Thanks To Mothers Against Drunk Driving, I’m a Dangerous Driver
by Mark R. Crovelli
by Mark R. Crovelli
DIGG THIS
The tacit idea
motivating Mothers Against Drunk Driving in their merciless "War
Against Drunk Driving" is that sober drivers are necessarily
safer behind the wheel than drunk drivers. Unfortunately, this idea
is totally fallacious. In order to see why this is true, consider
the following example from my own life.
Roughly
two weeks ago, I attended my rugby club’s end-of-the-season party,
which was held at a mansion in one of the most affluent neighborhoods
in Denver. The event featured catered food and drink – including
several kegs of quality beer. It was an extremely enjoyable social
event, and every one of the kegs was tapped over the course of several
hours. During my several hour stay at the party, I consumed approximately
ten beers.
Before
you get your blood up over the amount of beer I consumed, bear in
mind that I am just a shade under 200 pounds, and I drink beer almost
every day of the year. In other words, consuming ten beers over
the course of an afternoon and evening is not that big of a deal
to me, (and my Mother’s maiden name is Hofmeister,
if that explains anything). After the party, I caught a ride up
to our team pub and had one more pint with the team.
At the
end of the evening, though, I knew that I probably wouldn’t be able
to blow less than Mr. Clinton’s requisite and arbitrary .08 BAC,
and I decided I probably ought not to risk a DUI. My teammates,
however, had already left the pub, and I had no place to stay for
the night. So, I decided to catch a ride back to my truck where
I could sleep. I spent the remainder of the night in a smashed heap
on the bench-seat of my Ford Ranger.
Sounds
somewhat responsible doesn’t it? Thanks to MADD’s "War on Drunk
Driving," people like me were choosing to sleep off their buzz
before driving home. A victory in the battle against drunk driving!
Unfortunately,
while MADD can perhaps claim to have kept me from driving while
slightly intoxicated, they cannot thereby claim a victory for safe
driving. For, the following morning, I did not even remotely resemble
a safe driver. After having overslept in my truck, I woke up with
the sun cruelly beating down on my face, and sweat literally forming
puddles on my vinyl seats. I also had a headache that nearly blinded
me, eyeballs totally lacking moisture, and a kink in my neck that
felt like I’d fallen down a flight of stairs. I was a wreck. So,
while I was driving home sober that morning, I was also driving
horribly – and I knew it.
From this
example we can clearly see the fallacy involved in MADD’s most deeply-held
belief. It is clearly not true that sober men are necessarily
safer drivers than intoxicated drivers. I am a larger than average
man who drinks beer almost every day, and I can function completely
normally with beer in my veins. I am the first to admit, though,
that I am a shockingly poor driver when I have even a slight hangover.
But, thanks to MADD and the insane
drunk-driving laws in this country, I am encouraged to drive when
I know that I am not a very good driver. Some people may be worse
drivers when they are drunk than when they have a hangover, but
I certainly am not one of them. MADD’s "War Against Drunk Driving,"
and the draconian laws they have pressured Congress to pass, (utilizing
the argumentum ad misericordiam to its fullest extent), forced
me to wait to drive until I was in a physically and mentally worse
condition. Quite simply, MADD and the U.S. Congress made me a more
dangerous driver than I otherwise would have been.
Please
don’t object that "when you’re drunk you don’t know you’re
a bad driver!" I think know myself better than you do, and
I doubt very much that you have ever spent time in my head or body
while I’m drunk, hungover or any other time for that matter. I’ll
agree to speak for myself alone if you’ll agree to do the same.
If you can honestly tell me you drive better in the morning with
a blinding headache, nausea, and the shakes, I’ll try to believe
you, but please show me the courtesy in return of believing me when
I say that I am an absolutely awful driver with a hangover – much
worse so than when I am intoxicated.
The error
in MADD’s reasoning is quite simple to identify. Essentially, their
error consists of setting up an oversimplified and manifestly imaginary
dichotomous comparison between: A) totally sober drivers, and B)
drunk drivers. They totally ignore the fact that there exist many
more categories than these two – for example, as we have just seen,
C) hungover drivers. They seem oblivious to the fact that forcing
people to wait to drive will force them to drive with a hangover.
And, since people vary in their response to alcohol both when they
drink it and the morning after they drink it, it is completely absurd
to treat all people who drink alcohol and drive as though they are
criminals, when there exist men like me who are better drivers when
drunk than when hungover. Or, would MADD like to see "driving
with a hangover" punished with the same draconian laws as "drunk
driving"? What would the roadside test for that victimless
"crime" be? "Get out of the car, Sir. Do you have
an implacable urge to eat hashbrowns right now?"
The
fact is, and MADD itself admits as much, drunk-driving laws have
not succeeded in reducing drunk driving. In fact, MADD’s own webpage
claims that "In 2002, surveys estimates that Americans took
over 159 million alcohol-impaired driving trips, compared with only
116 million in 1997." If the solution to drunk driving lies
in increasingly severe and heartless punishment of drunk driving,
then why is this not reducing the number of people driving drunk?
Perhaps
we ought to look past MADD’s inflammatory rhetoric, so that we can
find a dispassionate and realistic solution. Perhaps that solution
lies in the realm of freedom; that is, only punishing people when
they actually hurt other people. After all, it has always
been illegal to willfully or negligently kill another human being.
So, why do
we need drunk-driving laws at all?
July
5, 2008
Mark R.
Crovelli [send him mail]
writes from Denver, Colorado.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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