Some reasons you shouldn't drive a car:<p>- Erosion of core horse-riding skills<p>Getting from point A to point B used to be a highly-skilled task, involving a fusion of man and beast working in tandem to accomplish the job. Now, by using a so-called "automobile" (more like "auto-mo-blah", am I right?) we're losing these core skills. Rather than deeply understanding the inner working of the horse's digestive tract, we're left with only the choice: basic petrol or premium?<p>- Over-reliance on roads<p>When driving a car, drivers can quickly reach their destination without understanding the underlying terrain. This leads to what experts (me) call "road dependence", where drivers are too reliant on roads, without checking if the route is the most efficient. There could be a badger path cutting 20 minutes off of your commute!<p>- Lack of ownership and responsibility<p>When going from point A to point B, car drivers shift responsibility for the drive to the roads they drive on. But the roads could expose them to rockslides, ice, highway robbers, bank robbers, and dangerous wildlife. They may think "if the road goes through here, it must be safe", rather than do due diligence and thoroughly research the route beforehand.<p>- Reduced learning opportunities<p>Getting from point A to point B used to be a highly trial-and-error process that forced you to LEARN THE HARD WAY that certain cliffs are too steep for the average horse. Rather than falling off a cliff repeatedly, road drivers don't learn these lessons at all.<p>- Narrowed creative riding<p>When riding a horse, you are beset by constant questions. "Is that cliff safe for my horse to scale", "are those berries safe for my horse to eat", "is that a bee nest in my path or just a lumpy tree branch". These force you to think creatively about your travels. As a road driver, the way is predetermined for you, and you won't be as adaptable if you run into unusual situations.<p>- Dependency on proprietary engines<p>All horses are exactly the same, right down to the color and number of hooves! This makes it easy to transfer your expertise from one horse to another. Unfortunately, once you become a car driver, you'll find that the manufacturers put the damn volume knob in a different place on every single model. And there's nothing you can do to change it, because it's proprietary.