I agree with you that new drivers don't know all of the risks, or they think they're invincible.
I am not talking about new drivers. I am not even talking about people who drive for only a few hours a day, or who have had no driver training since they got their first licence.
My comments apply equally - indeed, perhsps more so - to professional drivers, and to drivers with higher licence classes, who have passed several driving tests of increasing difficulty, and who are given ongoing and continuous training on a regular basis.
But it also boils down to responsibility and many kids have grown up to care only their own needs, wants, and desires without any thought to the risk to others.
That's a popular idea, and has a grain of truth in it. But it's a very small part of the problem. Most at-fault drivers in most crashes are not selfish, and do not act without consideration for others as a consequence of their selfishness.
This is what the psychologists call "fundamental attribution problem"; When I do something risky while driving, it's because I am tired, or have to deal with an urgent situation, or made an honest but very rare mistake, or some other good reason; But when someone else does the same thing, it's because they are selfish, or heartless, or malicious, or stupid.
Normal humans are always quick to excuse themselves, and quick to condemn others.
The fact that they generally don't think that they are responsible even after it has happened is exactly what this discovery addresses so that these accidents won't occur.
Nothing you have posted qualifies as a "discovery", and none of it is capable of addressing this problem, which is a basic psychological defence mechanism without which we would all be paralysed by fear of our own shortcomings.
Children learn early on how to be responsible if that was part of their upbringing.
No, they really don't. They learn how to avoid getting caught.
It is not inevitable that preventable accidents are here to stay.
Yes, it absolutely is. Humans aren't capable of eliminating all accidents.
This is not like teaching a blind man that he should be able to see because that's impossible. It's not impossible to teach new drivers what causes accidents and what they can do to avoid them.
Of course it's not. But it IS impossible to have them apply that knowledge perfectly, 100% of the time.
It is giving them careful instruction to help them see what could happen if they take chances. If they are unable to follow the do's and don'ts of good driving, and they can't see that this can happen to them just as much as anyone if they take the risk, then why does the government give them a license?
A driver's licence is only intended to show that a person is able to be trusted to continue learning without direct supervision in real-time. It is the absolute
minimum standard to be allowed on public roads. It absolutely does not identify the holder as a "competent driver", for any given value of "competent".
Rhetorical question. No need to answer.
Perhaps you should think harder about that question; And about why you think the answer is so obvious that it makes a rhetorical point, while I think it shows your lack of a deep understanding of the subject.