Xequecal wrote:
Jasmy wrote:
Xequecal wrote:
My level of sympathy decreases as BAC increases, but I could totally understand how someone could be on the road with a 0.08 and not realize it.
One drink and you don't get behind the wheel!! Simple as that!! I've lost a young cousin due to a drunk driver with multiple DUIs!! Almost lost her sister, her brother, her mother, and her aunt!! Just don't **** do it!!! If you do, I hope they throw the **** book at you!!! If they don't, watch your back, because I will be looking for you!!!
I sympathize, but a 0.08 is low enough that for some metabolisms you could still be at 0.08 even after a full night's sleep and driving to work in the morning.
While I generally sympathize with Jasmy's sentiment, and DEFINITELY sympathize with her loss, Xeq actually makes an excellent point here. It's very hard for a person to have an idea of their actual BAC. How many drinks, how large they were, how far apart, how fast each was drunk, body size, composition, stomach contents, etc all play into BAC. You might say "but you don't have to worry about that if you don't srive fter drinking anything" but that brings up the question how long after drinking is "after"? The answer is, it depends. A large guy who goes to a tailgate party before a football game, has 2 or 3 beers, and then watches the game without drinking anything for 3 or 4 hours, for example, probably won't have more than a miniscule BAC. Is he "driving after drinking"? PRobably not, but if he wrecks on the wy home and comes up with say, 0.008% BAC, 1/10th the legal limit, some people will still advocate hammering him, and some of them even if the accident wasn't actually his fault!
On the other hand a small, thin person (or actually even a big person, but it takes more booze) could be still drunk the next morning after a night's sleep. The human body, on average, processes alcohol out of the system at a rate of about 0.015% BAC per hour, so at the legal limit it will take a bit over 5 hours to be completely free. However, that also tells us that at 0.16% BAC the person will o
nly be free of lcohol after almost 10 hours. A person who parties late and gets up early for work might feel sober after, say, 5 hours sleep because they're a lot less drunk than they were before they slept but they aren't actually sober. Are they "driving after drinking"? Not exactly, and since most people aren't aware of either their BAC or the rate alcohol is processed out, its not exactly fair to say they "drove drunk" in the sense of doing it knowingly, although they still are responsible for what happens.
As for "one drink and don't get behind the wheel", one word: NO!
That's a fine personal rule, but as a matter of policy its a HORRIBLE idea. As it is, 0.08% is already TOO LOW. The lower you make it, the more you divert the attention of the police from the more seriously impaired ones. An experienced officer with a cooperative arrestee and no complicating circumstances can have the arrestee processed and out of the station about one hour after making the initial stop. That's 1/8th of a shift, typically (less for a 10 or 12 hour shift department but they have fewer shifts per person per week so it all works out the same in the end) and he's probably got some paperwork that still needs to be done. If there are other charges, multiple arrestees to be dealt with (the other arrestees obviously won't be for DUI if from the same vehicle), the person is uncooperative, or has to be transported to a jail (common for small departments that don't have their own) a single arest can easily stretch to 3 or 4 hours or more!
Spending all this time on reltively unimpaired drivers wastes time the police could be spending on the myriad of other things that could be done, not to mention drivers that are significantly more impaired.
Worse, the "drunk driving" problem and BAC reductions are self-perpetuating. Every time you lower the BAC you get a bunch of new "drunk drivers" who weren't drunk drivers before, in the statistics. This makes the problem appear to be an "epidemic". Worse, you won't find much in the way of statistics that differentiate drunk drivers by BAC although you'll find plenty of anecdotes leading you to think they're generally 2-3x the legal limit.
BAC effects charts also gloss over this by giving effects on the person for a wide BAC range; for example on the Wikipedia BAC page chart it lists the symptoms for a range from 0.03-0.059% and again for 0.06 to 0.10%. Note that the first range almost doubles and the second increases by 67%. I don't think I have to tell anyone here that a person at 0.06% is significantly less impaired than a person at 0.09%, or 50% higher BAC.
Again, Jasmy, you have my total sympathy. I have no sympathy whatsoever for drunk drivers. That said, I think the legal limit right now is too low and diverts attention and resources that could be better spent on worse offenders. That lawyer Xez cited earlier does have one good point: MADD is a nutcase extremist group in many regards.