaves the majority without such protection.

Also think about a Nation Wide scale changing every new vehicle to having another addition to them will cost.

Imo it's just another way for the vehicle to have a mechanical malfunction, and it's getting harder to work on your own vehicle besides taking it to the dealership to fix it up. More computer technology inside the vehicle.

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 Post subject: Re: U.S. Drivers beware: Black boxes mandatory in new cars
PostPosted: December 21st, 2012, 11:35 pm 
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Arya wrote:
That post about the spending could mostly be about anything and everything else, and everything costs money what about the vehicles that don't have the manufacturer "recording boxes".

The car dealerships that put in those boxes are able to remotely disable your car if you don't make the payment. that still leaves the majority without such protection.

Also think about a Nation Wide scale changing every new vehicle to having another addition to them will cost.

Imo it's just another way for the vehicle to have a mechanical malfunction, and it's getting harder to work on your own vehicle besides taking it to the dealership to fix it up. More computer technology inside the vehicle.



Ok...
1) They just... won't not put them in. The car dealership will pay for them as they make new cars. New cars might cost more as a result, but we're talking 100-200 dollars in a 10,000 dolar or more vehicle. This law only applies to newly made vehicles. Older vehicles don't matter.. it's only a law to retrofit old cars.

2) No, that's not reasonably possible. That's not the scope of this law. These boxes record like 10-20 seconds of velocity, acceleration, and other data about the vehicle before a crash eg. were the brakes on, angle of the wheels... Upon a crash, they save the data and it's stored.

So these boxes do little more than record data about the vehicle they can't control it at all.

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