You say "them" as though they are a subclass of humans, a person who gets a DUI is a person who made a mistake and it usually only happens once, you are using a tense as if these people have a disease and they do it always. This is where the propaganda comes into play.
I used "them" as a referent back to the phrase "Most people who get DUI's." A simple use of a pronoun so that I didn't have to repeat the phrase "people who get DUI's."
I didn't set the tense. I used the tense that was in the post that I quoted. Present tense "get," "don't hit or kill" was used in the post,
not "got," or "didn't hit or kill."
The point was, if drunk drivers aren't kept off the roads, they will have more opportunities to get into wrecks.
Also, I never said drunk driving was a disease. I don't believe it is. It's a behavior and that can be changed.
I would agree with you, but statistically speaking, it is a minuscule amount of deaths IN COMPARISON to the other deaths of people in this country. Also, in the circumstance where the drunk driver is not at fault; the drunk driver is at fault in the eyes of the law regardless of the evidence.
That is a good point however, it is most likely going to happen, the fact of the matter is it is not illegal to drive with alcohol in your system, but it is illegal to drive heavily intoxicated. Simply don't drink and drive is a bit of a narrow minded answer, especially when it is not even illegal.
Maybe it seems narrow minded but it's the only sure way of not driving drunk. If drivers think they know how much alcohol they can consume before it effects their driving then that's the chance they are taking.
That sounds like entrapment.. that would be similar to saying marijuana is illegal for people to posses but it can be sold in stores, creating an environment where the individual can be penalized where the facility pushing the stuff has no penalty.
No, that's not the same. For one thing, it's not entrapment--the police aren't luring people into bars. Secondly, the police don't pour alcohol down the throats of drivers.
Once again drinking and driving is not illegal, driving too intoxicated is... simple.
Apparently, for some drivers, acknowledging that they are too intoxicated to drive is not so simple or else they wouldn't do it. If a driver doesn't drink at all, then there's no doubt.
Most bars do have parking lots of some sort, even in downtown areas, for someone who doesn't drink you seem to know a lot about bars.
I know my communities. I know where the parking is and where it isn't. I read the newspaper and watch the news so I know what people are complaining about. Downtown parking and neighborhood bars are common complaints in the news.
A designated driver is a good idea, but once again it is usually a one time mistake people make, when it is legal to drink and drive but illegal to drink too much and drink it creates a big grey area that favors the law.
Actions have consequences, and that's a fact of life.
They should be penalized harsher, since they should know better than the average person. But that doesn't happen, so obviously there is something wrong with the justice system.
Well, I think
all drivers know that they're not supposed drive drunk. However, persons in positions of authority need to be held accountable just like everyone else.
Once again it is not a disease it is a mistake, and once again it is not illegal to drink and drive.
So, how would you ensure that the "mistake" doesn't get made again?
Simply put, accidents do happen; that is why they are called accidents. However a sober person who kills another person in an accident pays very little in fees in comparison to a person who doesn't hurt anyone and gets a DUI. The fact that there are almost 4 times more deaths from sober bad drivers is the point; accidents happen regardless of alcohol or not.
Traffic collisions haven't been called "accidents" for a few years now by most agencies.
http://blog.driversed.com/why-we-use-crash-not-accident/
Drinking before driving is not an accident. Texting while driving is not an accident. Speeding, tailgating, unsafe lane changes aren't accidents.
The propaganda is the pushing of public support for harsher fines and penalties through various media sources. People have been drinking for a long time in this country, but it wasn't until recently that we have seen ridiculous fines and penalties being thrown at people. Also in an scenario where a drunk person is killed by a person who is sober and driving reckless.. The drunk person is at fault no matter what the evidence, this manipulates the figures.
What are those figures?
You will believe what you want, all i'm saying is it is not as black and white as you would like to make it seem. Unfortunately today, laws are not like they used to be, police are very strict to younger people; and you simply wouldn't understand because you are from a different time and don't have to experience the oppressive nature of todays justice system the way younger Americans do.
And you don't know much about history. If you think the justice system is harsh on young people today you obviously don't know anything about civil rights oppression and battles in the 1960's. The Miranda warning wasn't even established until 1966.
"Today, roughly 30% of America’s traffic fatalities involve a drunk driver. Back in the 1950s and ‘60s, that percentage was closer to 50%."
http://paleofuture.gizmodo.com/drunk-driving-and-the-pre-history-of-breathalyzers-1474504117
Of course, young people in the USA today can't legally drink until age 21, so the really young drivers don't have a legal limit. Back in my ancient day there were still places where 18 year olds could legally drink, so even more of them could be legally drinking but driving.
It was a lot worse back then. You don't know what "strict" is.