Apps help parents track teenage drivers: The countercultural power of accountability

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If you’re a parent of teenagers, you know the fear of
watching your teenagers drive off without you in the car. If your kids are
infants, you know that day is coming (unless autonomous cars intervene). If
your kids are adults like mine, you still remember the days when they began
driving. And you probably pray for their safety when you know they’re on the
road even now.

Well, as they say, there’s an app for that. Several, in
fact.

Tech companies now offer apps that allow parents to track their children’s driving habits, from speeding and braking to cell phone usage and texting. Insurance carriers have created their own versions, some of which offer discounts for safe driving.

Interestingly, much of the technology goes two ways, meaning that children can track their parents’ driving as well. For example, a father recently rented a Ford Mustang convertible and drove it on a back road at ninety-eight miles per hour. His daughter took a screenshot and texted it to her parents with the question, “What’s going on?”

Such accountability is an unsurprising extension of the
technological innovations of our day. When our online shopping and browsing
habits are transparent to marketers and our phones continually give out our
location, we should expect that apps can track our driving habits as well.

Such accountability is surprising, however, in a countercultural way.

The countercultural power of accountability

Our postmodern society is convinced that there are no absolute truths (which is an absolute truth claim). “You have no right to force your ethics on me” is the mantra of our day.

But the driving app phenomenon shows that we are willing to take such relativism only so far. Parents want their children to drive safely (as do children their parents). We want them to obey the absolute laws of the road. We are unwilling for “their truth” to be “our truth.” We know somehow that our children are safest…

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