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Holiday Travel: Is It Time to Ban LED Headlights?

The piercing blue-white beams cause some unnerving side effects.

Let’s face it: Driving at night has become a miserable experience. Unless you enjoy the thrill of going blind while driving 70 miles per hour, chances are you’ve been incensed by the piercing blue-white beams of LED (light-emitting diode) headlights. Was that a nuclear explosion in front of your windshield or just Kyle in his 2025 RAM 1500? Only time will tell, so white-knuckle that steering wheel in the meantime.

LEDs are the brighter, harsher lights that have taken over American roadways, giving their drivers a crystal-clear view while blinding everyone else. Most drivers agree that LED headlights are too bright. Is it time to flip the switch on this bright idea, or would doing so be a nanny-state overstep?

LED – A Not-So-Bright Idea

Like many bad ideas, the widespread usage of LEDs didn’t happen organically: They grew in popularity – well, were basically forced on Americans – by President Barack Obama’s Department of Energy. In 2007, candidate Obama promised to “immediately sign a law that would begin to phase out all incandescent light bulbs,” claiming it “will save American consumers $6 billion a year on their electric bills.” After winning the White House, he urged cities to “upgrade” millions of streetlights to LEDs.

If you were wondering why formerly warm, nostalgic streetlamps now emit a cold, blue stream of light, look no further than our 44th president. Neighborhoods lost ambiance and warmth, and, sadly, headlights followed the same trend.

Upgrade or Health Hazard?

A study on the health impacts of LEDs found that they can cause headaches, eyestrain, and even epileptic seizures. The lights produce a subtle flicker that most people can’t detect with the naked eye – but the human brain picks it up, triggering negative health responses. Exposure to LEDs at night can also “alter the body clock.”

Mark Baker, founder and president of the Soft Lights Foundation, an advocacy group that aims to protect “people and the environment from the harms of Visible Light radiation emitted by products that use Light Emitting Diodes,” pressed the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) on the health concerns related to LEDs in a 2024 letter. The response was pure bureaucratic deflection:

“We are aware of concerns raised about possible adverse effects of certain LED devices, particularly as used in street lighting that emits excess blue light. NHTSA’s focus is on automotive safety, but the agency recognizes that separate expertise resides in sister agencies that are health-focused, such as the Food and Drug Administration.”

In other words: If LED headlights are causing harm, that’s someone else’s department.

Give the People What They Want

With thousands of social media posts bemoaning bright headlights, a 35,000-member subreddit dubbed r/f—yourheadlights, a Facebook group called Ban Blinding LEDs, and a change.org petition condemning extra-bright headlights, it’s safe to say the people have had enough.

And this isn’t just online grumbling: A UK study found a staggering 97% of drivers “get dazzled by oncoming vehicle headlights,” and 70% believe white lights are to blame, as opposed to yellow lights.

“Headlight glare is perceived as a problem by most drivers,” the study concluded. Basically, everyone hates LED headlights. So why not ban them and save us all the trouble of disorienting road rage?

One major roadblock is, of course, the experts, who argue that headlights aren’t bright enough.

“We actually need more light on the road than what we have,” said Greg Brannon, director of automotive engineering at the American Automobile Association (AAA).

Dr. Joanne Wood, a professor in the School of Optometry and Vision Science at the Queensland University of Technology, in Brisbane, Australia, agrees that poor visibility from low light levels “is the leading cause of collisions with pedestrians, cyclists and other low-contrast obstacles at night-time.” Fair enough, but which is worse: low visibility caused by dim lights or low visibility cause by blinding lights? Surely a “happy medium” exists somewhere between candle-lit buggy lamps and retina-melting LEDs.

The Obama-era obsession with energy efficiency created a lighting hellscape that most Americans never asked for and now can’t escape. Is it finally time to reverse the nanny-state LED takeover and give the open road back to the people?

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Liberty Nation does not endorse candidates, campaigns, or legislation, and this presentation is no endorsement.

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