I don't know if the question test is as easy as the car license test (I got a waiver from taking the safety class), but that's way too lenient too. I don't care what they do after they get the license, but they ought to at least make it so only someone who's really ready to drive/ride ought to get a license.
Driving's not all that different than Aces High, really. The bottom line is the majority of the population is never going to get all that good at it. Considering how limited our public transportation options are around here, living with people who don't know what they're doing is just the way it is. A lot of nice people die because of it, but there's not really any way to change it.
Following numerous high-profile teenage driving deaths in Connecticut (sadly, many from my particular town), new laws have been passed upping the requirements for first time license applicants, and restricting teen drivers from driving at certain times and with certain passengers, and, I believe, upping the age before they can start (not sure on this last one).
I have serious doubts that this will accomplish anything save making it even harder for a teenager to get a job around here. When pretty much the only jobs that'll take teenagers have shifts that close at 11 p.m., and they aren't allowed to drive past 10 p.m., I don't really know what they're going to do.
All I do know, is no law on the books ever stopped me from thinking I was invincible when I was 16.
Also worth noting is the only real way to get better at driving is to drive often. As gas prices and teen restrictions increase, average driving skill will decrease.