I agree that the judge made an error in his ruling, and that I would consider what took place to be a conscious choice, not a reflexive action. But otherwise I disagree with you. I think that absolutely some actions while driving are justifiably reactionary, as I've already covered in post #8. Saying it's criminal to be reflexively distracted while driving is kind of ridiculous as reflexes are uncontrolled reactions. Your example of the needle is different; you are expecting it and so don't react. Applying that logic to driving isn't possible.
I think it is. Just as you decide I won't drink, you decide I won't respond to my phone. I'll turn it off, the same way I put the open cognac in the trunk. Just as you decide to put your coffee cup in a safe place so it won't spill and make a mess of your desk, you decide to load your car safely, whether it's big stuff or small.
Mostly, you decide, "I am driving a deadly machine among people stupider and more reckless than me, on roads whose maintenance has been under-budgeted for decades and contracted always to the cheapest bidder. the only way any of us is getting home safely is if I devote my
full attention to driving. Whatever the distraction I will
not let my attention — never mind 50% of my control and my entire vision — waver. Until I'm stopped safely off the road,
nothing is more important." To me that's quite analogous to how you psych yourself for a needle.
If his passenger instantly morphed into a fiery dragon I'd certainly agree he couldn't have mentally prepared his car or himself. Or if his fizzy water had suddenly exploded and drenched him. But a badly stowed water-bottle predictably rolling on the floor?
"Hey Bud, Sumthin's effing rolling around under my feet! Get it for me wouldya, before I have an accident." OR <
"Mm, that'd be the stupid waterbottle I stuck under my seat. I guess the Owner's Manual wasn't enough to keep it from rolling. I'll slide my heels down to keep it from getting under the pedals while I signal right. OoH! Bike lane, Serious Shoulder Check!> "Sorry Bud, gotta stop for a sec and get a damn water bottle that broke free"
It's not that I think reflexive responses are bad or criminal; they sometimes can save lives. But driving is too important and dangerous to let any and every trivial thing distract you; you're supposed to have the mental maturity to handle the small stuff so when a criminal asshole in the other lane ducks under the dash and veers across the centre line you'll be ready to act reflexively.
And intelligently.