Kill Switch: Guess what was hiding in that 1000 page bill?
Kill Switch: Guess what was hiding in that 1000 page bill?
You
may have heard that as of yesterday, it's been decided that beginning
in 2026 all cars sold in the United States will be equipped with a "kill
switch," whereby the car can be disabled remotely if it is determined
that you are driving poorly.
Rep.
Thomas Massie sought to defund this provision of the Infrastructure
Investment and Jobs Act, a bill of over 1000 pages. His amendment was
defeated.
But I want you to see the difference in how he argues from how the Democrats argue. You'll see it immediately.
First Massie:
My
amendment is simple. It will defund the federal mandate that requires
all new vehicles after 2026 be equipped with a kill switch that can
disable a vehicle if the vehicle has monitored the user's the driver's
performance, and that the vehicle determines that the driver is not
performing well.
It's so
incredible that I have to offer this amendment. It almost sounds like
the domain of science fiction, dystopian science fiction, that the
federal government would put a kill switch in vehicles that would be the
judge, the jury and the executioner on such a fundamental right as the
right to travel freely. But here we are. It is federal law that this is
mandated. And so I am offering this amendment to defund this mandate.
Then Rep. Debbie Wasserman-Schultz (D-FL) delivers her response:
I
rise in opposition to this amendment. Let me be clear. This this the
act that the gentleman is trying to defund does not require auto
manufacturers to install kill switches. It does not do that. Passive
drunk driving technology is a vital tool in safeguarding our loved ones
and other innocent people on our roads. This new technology offers a
lifeline of hope to not only save lives, but to prevent the lifelong
emotional toll and gargantuan costs these accidents inflict on families.
Deadly drunk driving accidents can echo across generations, but we can
seize this opportunity to stop such tragedies.
Between
2019 and 2021, Florida saw a 31% increase in drunk driving crashes in
Mr. Massie's home state of Kentucky, 190 people were killed in drunk
driving crashes in 2021 alone. That was a 26% increase. When we saw
these grim statistics, we acted in a bipartisan fashion in Congress. And
how often do we see that both Republicans and Democrats supported the
Halt act to require auto manufacturers to make this passive technology
standard in new vehicles?
The
sponsor of this misguided amendment will tell you that he worries about
privacy concerns. We heard the same inane calls with seatbelt
requirements. But you don't have a right to engage in potentially fatal
behavior that we know poses a major health threat to public safety.
Passive drunk driving technology is pro-police. This anti-drunk driving
technology lightens the load on police officers, allowing them to focus
on more pressing safety concerns. The importance of this technology goes
far beyond statistics. It's about saving lives, preventing heartbreak
and making our roads safer. It's a passionate call to action to prevent
alcohol-impaired driving from shattering the lives of those we hold
dear.
This amendment, I
understand, was dubbed the kill switch amendment and it does not require
a kill switch. It simply allows, it simply requires passive technology
to help us prevent drunk driving. In the name of the 406 people who that
were killed by a drunk driver in my own state of Florida last year
alone, I urge my colleagues to vote no on this amendment. Let's take
steps to reduce deaths due to drunk driving, not increase them.
Now here's Massie again:
Drunk
driving is a serious problem. That's why 31 states already have a law
to implement interlock ignition technology, where if you've been
convicted of a DUI, that you have to pass this test in order to operate
your vehicle. But this federal law that I seek to defund goes far beyond
that. And I regret that I have to spend some of my time reading the law
to the other side of the aisle. But I will do that.
This
law that was passed in a thousand-page bill two years ago requires that
automobiles can passively monitor the performance of a driver, not the
blood alcohol content, but the performance of a driver of a motor
vehicle to accurately identify whether that driver may be impaired, not
drunk, it says impaired, and prevent or limit motor vehicle operation. That's a kill switch.
Now
the question is, how much time do you have once your dashboard tells
you that it doesn't approve of your driving? What if you're a single
mother and you're out on a in bad weather and you're trying to avoid
some obstacles? Ice perhaps. And you've swerved three times and your
dashboard says: swerve one more time and you're going to be put over to
the side of the road, that you'll have 100 yards to park this vehicle in
the middle of nowhere with your children in the back seat.
This isn't some fantastical scenario. This is what will happen if this is implemented.
And
this is the law. I have read it to you here. Now, you maybe should have
read it two years ago when you all voted for it on that side of the
aisle. But it was in a bill that was 1039 pages long. So I can
understand how you don't know what the law has in it. But I've read it
to you.
Rep. Janice Schakowsky (D-IL) then speaks, evidently having heard none of what Rep. Massie just said:
More
than 10,000 people die every year from drunk driving crashes. Drunk
drivers are seven times more likely to be involved in a fatal crash than
a sober person. So you would think that the Republicans would want to
do something about it. Democrats have done something about it and said
that NHTSA now will have drunk driver protection prevention technology.
You
know, this this technology has the potential of saving thousands of
lives. And I don't see that you're agreeing that we should be saving
those lives. And I would say we should all vote against the Drunk Driver
Protection Act [her sarcastic name for the Massie amendment], and I
yield back.
And finally Massie, who as you'll notice is the only one who doesn't sound like he's reading a fourth-grade book report:
Well,
we actually don't know how this technology is going to work. And they
don't know over at the DoD, either, because we've sent a letter to them
that they haven't responded to yet, asking them: will this have cameras
inside the car? Will it monitor your eyes to see if you're focused on
the road? Will it have cameras on the outside of the car? How will it
know what your performance is relative to the road that you're driving
on if it doesn't in fact know which road you're driving on?
Will
it need to know where you are when you are driving? If so, who has
access to this data? Who has access to those cameras? Will the Fourth
Amendment be followed? Will you require a warrant for your insurance
company to access this data? Will you require a warrant for the
government to access this data once your car has been disabled and now
you're on the side of the road with your children in it for reasons you
don't understand? How long until the police show up? Or what if you
truly are disabled and you're over to the side of the road? Does anybody
show up? How long do you have to get out of the vehicle? Who decides
when your vehicle kill switch is disabled and you get to drive again?
Who's going to adjudicate that on the side of the road?
What
if it's rush-hour traffic? What if you know you've already got points
against you according to your dashboard, and it's monitored your
performance, and now there's somebody's pet in the road, do you swerve
to miss it and get your car disabled? What if there's an emergency
vehicle approaching from behind you, and you know, the right thing is to
swerve off the road and let that vehicle pass? After you've done that
three times and now your car says, do it one more time and we're going
to leave you on the side of the road?
This
is in the law. This will become law in 2026. Every vehicle manufactured
after that. And it's not about drunk driving. If it were, it would just
be about blood alcohol content. This law has far more than that in it.
It violates the Fourth Amendment. It violates so many amendments. It
violates things that are so fundamental to our rights that they're not
even in the Constitution, like the right to travel. And so I urge
support of this amendment. It will defund the law that was passed two
years ago, that the other side of the aisle doesn't even know exists.
It's an open-and-shut case, yet all the Democrats and 19 Republicans voted to keep the kill switch.
The rate at which things are getting crazier is truly out of control.
So when I say I'm having a meeting on protecting your privacy, understand that we're protecting it from complete sociopaths.
Privacy concerns aren't something that only weirdos care about. It's not a niche issue. It's for every last one of us.
The
data gathering by Big Brother and Big Tech is not something unavoidable
that we have to reconcile ourselves to, or that you have to be a tech
whiz to fight against. We're going to talk about simple actions anyone
can take to stymie the bad guys. Register right now to join us, because
it's happening tomorrow:
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