dank69
Lifer
- Oct 6, 2009
- 37,229
- 32,760
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I understand your argument entirely, and I believe a case can be made for these devices in all cars. I also believe that they may be standard in all cars at some point. It does make a lot of sense and it is very difficult, if not impossible, to back any argument claiming that these devices restrict freedom. It is already illegal to drive drunk.It's not treating everyone like a criminal.
Take driving tests to get a license. Why don't we not require them, assuming everyone can drive and knows the laws, and not treat them like they don't?
Simply because the devices have only been used for convicted drunk drivers doesn't mean that using them is 'treating the driver like a criminal'.
You have to pass a driving and written test to drive - to make sure you can at least to some standard.
The device further makes sure you are fit to drive. Fact is, with one in 75 drunk drivers reportedly caught, there are a lot of drunk drivers and we need protection. Ones who are NOT convicted criminals. It's simple common sense - a few seconds when you start your car, in order to prevent a lot of drunk drivers from killing you.
I don't understand the mentality of making trivial things the basis of hyperbolic complaints about their being big 'freedoms'.
The right to criticize the government, of free association, of supporting political causes, of freedom of movement, freedom from police abuse, and others, those are real freedoms.
But what we hear about in these complaints of the 'tyranny' we're under are having to use more environmentally friendly light bulbs, wear a seat belt, take a few seconds to start a car. Last night, the Jon Stewart had a serious Texan couple saying they wanted to secede because of this tyranny, citing as their #1 example the right to text while driving.
It really trivializes the discussion of 'freedom' and to melodramatically play the 'people who have been killed in war for freedom' card over this type of thing?
Do you want to get rid of stop signs and traffic signals and speed limits as infringements on your freedoms, too? Why not?
Is it more important to have the 'freedom' to drive drunk without a device stopping you or the 'freedom' to travel on the road and not be at so much danger from drunk drivers?
Thousands and thousands of people a year are killed by drunk drivers, many more injured. The tradeoff seems clear to me that a few seconds to start the care is a low cost.
I will say this, though: I worry when I see people utter the bolded phrase above. Protection is nice, but we can't be protected from everything. I prefer the phrase "protection is justified in this case."