The Pathetic Argument for Prohibiting Drunk Driving
by Mark R. Crovelli
by
Mark R. Crovelli
Recently by Mark R. Crovelli: What
This Country Needs Is a 'Cash for Clunkers' Program for the Housing Sector
For people
who have grown accustomed to having the government monitor, regulate
and enforce every facet of their miserable lives, it can be very
difficult for them to conceive of the idea of legalizing
drunk driving without at the same time picturing in their heads
mangled cars, dead babies, and carnage generally. They have been
told year after year by the government that created and enforces
these laws, that drunk driving is one of the very worst crimes a
man can commit, and that, were it not for the government’s ruthless
pursuit of these dangerous criminals, there would indeed be unchecked
slaughter in the streets.
Any arguments
to the contrary, claiming that we could reduce both the incidence
and danger
of drunk driving by legalizing it, appear completely absurd to these
people. They dismiss these arguments out of hand because they have
adopted the government’s ridiculous conception of the drunk-driving
issue, which looks something like this:
A) Drunk
drivers are dangerous, and can kill other drivers
B) The government
has outlawed drunk driving, and punishes drunk driving ruthlessly
Ergo, C)
The government’s prohibition and punishments do actually
reduce the incidence and danger of drunk driving
It does not
take a professor of logic, however, to see that this type of argument
is fallacious. The conclusion simply does not follow from the premises.
We are not entitled to conclude that the government is successfully
reducing either the incidence or the danger of drunk driving, just
because they have prohibited it and are mercilessly punishing violators.
It could be the case that the government’s prohibitions and punishments
themselves are actually exacerbating the problem rather
than ameliorating it.
The preceding
point is exceedingly important, and is worth emphasizing with an
analogous example from the so-called "War on Drugs." The
federal government takes an analogous position with regard to drug
trafficking and consumption, after all. The claim has always been
that all the prohibitions and brutal punishments do reduce
drug production and consumption (otherwise, what would be the point
of the "war"?). Spokesmen for the drug warriors periodically
appear in the news claiming that they have just busted a behemoth
cocaine or marijuana smuggling ring, and that the bust will be a
major blow to drug pushers and consumers. We all know what happens
in the real world of drug production once the government cracks
down on drugs in some way, however: the market participants adjust
to the increased pressure by shifting their base of operation (e.g.,
from peaceful
Caribbean beaches to the blood-drenched calles of Mexico),
switching to more concentrated and dangerous drugs to produce and
sell to avoid getting caught (e.g., switching from marijuana to
cocaine and heroin), and the more vicious risk-takers among the
drug producers take market share away from those who fear prison
and God if they, say, cut
off a police chief’s head.
Needless to
say, the mere fact that the government has prohibited certain drugs,
and has gone so far as to wage "war" against them, is
insufficient to establish that the government is truly reducing
drug consumption or production. If anything, the government’s prohibition
of and "war" on drugs has itself caused drugs to
become more potent, has created a drug gulag system in the United
States (that is, ironically, itself rife with drugs) and a mafia
state in Mexico – and yet has not reduced anyone’s ability to
purchase coke, pot and meth in the slightest degree.
With regard
to the drug "war," and all of its obvious failures and
disasters, no one with half a brain would think of making an argument
claiming that the government is actually reducing
drug consumption, just because they have made them illegal
and ruthlessly punish offenders. No one would offer an argument,
like the one above, claiming:
A) Drug addicts
are dangerous, and can kill or hurt themselves and others
B) The government
has outlawed consuming or selling drugs, and punishes consumers
and sellers ruthlessly
Ergo, C)
The government’s prohibition and punishments do actually
reduce the incidence and danger of drugs
No one would
make such an argument because the conclusion obviously does not
follow from the premises. Some sort of further argument or evidence
is necessary to establish that the prohibition is working, or else
the argument is question-begging. And, once one takes even the slightest
peek at the evidence (i.e., the destruction, death and incarceration
that the Drug War has delivered to this continent, and the ease
with which anyone can buy virtually any drug in any
city, school, or prison on this continent), the argument falls apart
immediately.
The same
ought to be true for what might be aptly called the "War on
Drunk Driving." One ought not to simply assume that the government’s
prohibitions and medieval punishments actually work to reduce drunk
driving – unless there exist good arguments to that effect.
When one
looks at the arguments about the efficacy of the government’s war
on drunk driving, however, they all point to the opposite conclusion;
namely, that the government’s prohibition and punishments are actually
making things worse, rather than better. For example, the
government’s prohibitions have created incentives for drunk drivers
to drive
much more dangerously than they otherwise would. They have resulted
in a massive loss of income and freedom for hundreds of thousands
– if not millions – of Americans who have been arrested,
fined and imprisoned for drunk driving without ever hurting
anyone. They have created an interlocking structure of incentives
that actually
encourage drunk driving. They have created a blatantly hypocritical
standard for driving on the nation’s roads – with some dangerous
drivers let off with a wag of the finger, while others are arrested,
fined and incarcerated for doing exactly the same thing; namely,
putting
other people’s lives at risk. And they have created a police
state on the nation’s roads and highways; with Israeli-like random
checkpoints, a massive propaganda campaign to intimidate drivers,
and mandatory removal of blood from people’s bodies.
The
challenge, then, for people who believe in prohibiting drunk driving
is to show that these laws do actually reduce drunk driving.
Like proponents of drug prohibition, they must be able to show that
all of the obvious suffering these laws inflict, billions of lost
dollars spent in waging the "war," loss of individual
liberties, and counterproductive incentives the laws create have
actually reduced drunk driving.
For decades
we have been waiting for the drug prohibitionists to give us some
similar proof that their favored war has given us some tangible
benefits besides millions of men in prison, ever-more potent and
dangerous drugs, and a police state run amok. They have failed miserably.
So, too, will the proponents of drunk-driving prohibition when we
look back on decades of fighting a "war" against our own
people, when they have never even hurt any other people.
September
2, 2009
Mark R.
Crovelli [send him mail]
writes from Denver, Colorado.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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