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Driver licensing - license to fine,
jail, and revoke your right to drive
More traffic also meant more traffic laws. Traffic management, road maintenance, expanded police departments, and new construction ate up large segments of municipal budgets, and cities looked for new sources of revenue to cope with the presence of motor vehicles. Americans were eager to take to the road and understood that money was needed for better roads and traffic management. In the pioneering days of loco-motion, the driver’s license was more of a membership card than a permission slip. Having a driver’s license was prestigious. In fact, in the early 1900s, Chicago issued automobile license buttons that owners wore on their driving apparel. Licenses were also looked upon as a fair way to tax the people who were fortunate enough to be able to afford an automobile without unfairly taxing the people who could not.
Today the driver’s
license is a state’s primary weapon of mass duress. States revoke the driver’s license for so many reasons nowadays that it is hard to keep track of
them all. Most every drug possession charge that results from traffic stops by
police will result in a licensed suspension. If you forget to pay for your gas
and inadvertently drive off, your will lose your right to drive. If arrested
for a crime that the government calls violent, you could lose your license, but
overwhelmingly, most people lose their right to drive as a result what the government has labeled dangerous driving. If a driver has accumulated too many speeding
tickets within a random timeframe, they will lose their right to drive. If arrested
for per se impaired driving, the driver, regardless of whether the driver’s
driving abilities were actually impaired or not, they will lose their license. Current
traffic laws relating to driving behaviors such as speed, passing, use of turn signals, and impairment, along with laws in
respect to the vehicle’s equipment such as tire wear, properly functioning lights, seatbelts, and emissions, all are
enacted under the banner of making the public roadways safer. The presumption is that if ticketed, and
punished for violating a traffic law, drivers will be less inclined to repeat the behavior that could lead to an accident.
That would be great if it were true, but it simply is not. Furthermore, the concept of an ounce of prevention being worth a pound of cure needs to be abolished from the psyche of the lawmaking process. We punish too many Americans for what could have happened. For example, if
a driver undisputedly causes a traffic accident, in which there are fatalities, a jury of the driver’s peers should
stand in judgment and render appropriate punishment, but under no circumstances should the right to drive be part
of a sentence. However, if the same driver is in violation of a traffic safety law prior to an accident,
the only acceptable punishment is a fine. Revoked licenses produce revoked drivers, and revoked drivers
are most often uninsured drivers. There is an inherent risk associated with human beings strapping themselves into steel,
aluminum, and plastic cages and hurling themselves at 70mph down the interstate. Making safer drivers,
safer roads, and safer vehicles should remain a top priority for consumers, drivers, businesses, and the government.
However, if the government must punish the people by making a right into a privilege thus calling
it a crime to do otherwise, then both the government and the people have failed to accomplish much of anything at
all. Your donations sustain the Muckraker Report Archive. Please donate. Ed Haas is the founder, editor, and writer for the Muckraker
Report. |
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