Driving While Driving

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A childhood friend and former dance student, Isabella, was in her first year on a division one-dance team at a university in upstate New York. Her dream was to have the honor of dancing with an international dance troop traveling the world. After one fatal decision and barley making it out alive of a preventable car accident she was forced to give up her dream and never function normal again. Isabella had broken four different bones in her right arm, three upper ribs, her lower back, and her right collarbone. She also suffered from a lacerated liver, a bruised heart, and a duel brain injury. The median nerve, which makes your thumb move, was found in her right temple. And before being pulled from her car, Isabella suffered a massive stroke. …show more content…

Phil LeBeau of CNBC and Car and Driver Magazine partnered to conduct a test that would measure the reaction time of men texting while driving and those same men driving while intoxicated. The test was conducted on a deserted airstrip (taxiway) in a Honda Pilot, with high tech equipment that could measure their speed, reaction time, break pedal position, and their steering angle. They were tested on their reaction times while texting and driving, and also while legally intoxicated with a .08 blood alcohol content with the help of a few screwdrivers (vodka and orange juice). Phil LeBeau the author of the article “Texting While Driving Worse Than Drinking and Driving” was in the vehicle while all the tests were being conducted. The results are quite shocking. Unimpaired, the reaction time at 70 mph was approximately half a second, or 51.5 feet before braking. Intoxicated, the average reaction time was an extra four feet. Reading a text message, averaged an extra 36 feet before braking. While writing a text message averaged an extra 70 feet before braking. In a real world situation these results are extremely frightening considering traffic, signals, pedestrians, and much more. According to the Texting and Driving Safety website, a car traveling 55 mph is equivalent to driving the length of one football field without looking at the road. It takes a minimum of five seconds for an average person to read or send a text, and in those short five seconds at 55 mph, when you’re not one hundred percent focused on the road, it may be too late for you to

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