Mozart
Well-Known Member
So, by that logic, you would be AOK with the BAC threshhold being 0.00%, correct?
It's not like there's an arguement here that anyone DOESN'T want to save lives or DOESN'T think that drunk driving is wrong. It's a matter of "at what point is someone impaired?" and unfortunately that question is very dependent on the individual, yet there is this law that applies equally to all. It's the way it has to be, because laws need to be as objective as possible, but this arguement will NEVER end because it's an objective law that applies to a very subjective matter.
No, I would not be in favor of the BAC threshold being zero. That would, in my opinion, not be reasonable.
As I said, no law or set of them is going to be perfect. It seems we agree that impairment is subjective, or at least, difficult to objectively prove in every case, and that it is beneficial to have laws that are as objective as possible.
So it all boils down to reasonableness given conflicting goals that tug in opposite directions. That leaves a pretty wide swath of room for people, all with good motivations and even shared goals, to reasonably disagree.
Yes, this is a debate that will never end. That doesn't mean we shouldn't have it. I'd never call someone objectively 'wrong' for wanting to leave the BAC threshold at .08%, raise it to .10% where it was when I started driving, or even lower it below the proposed .05% threshold. I might disagree with them. I might think my opinion is 'better', for if it wasn't, why would I hold it? But there certainly is plenty of room for intelligent, reasonable people to honesty disagree with one another here.
The question was whether I, personally, would be in favor of the change.
I would.
And I fully admit my position is an opinion.