ballsdeep123
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 5, 2006
- Posts
- 173
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settle down russian boy scout...so you never drink and drive blah blah blahhhhh. Someone forget to give you a medal?????
Those nastly little things called facts...hahhahahahaha.
I'm a pilot, I don't deal in reality. :laugh: I read it on another flight info post. Bad facts, pass them on. All your base will belong to us! http://forums.flightinfo.com/showthread.php?t=87461
Throw me a bone here? What's that thread got to do with this thread?
Oh and people get "f'ed up" and drive and kill people on purpose. That is why if you kill someone it is vehicular manslaughter, not vehicular homicide. I'm sorry for your friends, truely. But with today's standards in some states on what intoxicated is anyone can get a DUI. Ex: UTAH is .04! One beer for some people! Playing the BAC game is BS, the law should be .00. Zero tolerance. Setting a "limit" just sets people up to think that they are okay to drive. It has become a way for states to make money. If they actually cared wouldn't they have you do something besides give them money?
I agree the law should be .00. But nobody, even myself wants to have to bring a designated driver to dinner for just one or two beers.
We've all gone out intending to have "one or two" and ended up closing the place down. But what happens after that is still a choice. In my case, I'll either take a cab or get picked up. The person who chooses to drive anyway is knowingly putting others at risk.
If you get behind the wheel pissed drunk, it could be argued that yes, in fact, you ARE out to kill someone. You are knowingly putting people in danger, and premeditation could be argued in court.
But in this country it truly is all about the money.
The 2007 FAR 67.207 under mental standards states ANY bal test showing over 0.04 % constitutes alcohol dependency, meaning NO medical 1st, 2nd or 3rd for at least 2 years. The test doesn’t have to be from DOT either.
.
There has been no change to FAR 67.107/.207 it always read this way:
2) A verified positive drug test result, an alcohol test result of 0.04 or greater alcohol concentration, or a refusal to submit to a drug or alcohol test required by the U.S. Department of Transportation or an agency of the U.S. Department of Transportation;
A police breathalyzer for DUI does not fall under DOT rules/ requirements.
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]e-CFR Data is current as of October 12, 2006[/FONT]