You’d had better take care of your current car and keep all those fluid services up to date, as these new already way overpriced cars are going to get much more complex and expensive with the new requirements Demonrats passed a couple years ago, due to hit in 2026. Newer cars have already gone too far, and some manufacturers just won a lawsuit so they can continue to read your text messages and see who you’re communicating with through their connected infotainment systems interfacing with your phone. I don’t think people realize how modern cars are already spying on them as well as having a black box with data from before an accident, and to think future cars will judge your driving with the ability to deny you the use of your vehicle. And they’re already using brain scanners on some truck drivers as the WEF pushes brain transparency technology for all workers in the coming future.
By Harold Hutchison
Republican Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky said Thursday that a “kill switch” provision from the 2021 infrastructure law would be “a backseat driver” for Americans.
Massie’s amendment to kill the provision was defeated by the House of Representatives Tuesday by a 229-201 vote. The provision was included as part of the bipartisan infrastructure bill President Joe Biden signed into law in 2021.
“People said I’m a conspiracy theorist for saying this is in the legislation, but I actually had to read the Democrats the bill that they passed two years ago,” Massie told Fox News host Laura Ingraham. “They passed this in 2021 as part of a 1,039-page bill to require that your car can monitor your driving performance. And if it thinks you are not driving well, it could disable your vehicle.”
“Imagine you are a mom with kids in the car and you swerve for a deer and you pulled over for an emergency vehicle to go by and you have only got one swerve left,” Massie continued. “Before it shuts you down and takes you to the side of the road. My question is, how do you appeal your conviction when you are sitting at the side of the road with a car that won’t run, who knows where stranded?”
Massie took issue with a characterization of the provision from Democratic Rep. Debbie Dingell of Michigan.
“This isn’t a breathalyzer, 31 states already have ignition interlock devices where if you have been convicted of a DUI, you have to blow through that in order to start your car,” Massie said. “That’s not what this is. This bill also has the ability, it says, car manufacturers need to somehow passively monitor the air in the car to see if you have been drinking. The problem with that is what if you are the designated driver and you are trying to get somebody home who has had too much to drink? There is so many ways this could go wrong. It’s basically a backseat driver and nanny.”
Massie noted that Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, one of the most liberal members in the House, voted to remove the provision.