Legal drinking age, dui limits, etc

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minendo

Elite Member
Aug 31, 2001
35,560
22
81
Originally posted by: erub
Quick question: I just used that BAC calculator - I was looking at a can of Coors Light that I have, and it doesn't say what % alcohol it is..does anybody know? I thought all beer was about the same.

Also, I think the drinking age should be lowered to 18, like many of the other posters here. Although I'm not so sure about high school kids showing up at football games drunk. Maybe it should be 19.

Heh, the college town I live in (College Station, TX) has a law that requires every club/bar stop selling alcohol at 1 AM. That just encourages more house parties..
~3.2%

 

onelin

Senior member
Dec 11, 2001
874
0
0
Originally posted by: ElFenix
different schools with different policies.

Yes, certainly. It just irks me anyway. I don't see how any school, period, can penalize students for being at a supervised party with alcohol...unless it has to deal with sports or a certain policy the student agreed to. At the same time, I can't see how any school, period, can completely ignore events like the one I mentioned before. Although I suppose if I want one matter to not be the school's business, then that school is right in saying it isn't their business.

I guess it just boils down to me not agreeing with our underage laws at their current position (although, if it were 18, which seems slightly more just, then it would still be the same case for highschools with the exception of most seniors by the second half of senior year), and in addition, substance controls in general.

Granted, I am not against DUI penalties (even strict ones), as endangering others is certainly the place I draw the line at.



 

BatmanNate

Lifer
Jul 12, 2000
12,444
2
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I am of the viewpoint that the United States Government should not regulate the sale of alcohol whatsoever. DUI laws on the other hand are necessary as protection from a legitimate domestic threat and should be kept strict with strict punishments that are enforced, however on a state level.

In most other countries, liquor laws are loose and drinking is a part of their culture that is more of a tradition and form of enjoyment than an outlet for recklessness that it is adopted as by most American youth. Being a drunk is more shameful in many parts of the world, and those individuals are shunned as a result of their choices often times. There is not as much of an abuse problem among young people because drinking does not hold the lure of a form of rebellion.

For the better or worse, I do believe that this like any other substance that is detrimental to oneself if abused is the responsibily of the potential user to forsee consequences and assess whether or not it is a good choice. The government should not be in a place to determine what should be done to prevent you from harming yourself and thus impairing your freedom. When this extends the the road however, other people are put in danger and that makes it a different ballgame.
 

iamshady

Golden Member
Mar 1, 2001
1,907
0
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Instead of starting a new thread, I just thought I would ask it in this one. Does anyone know of any anti-drinking age law website or organizations? I have searched for them on a few search site with no luck.
 

Mill

Lifer
Oct 10, 1999
28,558
3
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Originally posted by: iamshady
Instead of starting a new thread, I just thought I would ask it in this one. Does anyone know of any anti-drinking age law website or organizations? I have searched for them on a few search site with no luck.

There is one I have found before... lemme go look again.
 

guapo337

Platinum Member
Apr 7, 2003
2,580
0
0
Originally posted by: Anubis
1) yes. it shoudl go to 18 OR you shouldent have to register for teh draft till 21. its absurd that you can die for your country but you cant drink.
2) it was better at 0.1. but its all relative. when my BAC is at .1 im still more or less sover not really buzzed. blowing over th elimit and being too drunk to drive really are diff
3) bad idea. we tried before
4) open container laws shoudl go. if your of age no reason you souldent be able to drink where you want if your not causing harm. stupid states liek PA and their ass backwards laws. everyplace shoudl be liek Maine. you can but ALL the beer you want at the groshery store. AND all the licqure also cause the have a whole isle for it. none of thsi noo beer on sundays, only buying at a ABC store or a beer distributor

YEAH MAINE! REPRESENT!!

heh.. too bad im only 16.

 

alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,769
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Here's the thing if you get arrested for a DUI the process is totally unconstitutional. You are guilty until proven innocent.

I was arrested pulling into my driveway, I had 4 beers (I had my receipt with me) over a 4 hour period....I blew a 0.168 which is pretty much impossible based on that alcohol level unless there is blood in your mouth I found out and that morning I ran into a shelf that totally opened up the inside of my lip, pretty bad. It was one of the reasons I didn't drink so much that night, everything tasted like blood.

You are also forced to spend at least 8 hours in jail which in reality is more like 16.

You'd think it's be an easy case, however, most lawyers will only plead you guilty for less than $5,000....they are hoping there is some glaring misconduct, but usually there is not. For a real defense you are going to have to put up about $10,000 per trial (there can and probably will be about 3), you will also have to actually hire an expert and they want about $2,000-10,000 per day + expenses....using their book or a scientific write up is no good, an expert must be present.

The next thing is your license is suspended until the trials are over...this can take at least a year, more than likely about 1.5 years start to finish (sometimes up to a year for just the first trial).

My choice was to pay about $4k in all the fees, classes, etc and be done with it and hope not to get another one ever. The worst 'case' in my class was a New York or New Jersey guy...he just bought a $50,000 car cash and was in his garage detailing it up and having a beer....they arrested him for drinking while driving and impounded his car (permanently)...he tried to defend himself and it cost him about $50,000 also....+ a ton of other costs he had....he was over $150k.

MADD has a powerful lobby, it's hard to say no to a mother showing her messed up kid, but the bottom line is it's about the political power for other issues.
 

WhiteKnight

Platinum Member
May 21, 2001
2,952
0
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With respect to what people have suggested about lowering the age to 18... I agree that if you can vote, die for your country, etc, then it is absurd to prohibit alcohol consumption. However, the problem with putting it at 18 is that then it is in high school. Most kids turn 18 in their senior year of HS. Lower it to 18 and you might as well just throw in the 14 year old freshman too, as far as social situations will go. Although I really hate the idea that when you are 18 you don't have full rights, I think that setting the age at 19 might be better because it would keep the age limit to covering college aged kids without including high schoolers.
 

yukichigai

Diamond Member
Apr 23, 2003
6,404
0
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I think we need a system like Scotland, who has no true DUI problem to speak of:

1) Drinking age should be 18. Maybe even 16 with a driving age of 18. Get all that drinking out of your system before you start learning to drive.

2) The BAC laws... meh... I think 0.08 is fine where it is. The only reason you'd want it higher is so you can cram in more alcohol before you get behind the wheel which I think is a bad thing to encourage.

3) Yes, absolutely, zero tolerance. In other countries (Scotland, England, etc) you can have your license revoked for a year on the first instance, and those countries have the lowest DUI rates among the world. As for the argument about what if you somehow didn't mean to get that drunk or didn't realize? Tough. You should be more aware. That is the kind of mistake that can kill someone in a most literal fashion.

4) Open container rule should be changed somehow to make allowances for when you're carrying a bunch of people who are all drinking. If I'm hauling around my 3 friends and they all want to get wasted in the backseat then I say why not? If there's open beer in the back and I'm the only person in the car however... well yeah, that's gonna be pretty obvious what's going on. I think the open container would probably be done away with if a zero tolerance law came into effect.

By the way, do empties count as an open container? If I'm hauling recycling and some cop decides he's going to be a jerk can he get me for every beer bottle I'm taking in for 5¢?
 

Hossenfeffer

Diamond Member
Jul 16, 2000
7,462
1
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I want somethin' in my car that is keyed to the person driving. Won't let the car start without a satisfactory breathalyzer reading. That way it puts more information infront of the folks with no idea how much they've had. No punishment needed, but you're not driving yourself anywhere. Would probably piss me off if I showed up at .11, but in that case, tough luck, I've gotta sit in the parking lot for another 20-30 minutes or go get a cup of coffee while I "sober" up.

The inconvenience vs. the value and safety makes it a no-brainer to me.
 

alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,769
19
81
Keep in mind also the BAC is a bad indicator of inebriation. Some people can perform perfectly at over the BAL and some cannot even at half of it.

The #1 purpose of the fieldside tests is not to see if you are intoxicated, as many people cannot do the tests properly anyway...it's to provide more evidence via the video tape of the performance.

We were shown 50 people both drunk and sober performing the tests, the class averaged less than 50% of determining who was really drunk and who wasn't.
 

Hossenfeffer

Diamond Member
Jul 16, 2000
7,462
1
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Originally posted by: alkemyst
Keep in mind also the BAC is a bad indicator of inebriation. Some people can perform perfectly at over the BAL and some cannot even at half of it.

The #1 purpose of the fieldside tests is not to see if you are intoxicated, as many people cannot do the tests properly anyway...it's to provide more evidence via the video tape of the performance.

We were shown 50 people both drunk and sober performing the tests, the class averaged less than 50% of determining who was really drunk and who wasn't.

Hmm, so maybe on my car I'll want some series of lights/buttons. So I have to repeat some random series of lights (A la "Simon") in order for the car to work. Takes the BAC out of the picture and, instead (at least to a point) tests my ability to react.

Then how about something to test my reasoning. ;)
 

alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,769
19
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That would test you definitely, but in the eyes of the law it's your breath reading that's the end all be all. Also another flaw in it is some have much lower blood alcohol levels than their breath shows (some much higher)....the test reads the parts per million of COH in the blood in your expiration...it's an indirect / non invasive test. Many lawyers instruct their clients not to refuse being tested for alcohol, but to demand it be tested via a blood test. This is your right. The benefit is 1) you get more time to 'sober' up if you need it and 2) it's a lot more accurate.

For my 'test' it was conducted on the middle line of a two way street with the officer on the side of the road and me in the middle. Cars were passing on both sides and it was dark as hell....it was a bad deal, it was windy and I couldn't hear half the instructions given to me and he couldn't hear my answers so good either. I was told to say the alphabet forwards and I thought he said backwards (why even say forwards?) I said it 3 times as he keep saying wrong, do it again. On the report it was perfect letter for letter in reverse except a few he didn't hear.