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Post 80

Monday, September 26, 2005 - 5:42pmSanction this postReply
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Gary asked: Does everyone have trhe right to drive?

Driving is not a right. No one has the RIGHT to drive. Anyone who can operate a motor vehicle without intiating force against others can. Drunken driving and dangerous driving are all initiations of force, in my opinion.

Ethan


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Post 81

Monday, September 26, 2005 - 6:58pmSanction this postReply
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Well, we're not anywhere near the nub of the issue, everyone. What's the principle in operation here? Re my flu example, if you have a law that makes it a crime to merely *drive* a car unsober, that is, in an impaired condition, then what do you do in every other situation where drivers are impaired? If we put our heads together, I bet we could come up with literally hundreds of impairments, many worse than the mandated legal alcohol limit.

Ross

Jody: blindness is an incapacity; an inability to perform a function. Impairment is *diminished* capacity but not incapacity. Jumping in a car with three cans of beer inside you is not the same as Stevie Wonder getting behind the wheel & taking directions from his guide dog.

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Post 82

Monday, September 26, 2005 - 7:18pmSanction this postReply
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Gary:

"As you said, an unsober driver presents a clear and present danger to those around them."

No, I didn't say that. In fact, I've been at pains *not* to say that.

Further:

""Fact is, if you single out merely being unsober as an excuse for law, then you have no philosophical leg to stand on"

That's very naughty, Gary. I said this:

"Fact is, if you single out merely being unsober as an excuse for law, then you have no philosophical leg to stand on re any other preemptive laws such as drug, food, & gun regulation."

The "re" means: with reference to. So, with reference to the context that you chose to drop, how do you, in principle, reconcile your views on the illegality of drunk driving with say, the existing illegality of using drugs, because, as is often cited, drug users are a menace to society? If you get to ban someone from drinking & driving (due to an impaired ability), don't I get to ban someone from using drugs and then going out for a night on the town (due to their increased likelihood of violence or abusive & intimidating behaviour)?

Ross

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Post 83

Monday, September 26, 2005 - 8:36pmSanction this postReply
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Ethan, how is operating a car intoxicated de facto an initiation of force? If the person, due to their impaired state, actually drives 10 under in the right lane, presenting no danger to others per se, should he be punished? Again, how is the act of driving, regardless of your state, an initiation of force?

And I find it rather disgusting that freedom of movement on public (i.e. bought and paid for by ME and others) roads is considered a privilege by you.

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Post 84

Monday, September 26, 2005 - 8:43pmSanction this postReply
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Well I find plenty of things disgusting too

Post 85

Monday, September 26, 2005 - 10:06pmSanction this postReply
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Jody and Ethan,

Damn it, your spoiling my fun!


Ross,

Sorry to be naughty! Boxers are naughty, why can't I? :-)

The "re" means: with reference to
Please don't do that. I speak English.

Of course you New Zealanders speak "The Queen's English, don't you? (You are a NZ'er aren't you?)

I quess that means I speak George W's English - re: (Newcluur Wepon's)

You did say this -

If I drive my car, drunk or otherwise, in a manner that presents a *clear & present danger* to those around me, then I think I should be stopped, either by the police or anyone else who feels the need.
This is what I based my statement on. If I misquoted...sorry. (Hey, This civility stuff is nice!)

I know that drunk driving is dangerous. I too want a standard of drunkeness. A standard has been set. Set by the state. It is sanctioned by the public where I live. I concur with that sanction. The police have the obligation to enforce that law. If they do not then they are not doing their job. There is no correlation with this law and imagined future abuses by the state. The state that creates the law where I live is the state of Texas, not the good ol' USA. We voted on our drunk driver law.  I voted. We decided. It passed.

As to your flu scenario, my philosophy stands. The danger should be removed.

As to your drug scenario...you suddenly remove the car from the argument. 

A drug user in the same room with me, and all thing being even, i.e., no weapon advantage to the drug user, I can handle them. A drug user with a 3000lb weapon? No contest. They win.


don't I get to ban someone from using drugs and then going out for a night on the town (due to their increased likelihood of violence or abusive & intimidating behaviour)?
You are putting words in my mouth, but I guess you are the one being naughty now!

If this is true, then yes, my philosophy stands. The danger should be removed.  I will be consistent on this. No one has the right to endanger others, in automobiles or elsewhere.


And for the sake of clarity, define what drug. They are not all the same. 



Back to the drunk driver argument. Sarah has shown the "Why" of why drunks should not drive and no one has responded. Why? Why does no one challenge her post #47?



gw




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Post 86

Tuesday, September 27, 2005 - 1:02amSanction this postReply
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Terrific. Let's see if we can wind this up, at least where I'm concerned.

Now, stop me if you think I'm making this up.

We have a drunk + car & a drunk + flu scenario, where in both cases, Gary, you agree that drivers should not be allowed to drive because of impairment/reduced capacity.

By "not allowed", you mean: preemptively, before the fact & not upon the demonstration of clear & present danger. So although a driver that is over the legal limit may be driving in a manner that is *not* a danger to anyone else (ie, not exhibiting any swerving, speeding, shimmies, wobbles, lurches, etc.) then the law is correct in making it illegal to do so. Right?

And the same applies to a bad dose of the flu. And, since you said you'd be consistent, this also must apply to any other situation where a driver's performance is impaired to at least the degree that it is at the legal alcohol limit.

If that's not your position then your last post was perhaps unclear.

My position is that although a person's physical, emotional or psychological state may affect their ability to function optimally in a given situation, it is not the role of the state to determine that *prior* to an exhibition of clear & present danger.

Just as defending free speech is not about buddying up to the likes of Bob Guccione, Larry Flynt, et al, *this* isn't about defending the right of a some dumb lush to stumble into his car and fly it down the highway. It's about defending a principle. In this case, the principle that an individual has the right to go about their business until they demonstrate a clear & present danger to those around them. And, no, that doesn't mean a drunk has to slam into people on the sidewalk or that a gunman needs to blow someone's brains out for preventative action to be taken, but it sure as hell means that the mere *possibility* that something may happen is not a good enough definition of clear & present danger.

Gary, you said you live in Texas. As I understand it Texas has quite liberal gun laws. In fact, except for the need to acquire a license to carry a handgun in public it's essentially a free-for-all. I say great. Lock 'n' load. But do you know how disturbing, abhorrent and frightening that is to most of the world's population? Not to mention many of the other US states? And, not to mention many anti-gun advocates in Texas itself? Can you see where I'm going with this?

Why the hell should anyone, a Texan or otherwise, be allowed to own, transport & use a gun, especially a handgun, in such an unregulated and flagrant manner? The *mere possibility* that a gun *could* be (and demonstrably *is*) used to kill & maim, even accidently & without malice, should be enough to restrict firearms ownership in the most severe manner possible.

The driving drunkard & the unregulated gun owner are one & the same from the point of view of the preemptive law advocate. They're the same because they're based upon the *same principle*. That is, that individual actions must be proscribed not upon demonstrable danger but upon the mere *possibility* of danger.

Christ, the whole raison d'etre of the FDA & a hundred other government agencies is predicated on the *possibility* that something may go wrong. If drunks can't drive then the FDA must also be a reasonable response to food & drug production & consumption. And, if that's the case, then anything goes. Hell, let's rip up the Bill of Rights while we're at it.

So, I've gone from drunks, to the flu, to drugs, nasty guns, & the FDA, and the reason is that the same abstraction is applicable in a variety of contexts. You can't have your principles & eat them too.

Ross










Post 87

Tuesday, September 27, 2005 - 3:03amSanction this postReply
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Well said Ross.

Post 88

Tuesday, September 27, 2005 - 6:36amSanction this postReply
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People, please note my example in an earlier post, which I will now expand upon. If the police notice erratic or dangerous behaviour, they can pull you over and investigate to see if your impaired (drunk, tired, whatever.) If you've had some drinks and drive home no problems, then you are fine. If you have some drinks and are involved in an accident, then the cops show up and find that you have been drinking, and are impaired, then you get busted. That should be clear enough.

The only trouble will arise of you had a few drinks and someone smashes into you, even though your were doing fine, then the cops try and bust you with some legal limit thing. I agree that a better test should and probably could be developed to determine impairment.

The flu thing is a good point, as meds or extreme sickness can impair your ability to operate a car. If you are driving erratically or get in an accident while thus impaired you should be liable.

Ross, you are correct about the principle underlying the laws. I say that it must be an initiation of force or threat thereof. You have to be caught in the act of driving badly or post accident. They can't randomly stop you an administer a breath test or whatever. This should be reasonable.

Ethan


Post 89

Tuesday, September 27, 2005 - 7:02amSanction this postReply
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If that's not your position then your last post was perhaps unclear.

That is my position.

There is no right to endanger.



Texas gun law?

It is far more restrictive than our driving laws. I do have the privilege to carry and conceal a handgun. I cannot walk around with it in my hand on public display. I cannot obtain a licence or carry a weapon if I am impaired, re physically or mentally incapable of operating it safely. I cannot go anywhere I want with a gun. And, god help me if I am arrested with a chemical impairment while carrying the sucker. If I am impaired while carrying it, I will be arrested, even if I'm not waving it around in a saloon. Or a shopping mall. And I sanction that also.

But do you know how disturbing, abhorrent and frightening that is to most of the world's population?
Who gives a shit. Ask a Texan if they care.


I see what you are saying. I agree with some of it, but I disagree with the rights of drunk drivers to drive.


gw


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Post 90

Tuesday, September 27, 2005 - 3:59pmSanction this postReply
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Ethan:

"Ross, you are correct about the principle underlying the laws. I say that it must be an initiation of force or threat thereof. You have to be caught in the act of driving badly or post accident. They can't randomly stop you an administer a breath test or whatever. This should be reasonable."

Thank you, Ethan. But, I'd clarify it further by saying that there need be no law specific to drunk driving, just as there need be no law specific to having the flu or having gone without sleep for two days, etc. Judge people on their behaviour and on a demonstration of clear & present danger.

It's extremely dangerous to preempt individual action on the mere possibility of danger. It must be clear. In fact, it's the unwarranted assumption of preemptive powers that has got the western world into the cesspool of regulation that it finds itself in. We ain't living in police states yet but it sure as hell starts somewhere & it starts with sloppy application of basic principles.

Ross

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Post 91

Tuesday, September 27, 2005 - 4:46pmSanction this postReply
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Ross, I agree with most of what you said but I think the standards of "Drunk" "Sick" or "Tired" are fairly nescessary.  For example you could wind up running a red light or going into the opposite lane because you were changing the radio station or answering your cell phone, or any other quick temporary situation.  You get pulled over for a dangerous action like this, you get a ticket (or other advisable punishment) you rethink your actions and are able to continue driving without incident because you'll think your COMPLETELY VOLITIONAL actions through better.  If you are impared due to sickness, chemical impairment or lack of sleep it's not as simple.  If you're incapable of continuing to your destination without a reasonable guarantee of making it there without causing a (possibly fatal) incident, you shouldn't be allowed to try and put others at risk.

Displaying clear and present danger is the best criteria though and for pointing that out I thoroughly agree.

---Landon


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