A Government “Safety Feature” That Looks A Lot Like Control
If you needed another reminder that Washington has a control problem, here it is: a federally encouraged “kill switch” inside your car. Not a metaphor. An actual mechanism designed to prevent your vehicle from operating if a system decides you’re “impaired.” And thanks to a cozy bipartisan vote, this idea just took another step toward reality.
Supporters call it safety. Bureaucrats call it progress. Anyone paying attention should call it what it is: an unprecedented intrusion into personal freedom with potentially deadly consequences.
This isn’t some fringe conspiracy. A recent House vote killed an effort to block a mandate born out of the Biden-era infrastructure law. That law nudges automakers toward technology that can monitor drivers and restrict vehicle operation. Fifty-seven Republicans joined Democrats to keep it alive. Conservatives noticed—and they weren’t subtle about their outrage.
Orwell Wasn’t Supposed To Be An Instruction Manual
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis summed it up bluntly, comparing the idea to something ripped straight from 1984. He’s right. A system that monitors your behavior and decides—without a trial, without an appeal, without context—whether you’re allowed to move is not “safety.” It’s algorithmic authority.
Rep. Thomas Massie, who tried and failed to stop this, asked the obvious question: when your car shuts down because it doesn’t like how you’re driving, how do you appeal that roadside verdict? Who do you call when you’re stranded? And how long before “impairment” quietly expands to include stress, age, medication, or a bad night’s sleep?
The technology isn’t even ready. Federal regulators admit they can’t reliably tell the difference between drunk driving and drowsiness or distraction. Yet the plan marches on anyway, because Washington loves mandates first and consequences later.
When “Safety” Becomes A Life-Threatening Risk
Imagine this scenario. You’re driving your child to the emergency room. You’re exhausted, emotional, panicked. A sensor decides your reaction time looks off. Your car limits speed—or shuts down entirely. Congratulations: the safety feature just created a medical emergency.
Or picture being stranded on a dark highway at night because your vehicle misreads your behavior. Or losing power in extreme heat or freezing cold. These aren’t hypotheticals. Machines fail. Sensors glitch. Software misfires. When that happens in a car, people can die.
And let’s talk about the elephant in the room: hackers and criminals. Any system that can remotely restrict or disable a vehicle is a gold mine for bad actors. If the government or manufacturers can do it, so can someone else eventually. A car that can be shut down is a car that can be weaponized—perfect for robbing drivers, staging ambushes, or causing chaos.
Bipartisan Comfort With Power They’ll Never Give Back
What’s most infuriating isn’t just that this idea exists. It’s how casually lawmakers defend it. The same politicians who can’t secure borders, balance budgets, or fix basic infrastructure are somehow trusted to oversee a nationwide vehicle control system.
Once this tech is normalized, it won’t stop with drunk driving. It never does. Speeding. Unpaid tickets. Missed inspections. Wrong political protest in the wrong city? Power, once granted, is always expanded.
This is why so many voters feel betrayed. Because freedom doesn’t usually vanish in one dramatic moment. It erodes quietly, under the comforting language of “public safety,” while politicians assure you it’s for your own good.
Bottom Line
A government-influenced kill switch in your car is not a safety feature—it’s a precedent. One that risks lives, invites abuse, and hands enormous power to institutions that have repeatedly shown they can’t be trusted with it. Your car should answer to you, not to a sensor, a server, or a distant federal agency. If that sounds extreme, ask yourself this: when the switch flips, who’s really in control?
We know the progressive communist democrats want to kill you, but apparently, 57 republicans are willing to join in.
We are so screwed.
— Steve
Here are the 57 Republicans who jumped the aisle to kill you in an emergency…
Arkansas: French Hill, Steve Womack; California: Ken Calvert, Vince Fong, Kevin Kiley, Young Kim, David Valadao; Colorado: Ken Buck Hurd; Florida: Gus Bilirakis, Mario Diaz-Balart, Neal Dunn, Randy Fine, Carlos Gimenez, Brian Mast, Maria Elvira Salazar; Georgia: Brian Jack; Guam: James Moylan; Idaho: Mike Simpson; Illinois: Mike Bost, Darin LaHood; Iowa: Randy Feenstra, Mariannette Miller-Meeks, Zach Nunn; Kentucky: Hal Rogers; Michigan: John James; Montana: Ryan Zinke; Nebraska: Don Bacon; Nevada: Mark Amodei; New Jersey: Tom Kean Jr.; New York: Andrew Garbarino, Nick LaLota, Mike Lawler, Nicole Malliotakis, Elise Stefanik; North Carolina: Chuck Edwards, Tim Moore, Greg Murphy; Northern Mariana Islands: Kimberlyn King-Hinds; Ohio: Dave Joyce, Max Miller, Mike Turner; Oklahoma: Stephanie Bice, Tom Cole, Frank Lucas; Pennsylvania: Brian Fitzpatrick, Mike Kelly, Dan Meuser, Glenn Thompson; Tennessee: Chuck Fleischmann; Texas: John Carter, Jake Ellzey; Utah: Celeste Maloy, Blake Moore; Virginia: Jen Kiggans, Rob Wittman; Washington: Dan Newhouse; Wisconsin: Derrick Van Orden.