What is the anti-MADD quick-and-dirty smackdown?
As some of you know, I'm reading stuff that brings me into contact with MADD members. I get stuck when they say "Rights? My son is dead! Where are HIS rights?!?"
Well, unfortunately, he doesn't have any because he's dead. While true, that's a little bit in-your-face for me, and observers, if any, tend to think I "don't care". The fact is that I care about different things in a different way than they do.
But what can be said to that? Somehow, "taking away other boys' rights will do nothing for your son" leaves you open to the roadside sobriety checks and everything that can go with them aren't taking away anybody's rights!!!
Well, um, yes they are.
No they're not.
You see where I'm going here.
I'd like something snappy that will stop them in their stilettos.
All assistance appreciated.
Well, unfortunately, he doesn't have any because he's dead. While true, that's a little bit in-your-face for me, and observers, if any, tend to think I "don't care". The fact is that I care about different things in a different way than they do.
But what can be said to that? Somehow, "taking away other boys' rights will do nothing for your son" leaves you open to the roadside sobriety checks and everything that can go with them aren't taking away anybody's rights!!!
Well, um, yes they are.
No they're not.
You see where I'm going here.
I'd like something snappy that will stop them in their stilettos.
All assistance appreciated.
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some part of your argument is missing - the assumed premise part, I think.
I don't think reason has a part in this conversation; I'm just hoping to get them to shut up."
It's a bit like the "you can't understand the problems of the man from Zamunga, because you're not from there, so you have no standing."
hmmm.
Your idea about alcohol is simplistic. It is known to boost endorphines. "Beta-endorphin release produces a general feeling of well-being." http://www.attcnetwork.org/explore/prior...
In addition it has been shown to boost cognitive reasoning. "The finding that older women who consume moderate amounts of alcohol score better on cognitive tests suggests that it can." http://www.nature.com/news/2005/050117/f...
Drinking alcohol is not about impairing your ability to exercise sound logic. We know that the brain needs time to reorganize (down time which includes sleep) and to function more effectively. In fact many great scientific discovers have occurred when people have turned off their immediate processing (active thinking) and allowed their mind to free associate. Now I would argue this can only work if you first put in the hard work of active thinking, but I would also argue that alcohol also provides this down time for free association and reorganizing the brain.
My personal "tragedy" wasn't care of drunk driving but rather "drunk living". (alcoholism) and the destruction that these folks are capable of knows no boundaries.
I still don't support MADD. When the problem is a spiritual one, physical punishment rarely works.
Of course it is a crime to be falling down drunk and get behind the wheel.
(I didn't say blow .08 - I said being falling-down drunk.)
So I have sometimes wondered if the change in the legal definition was from a 'prevent drunk driving' model to a 'generate revenue' model.
It is my belief that we have generated a Catch 22 situation here: if a patrol officer pulls over a car that is driving erratically, they have difficulty getting a conviction unless they can show that the individual is drunk (or on drugs). So this is where their focus has gone. (One is just as much endangered by a person who is 'driving tired', after all.) If the public had greater confidence in the police, then we would be more supportive of relying on the officer's decision - and we would not have to measure blood alcohol or not tag non-drunk reckless drivers. But that is not the case: we do not trust the police, so we enact laws that rely on measurable procedures.
I personally think that the outward display of erratic driving should result in a penalty and cars that are driving normally should be left alone. Since we are now in an age of universal video cameras, we should rely on the report of those to ticket all drivers who are performing erratically and leave a person's body to their own control.
The issue of drunk driving is going to become a degenerate question: Inasmuch as a cowboy's horse could get him safely home when he was drunk, an autonomous car will be able to get us home when we are thoroughly plastered.
Jan
1. I make reasonable judgments based on experience and science. As was said earlier, sharing a bottle of wine over a two hour meal, will likely metabolize most of the alcohol. Eating a large Thanksgiving meal and driving home poses more risk, in fact studies show more accidents are actually caused by drivers falling asleep at the wheel. Do you suggest no one drive home after a big meal is eaten on a holiday?
2. you will have to give me an example of what you mean here. Are you suggesting that by my support of limiting road blocks and mandatory blood draws, I am encouraging others to drive while impaired?
To your last point, I completely agree. Even the founders of MADD in both the US and Canada felt that their grief in support of the organization was hijacked by turning the operations into a Big Business. Please see db's post on point.
I'm pretty sure it is generally accepted that most people do not get adequate sleep anymore.
("Most" just means over half - but in this case I think it's considered much higher than that.)
Their research concludes, therefore, that the majority of people are essentially driving drunk.
Reminds me of the research that said talking with your passenger is just a distracting as talking on your cell phone.
I remain skeptical.
(Please note I do not consider moderate blood alcohol levels to be an accurate indicator of impairment.
And I did concede the obvious danger of someone actually falling asleep.)
Aaaanyway, sometimes we have to simply agree to disagree, neh?
Instead of focusing on a snappy comeback (which would require a logical and focused mind to either appreciate or absorb), why not simply ask them how long ago their particular incident occurred and whether or not they have sough professional or clerical assistance in dealing with it. Once they rejoin reality and make peace with what happened, they might be in a better position to be logical. It is only the logical people we can reason with.
Now I can see that you are simply going to argue that my very logic supports your argument. Perhaps it does. But I would ask you to consider two points:
1) As one who values the products of the mind and the exercise of sound logic, why would you deliberately dilute and impair your critical thinking abilities - especially just before operating an automobile and thereby placing others of the public in danger?
2) As a corollary to 1, why would you seek to encourage others to place themselves in a position in which they would dilute and impair THEIR critical thinking activities - especially when the results of such can have such devastating and life-altering outcomes?
Please do not take this as any measure of support for MADD. I look only at the principle involved - in this case the free and unfettered exercise of clear judgement and the full use of the rational mind at all times.
As one acquainted with the grief that can only come from the death of a child, I feel for those who have joined themselves to such an organization as MADD, but out of pity, not sympathy. Emotions can have the same effect as alcohol in clouding the exercise of the rational mind, and it seems pretty clear to me that some of MADD's members allow their grief to drive their lives (pun intended) with an outcome no different than that which they crusade against.
Honestly at this point, I distrust stats from most sources, including of course government ones.
Or should I say especially government ones?
Since that is not only absurd, but a total affront to humanity and self-awareness, what we should focus on is helping each and every person understand reality so that they are capable of evaluating any given situation and making decisions that do not lead to undesired consequences. Will we be so completely adept that we succeed? Probably not - thus the need for laws and consequences. And there may be some who simply choose something contrary just to rebel.
[Echoing CG] Freedom isn't free. It is a constant series of choices we make.
I couldn't agree more.
As for a good nights sleep - that's simply not true. Unless you are literally falling asleep at the wheel, it has no where near the same impact as driving drunk.
Neither does any other "distraction" which impairs you only for as long as you are "distracted".
As opposed to driving drunk which impairs you for the duration of your drive.
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