Aizle wrote:
Thanks. It happened a number of years ago.
I certainly understand that it's not possible to eradicate drunk driving. However, I think that the penalties for it today are limp wristed at best. While I don't believe that all drunk driving will be stopped by increasing the penalty, I do think that a lot of drunk driving will be reduced by increasing the penalty. What it really boils down to is a culture change, where everyone gets that driving drunk isn't "ok".
I think most people get that its not OK, but most people who drive drunk either A) don't care, or are alcoholics, or B) aren't aware of how impaired they are.
Penalties have been steadily increasing over the years, although I would say they've been diluted by misguided lowering of BAC limits. By expanding the pool of drunk drivers, we've created a situation where there are so many of them that only the worst offenders get serious consequeneces. Constantly lowering the BAC makes people just play the same game and actually distracts from more serious offenders. Raising the consequences for going over the limit makes it a lot less attractive to play the game and try to get it thrown out if you get arrested because if you lose, it sucks.
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As to your earlier post, yeah I'd be focusing on those who were impared while driving on a suspended license. And yes the BAC is very imperfect. Unfortunately the way of our legal system requires that there be some kind of objective line to say that you've crossed, so it's what we have to work with. Really my point was not that .08 is great or some magical "ok" number, but to point out that it's actually not hard at all to stay underneath it if you're paying any amount of attention at all. And if you're not and getting plastered, then call a **** cab.
Well, it actually doesn't require an objective number, you can convict based on the persons' actions. Its that rather than just use the BAC as evidence, we want to put a hard limit on it. In reality we should really just use it as another piece of evidence demonstrating the person's impairment.