With all due respect, it is up to the individual in any professional to make sure s/he has the right tools/training for the trade.
Which is exactly what those individuals aren't getting from the carriers who advertise training as a benefit, and sometimes charge a lot of money for it, too.
There is no utopian program that covers every type of situation/condition that one is going to encounter. Thus, it is up to the individual to learn as s/he goes and pick up where the training leaves off.
'Utopian' is a gross mischaracterization of a training program that addresses the normal and usual conditions all drivers will face between November and April - and a condescending deflection of the very responsibility that is promoted in the next breath.
I agree, there’s always room for improvement with respect to training but it will never be a perfect science.
Don't ask for perfect, adequate is fine. But it will never even reach the level of adequate if the reality of the differences between June & December is simply ignored, forcing drivers to learn how to handle icy mountains on their own. Call it machismo, or just pride, but how many drivers will admit they lack the knowledge required? Not enough to skip the subject during training, that's for sure.
Ranting and raving
Excuse me - this is discussing. Calling it' ranting and raving' is just more of the dismissive condescension that furthers nothing but someone's ego.
about that reality does nothing more than invite unwanted government intervention and more needless regulations.
Business has proven itself to be no more or less trustworthy than people in general, some of whom think nothing of harming others. Probably less, actually, as 'business' has a current politically correct cachet that overlooks almost anything [especially if it claims to provide jobs]. That fact makes government intervention and regulation as necessary as law, which is neither unwanted nor needless in most cases.
"Trust, but verify" is excellent advice.