I don't fully understand 2.). If you were so curious, why did you not just google it? You'd get your answer much more quickly.
? I did google it and I got conflicting information.
How many times must this be explained to you Art? This is a skeptics forum. Claims are to be supported by those making the claim.
You have to be truly out there to go from "people have the right to decide how to run their businesses" to "people have the right to rape".
Huh? Is this a strawman? Who said anything about rape? Why is your sentence in quotes?
I'm just answering your questions. Why do you keep asking about it, if you don't want me to talk about it?
I just want to understand.
No, it's a very important distinction.
No, not at all. It is a distinction with no difference. Asserting that it is an important distinction doesn't make it so.
It's rare that it's absolutley necessary. If it's an emergency, you can pull over. And the more important the call is, the less you should be driving while making it.
I never said that it was absolutely necessary. Please don't make strawmen. I said that it would be a hardship for me. My phone is very important. I travel 60,000 miles a year and I'm on a very tight schedule. Pulling over to talk would require a significant reduction in the amount of work that I do. I'm barely keeping my head above water as it is. I've lost almost all of my programming work and I don't have any other options that I know of.
It would really hurt me.
No, it would not be punishment. If this is just "semantics", why do you insist on using an incorrect term?
It is not an incorrect term. You are simply playing semantics. You want "punish" to be defined in your own narrow way and then play gotcha because I used a word the way you don't like but that is just semantics. The term is used the way I used it all of the time.
You're asking the wrong question. The correct question is "What did he mean by 'lowest common denominator'?" And the answer to that question is that he was saying that safety rules should be designed to be applied broadly, rather than having to have separate standards in each situation.
You still must decide what is the lowest common denominator. I'll concede that the term has meaning for the way he used it but I think it fails without defining that term. Which is why I asked what is the lowest common denominator.
Did you not read what I wrote?
"or banning it would cause MORE hardship"
I think that is the point that I'm trying to make. Hardship is in the eye of the beholder. Which is why I asked the question in the first place and why we are right back to square one.
Assuming that both were as dangerous would you ban either and why? That's a reasonable question. I'm not trying trying to force anyone into a decision. Where you fail to understand me is to assume that I'm trying to prove something. I'm not. I'm trying to understand and I'm trying to get others not to knee-jerk ban cell phones.
I have said over and over and over that I am willing to accept a ban on cell phones even hands free cell phones depending on the evidence. I simply want to know if others will be consistent.
If the analogy with conversations with passengers is wrong then explain why. Don't simply attack me. I started all of this very reasonable asking reasonable questions and I could not get answers. After a couple pages I think I finally got through and Jim and I understand each other.
Now I've got you.
