Smart boys still have brains flooded with testosterone and do crazy things. Try again. |
| 6 months and during that time volunteer once a week at a brain injury rehab center to assist people with brain injuries sustained due to motor vehicle accidents. Finally, a thoughtful letter to me explaining what she's learned during that time and explaining why on earth I should EVER trust her to get behind the wheel of a car again. Absolutely this could have been fatal. Good luck OP, good luck. |
I also think this post was based on this story, especially since op hasn’t come back. I also think it is a moot point. License will be suspended for a long time |
You’re in denial. Smart kids make smart decisions. The idiots have no impulse control or maturity. 16/17 yo immature kids act like they’re 12. |
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You know in your heart what you need to do.
Other then that there are cars that LIMIT YOUR KID"S CAR TOP SPEED FOR YOU! things that you can do to make your child a safer driver, many parents are clueless that they exist, just couple examples and more info below. - real time GPS monitoring complete with speed reads and alerts - cars that come equipped with speed limiting devices that allows you to do just that https://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/columnist/2017/06/25/got-teen-driver-here-tech-help-keep-them-safe/103076252/ Ford’s MyKey system has all kinds of custom settings for parents, including volume limits for the radio — so your teen isn’t rocking out when they should be watching the road — a “Belt-Minder” that chimes and mutes the speakers until the buckles click, and includes top speed limits that prevent the car from topping 65, 70, 75, or 80 mph. All of which makes sense, especially when the CDC says teens have the lowest rate of seatbelt use of all drivers. Chevrolet’s new built-in safety system called Teen Driver Technology works like a virtual coach that lives inside the car itself. It also sets speed alerts, volume limits for the radio, and parents can get an in-vehicle report card right on the dashboard display . Volkswagen’s connected car system, Car-Net, is also packed with fancy features that send apps from your smartphone right to your car dashboard, with some handy tools for parents, too. It has built-in emergency alerts in case of an accident, but it also lets you set alerts for both speed and location boundaries — so if your young driver decides they want to go on an impromptu road trip, you’ll know about it immediately — and the notifications get sent right to your phone. |
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Jul 6, 2017 - Ford's MyKey system lets parents turn on speed warnings (45, 55, and 65 mph) and limit the car's maximum speed when it's being driven with the teens' key fob.
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=14&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=2ahUKEwjDm4_3pq_fAhUNZd8KHWeNCoIQFjANegQICxAB&url=https%3A%2F%2Fcars.usnews.com%2Fcars-trucks%2Fbest-teen-driver-monitoring-systems&usg=AOvVaw1HxsNjvcmNM8UiqHcOohJW |