Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When they get into an accident that is bad enough for their license to be taken away. A 95 year old is not going to be charged for causing an accident even if it causes a fatality. A 45 year old, not so much.
Consider what the report about Biden’s hoarding situation with documents said. This is how law enforcement views people like this.
Don’t worry about this. It’s not your problem and there is nothing you can do about it.
Kill a kid and then grandma can stay at home? Do you people even hear yourselves?
That’s how the law works. It’s not my personal opinion?
Remember the elderly woman who drove into the grocery storefront in Bethesda last year? Just one example.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When they get into an accident that is bad enough for their license to be taken away. A 95 year old is not going to be charged for causing an accident even if it causes a fatality. A 45 year old, not so much.
Consider what the report about Biden’s hoarding situation with documents said. This is how law enforcement views people like this.
Don’t worry about this. It’s not your problem and there is nothing you can do about it.
Kill a kid and then grandma can stay at home? Do you people even hear yourselves?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:take out the battery
If something like this actually worked, the person might be too far gone to be driving because even a person who’d lost half their senses would think to open the hood and check when the dash lights didn’t come on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand old people who won’t give up their keys. With rideshare apps it’s not like they are losing their independence.
I am a passenger princess who hates driving (my DH drives whenever we’re both in the car). Once no longer have the regular demands of driving kids around in a minivan, I would gladly stop paying for a car, gas, insurance, taxes, maintenance, etc. and just hire someone to drive me around to the store or wherever I need to go.
And I know SO many older people who keep driving despite things like chronic back pain causing leg weakness, Parkinson’s, cognitive issues, etc. but it’s a nightmare to take their keys away. We need to do a better job of treating driving like a privilege and start doing more frequent testing once someone hits age 65 (it seems like late 60s to early 70s is where a lot of older people go from still being young-ish to old).
My mother has an iphone and is facile on the computer but has trouble with apps. She is constantly stumped by the uber app. It's easy for us but not for people in their 90's.
You don’t find it alarming that someone who can’t figure out a basic car ordering app can drive a 4,000 machine at high speeds capable of killing someone?
I didn't say she was driving, just that rideshare apps are not the easy solution for everyone.
Anonymous wrote:When they get into an accident that is bad enough for their license to be taken away. A 95 year old is not going to be charged for causing an accident even if it causes a fatality. A 45 year old, not so much.
Consider what the report about Biden’s hoarding situation with documents said. This is how law enforcement views people like this.
Don’t worry about this. It’s not your problem and there is nothing you can do about it.
take out the battery
If something like this actually worked, the person might be too far gone to be driving because even a person who’d lost half their senses would think to open the hood and check when the dash lights didn’t come on
Anonymous wrote:Is she a safe driver? Not everyone ages the same. Look at Biden.
Anonymous wrote:take out the battery
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand old people who won’t give up their keys. With rideshare apps it’s not like they are losing their independence.
I am a passenger princess who hates driving (my DH drives whenever we’re both in the car). Once no longer have the regular demands of driving kids around in a minivan, I would gladly stop paying for a car, gas, insurance, taxes, maintenance, etc. and just hire someone to drive me around to the store or wherever I need to go.
And I know SO many older people who keep driving despite things like chronic back pain causing leg weakness, Parkinson’s, cognitive issues, etc. but it’s a nightmare to take their keys away. We need to do a better job of treating driving like a privilege and start doing more frequent testing once someone hits age 65 (it seems like late 60s to early 70s is where a lot of older people go from still being young-ish to old).
My mother has an iphone and is facile on the computer but has trouble with apps. She is constantly stumped by the uber app. It's easy for us but not for people in their 90's.
You don’t find it alarming that someone who can’t figure out a basic car ordering app can drive a 4,000 machine at high speeds capable of killing someone?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand old people who won’t give up their keys. With rideshare apps it’s not like they are losing their independence.
I am a passenger princess who hates driving (my DH drives whenever we’re both in the car). Once no longer have the regular demands of driving kids around in a minivan, I would gladly stop paying for a car, gas, insurance, taxes, maintenance, etc. and just hire someone to drive me around to the store or wherever I need to go.
And I know SO many older people who keep driving despite things like chronic back pain causing leg weakness, Parkinson’s, cognitive issues, etc. but it’s a nightmare to take their keys away. We need to do a better job of treating driving like a privilege and start doing more frequent testing once someone hits age 65 (it seems like late 60s to early 70s is where a lot of older people go from still being young-ish to old).
My mother has an iphone and is facile on the computer but has trouble with apps. She is constantly stumped by the uber app. It's easy for us but not for people in their 90's.