She most have drank a lot in fairness to be over the limit by 1pm the next day.
... I just think there's a difference between someone who gets straight into their car after a few drinks and someone who genuinely thought they were okay and had no previous record of anything like this. I would have thought a caution would suffice.
I just think there's a difference between someone who gets straight into their car after a few drinks and someone who genuinely thought they were okay and had no previous record of anything like this. I would have thought a caution would suffice.
But the person having 1 or 2 and getting into their car could think that they are OK too? If they are both over the limit by the same amount for example I don't see much difference TBH.
That's because she did exactly what they do - she drove while her blood-alcohol level was elevated above the maximum permitted legal limit.... Yet she was treated in exactly the same way as someone who had a load of pints and knowingly got into their car and drove...
But there is none because the law makes no differentiation.... but I just think there's a difference between someone who gets straight into their car after a few drinks and someone who genuinely thought they were okay and had no previous record of anything like this....
For the Guards on the side of the road once drink-driving is suspected / indicated, there is no discretion, they cannot issue a caution they must take the driver off the road.... I would have thought a caution would suffice...
I haven't seen any evidence that the process the lady got herself involved in through her dangerous drunken-driving episode was oriented towards anything other than road safety or preventing drunks from driving with impunity. The only person, so far, who seems to 'lose respect for the whole process' is yourself.... I suppose my concern is that people will just lose respect for the whole process if it seems to be more based on getting 'results' than on actually trying to catch the really dangerous drivers.
/ The only person, so far, who seems to 'lose respect for the whole process' is yourself.
I haven't lost respect for the process, I just wonder if a system where a caution can't be given, if it is clear that the person themselves had no idea they were over the limit and is deeply shocked at the result ,is anymore educational than allowing persons who genuinely thought they'd taken the correct procedures to ensure they were safe to drive, to get one warning and no more. Anyway, just my view on the matter.
I haven't lost respect for the process, I just wonder if a system where a caution can't be given, if it is clear that the person themselves had no idea they were over the limit and is deeply shocked at the result ,is anymore educational than allowing persons who genuinely thought they'd taken the correct procedures to ensure they were safe to drive, to get one warning and no more. Anyway, just my view on the matter.
Just, on an individual level, I feel sorry for that girl.
Well I agree with you on that, unfortunately you cant judge situations like this at an individual level because then every gurrier in the country would be drink driving and producing 50 character witnesses to say theyd never done it before, hadnt a clue about blood alcohol levels, had waited a number of hours etc, were going to lose their job and family etc...you knwo what I mean?
But you seem to want to change the existing process, which indicates you find it deficient in some way, which to me doesn't smack of respect.I haven't lost respect for the process, ...
Maybe you could help by describing how such a system would work in practice as I can't seem to envision it.... if it is clear that the person themselves had no idea they were over the limit and is deeply shocked at the result ...
There is no need for uninformed speculation about "taking the correct procedures" - apart from other obvious measure, personal alcohol-level measuring devices for example, are readily available; let drinkers buy them and use them, otherwise either stop drinking or stop driving.... is anymore educational than allowing persons who genuinely thought they'd taken the correct procedures to ensure they were safe to drive, to get one warning and no more...
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