Dusty wrote:
Quote:
The main problem with that suggestion is that many people would fail when they hadn't touched a drop.
I am inclined to agree.
A while back I commented on a exercise performed by the "Nationwide" news programme back in the late 70's.
They took a group of people to the TRL and had them perform a range of tasks behind the wheel while plying them with varying quantities of V&O.
The range of ability/performance was staggering.
At the extremes was a young woman who performed poorly when sober and was out of the contest after a single drink. At the other end was a (Clearly seasoned inveterate alcoholic) chap in his 40's who performed pretty well to start off with and whose performance actually improved with intoxication right up until they stopped testing (by which time he was 3 times over the limit!)
'Common sense' (the politically correct version of it) might at best, begrudgingly admit the existence of the latter, but since such would be seen as a rare undesirable anomaly, neither the public majority nor the legislative or judicial minority would think themselves wrong in not protecting the latter character from some sort of penal code.
(It may not reek of social eugenics, but I detect a strong note of neo-prohibitionism).
Quote:
Despite all the claims of careful scientific analysis the current limits are actually just a number plucked out of the air imposed to make administration and enforcement easier (Just like speed limits mostly)
Why do you think the legal blood alcohol limit was lowered?
Why do you think speed limits are on a downward trend?
Why did Candace Lightner oppose the lowering of the American legal BAC from .10 to .08?
Quote:
Personally I am not that bothered about people who Drink and drive. I am only bothered by those who drink, Drive and crash! Since the former outnumber the latter by, Oooh, Half a million to one or so, drinking and driving isn't actually that dangerous in itself.
What is more, Those that DO go on to have serious accidents are almost always doing something else spectacularly bad as well as being legally drunk, The people who drive home carefully don't really feature in the accident statistics. Though they are the most likely to be stopped by suspicious Police and banned! (The ones that have the serious accidents are only ever caught "after" the event!)
Doesn't seem right somehow!
I, like most people, am bothered by people who fail to follow the Rules in my sig. Crashing, by definition, is breaking either or both of the first two rules.
Besides neo-prohibitionism, we are also being conditioned to accept invasions of privacy, with sobriety checkpoints.
For the majority of the population, however, I stand by my educated guess, that a significant number of people who can otherwise drive very well, could mostly continue to drive well while legally inebriated; excepting their ability to deal with the unexpected, which I suspect is probably the first thing to go upon drinking, for the majority of people anyway.