Your viewpoints are aspirational at best. Nothing else is in play to help guarantee a minimum bar of driver skills.I disagree.
All drivers have a diversity of skills but they all should have a minimum skill set at least, or get off the road.
Teaching people that they don't need to focus or take responsibility for their actions is a major problem.
What if the little light in the mirror doesn't work and someone relies on it and just changes lanes.
They think they don't need to look out the windscreen because the vehicle will automatically keep in the lane, adjust the speed and apply the brakes if the vehicle in front stops. Maybe they can get on their phone or do their makeup.
You avoid accidents by focus and concentration. Not giving up control to a machine.
This is why we have these clowns climbing into the back seat of their Tesla and letting auto drive take over.
I have driven on the autobahn at 230 kmh (143 MPH) and believe me I was looking out the windscreen, holding the wheel, not chatting and I was focussed.
I was also overtaken by several cars and a motorbike.
Again, you keep bringing up your personal approach for driving. I am saying that means nothing in a statistical context. A few good drivers on the road doesn’t move the statistical needle.
So in light of that , use technology, including self driving cars, in the future to take over something that humans are poorly optimized for.
Yeah I don’t give a sht if someone likes “driving”. A swarm of autonomous vehicles in communication with one another is more efficient than humans operators