http://www.cbsatlanta.com/news/26675368/detail.html
2/2/2011 11:28:46 PM
Think of all the DMV jobs that would be lost if we didn't have a licensing system in place. Do you really want that blood on your hands?
2/2/2011 11:34:16 PM
i think that WAAAAY more proficiency should be required before getting a license.
2/2/2011 11:39:53 PM
GA republicans are fighting licenses for driving, whereas the NC GOP is proposing needing government issued IDs for voting, essentially requiring voting licenses.
2/2/2011 11:53:32 PM
I will agree that our current driver's license system is a complete waste of time.
2/3/2011 12:30:26 AM
^ uhh… that’s overstating things quite a bit.And how does this apply to illegal immigrants?I can’t see how this proposal as it’s written, and the spirit of it, is not completely idiotic.
2/3/2011 12:35:04 AM
The guy wastes time trying to find a Constitutional basis for why all people should be able to drive cars. That's simply not the case.There either needs to be more stringent requirements for getting a license or I actually agree that the whole license system is pretty pointless. If the guy would just come out and say that he wants to save money by removing the DMV I feel like it would go over better. The only thing that having a drivers' license really does is guarantee that you have insurance, which is a very good thing and that's not even a requirement for a license in all states.If the current licensing and enforcement system actually worked though, I would prefer that. But that seems like too much work for DMV people to handle.
2/3/2011 1:15:30 AM
2/3/2011 7:46:18 AM
2/3/2011 8:55:36 AM
2/3/2011 9:47:35 AM
so it's only illegal immigrants that don't have insurance?
2/3/2011 9:55:20 AM
No one said it was only illegal immigrants.They do make up a large portion of the unlicensed arrests and automobile impounds. They're the reason this problem is big enough to be in news.
2/3/2011 9:59:05 AM
2/3/2011 12:20:25 PM
Well I inferred from your post that the growing number of unlicensed drivers is one of the reasons this proposal is being made. Illegal immigration is the main cause of this growth, so that would make illegal immigrants relevant.I read the article, but Franklin doesn't really provide any worthwhile supportive argument.
2/3/2011 12:28:14 PM
I think the argument that the license actually doesn't do or provide any benefit is a fairly worthwhile one.
2/3/2011 1:02:52 PM
As the legal owner of the roads, it is the state's responsibility to keep unsafe people off the roads. How it decides to do so is up to it. If we eliminate driver's licenses, then the state must still keep a readily accessible list of people that have been banned from driving.
2/3/2011 1:30:58 PM
The current standards for getting and keeping a driver's license are ridiculously stupid. And to say that they should stay this way until we have better and more widespread mass transit is a stupid statement to make. Last time I checked if you weren't good you could practice until you were. Billions of dollars a year could be saved in medical/insurance bills and vehicle safety development if instead the government put their focus on requiring a better driver.Instead we continue to cater to the retard who has a hard time remembering what a stop sign means
2/3/2011 2:17:12 PM
2/3/2011 2:24:45 PM
2/3/2011 2:36:46 PM
2/3/2011 7:44:22 PM
I guess the most fundamental is that it's a standard of identification so that responsibility can be ascribed for traffic accidents and violations.
2/3/2011 8:49:01 PM
Of course, that doesn't require a driver's license, merely a state ID of some sort. There's also the argument to be made that police routinely manage to establish responsibility for other crimes when people don't have ID. After all it is a driver's license, and there is no law which states you need to carry ID with you during your day to day activities. The necessity or lack thereof of an "official" ID is for another discussion, so for now we'll leave it at the point that positive identification does not require a license to drive.
2/3/2011 9:53:02 PM
theDuke866 hardly represents the most rational school of thought on driving laws.
2/3/2011 10:06:11 PM
2/3/2011 11:18:30 PM
2/3/2011 11:37:18 PM
2/4/2011 12:55:54 AM
2/4/2011 1:03:23 AM
2/4/2011 8:06:51 AM
2/4/2011 9:28:04 AM
if you drive your buddy's car drunk and you get caught you're going to jail regardless of if you were licensed or not. If you drive your buddy's car drunk and you get into an accident his insurance is liable.
2/4/2011 9:38:22 AM
It serves a double purpose. It is evidence of your right to drive when the computers are down, or if the local sheriff's department is too small to have a dispatch capable of checking, or if the state has screwed up the paperwork, all very likely scenarios we as drivers never get to hear of, because the police can do a visual check of the license as sufficient evidence in such cases. Yes, licenses can be forged, so can computer systems. Just takes a friend at the DMV. Just because a system is not 100% does not mean you scrap it for nothing. As for the plates: the plates follow the car, the license follows the driver. A car can be illegal by not having insurance, a driver can be illegal by having their license revoked. The two are not related to each other. An illegal driver can be in a car with insurance in someone else's name, and a legal driver can be in a car without insurance.
2/4/2011 9:40:44 AM
Here are the benefits of a Driver's License:1. Proof that a person has taken an initial course in driving and passed a thorough exam2. Proof that a person is medically fit to drive (granted, its a low and rarely tested threshold)3. A national standard for driver records - necessary for insurance and law-enforcement4. A national standard for driver id - one should never be driving a vehicle on public roads without photo ID5. A national standard for general personal identificationI don't mean to imply that the current license system does these things well, but its far better that they be done poorly than not at all. If someone can present a system that better accomplishes all these things, that would be great.
2/4/2011 11:44:44 AM
2/4/2011 12:52:18 PM
2/4/2011 12:55:03 PM
I've been helping a friend of mine learn how to drive. she's from Texas and has had a drivers license for 4 years. but in Texas you don't have to take a road test to get a license. (it probably saves DMV costs). You just have to sign off that you got lessons. so she has a license but could barely drive and was a big danger on the road ]
2/4/2011 2:01:29 PM
Is this about doing away with the physical cards? Or is it also about getting rid of driver certification?^^1,2 - It's not yet practical to do away with physical cards. The technology is available to be completely wireless, but it hasn't saturated the whole of the nation's law enforcement. Outside of major cities, I highly doubt most police departments have the budget to meet the technology needs of cardless documentation.3. No, but it's still a good thing that insurance companies and law enforcement collaborate. Traffic violations short of misdemeanors don't go on your criminal record, so tracking them would be a different system. It doesn't matter if you're just talking about getting rid of the physical card, which is probably not a problem regarding insurance, except that you would have to remember your driver's license #.4. It's not circular reasoning. It makes practical sense for drivers to have a standardized physical ID on them at all times. Threre are plenty of good reasons.5. A state-isssued ID is good for many reasons, and even better if its standardized nationally. There are differences among states, but nationally, all driver's licenses have several common pieces of data.
2/4/2011 5:27:41 PM
2/4/2011 6:05:05 PM
Yeah let's just change the way we do things for the hell of it.
2/4/2011 6:05:39 PM
2/4/2011 7:10:55 PM
2/4/2011 9:26:19 PM
2/5/2011 11:07:14 AM
could you explain how one has a right to stand on private property?
2/5/2011 3:31:40 PM
2/5/2011 4:00:37 PM
2/5/2011 4:19:55 PM
2/5/2011 5:55:45 PM
2/5/2011 6:07:24 PM
2/5/2011 7:08:02 PM
^^ Positive identification is not the same as a license. Further, I can assure you when I purchased alcohol last night that I displayed no proof of ID or age other than myself, which is perfectly legal:
2/6/2011 9:10:11 AM
again, the retarded and blind can buy booze and vote
2/6/2011 1:17:34 PM
Irrelevant. If the state wanted they could make a law to that effect, and it still wouldn't need to issue a license to buy booze to enforce it.
2/6/2011 2:31:35 PM