ProDarwin said:
z31maniac said:
And another 14% are people that were dumb enough to get in the car with the drunk driver. Which means it's 11% of people not the drunk driver or riding with them that are killed by the drunk driver.
I wouldn't say that 14% made a stupid choice. Many likely didn't comprehend the level of intoxication. And an number of them were minors likely without a choice.
My son was in a DUI car crash as a passenger. He was 3. He sure as berkeley didn't choose to be there.
I was thinking about this more last night after posting, and hopefully this makes sense:
It seems like this issues hits pretty close to home for you, especially now seeing the example with your son (I am very sorry you and he had that experience). I can certainly understand how that would give you a bias, or a filter in how you see the world/this particular topic, and make it seem like a no-question, slam dunk. Viewing the issue through that same lens, I agree with you 100%. If there was a way to have such a system work perfectly, with no false positives or negatives, not detract from sober enthusiast driving experiences or be particularly intrusive, who wouldn't support it? I can't think of anyone who would say, "Driving while intoxicated and causing crashes is a good thing". Most here seem to be arguing HOW to fix this (existing laws vs. passive systems vs. active systems), not the validity of stopping drunk drivers.
I also have biases that I'm not always aware of. My alcohol consumption is 0-2 beers a week, usually at home with takeout food on a Friday or Saturday. In my day to day world, DUI's just aren't visible/a "real" problem, because I don't see them. So I may be unintentionally under-estimating the number of accidents/amount of damage they cause vs. the difficulties of programming/changing/upgrading ALL the cars on the road. Through my filter, we are "punishing" (through $ and a reduced consumer experience) 98% of normal people to account for the 2% of idiots.
Also, I worked in vehicle development for an OEM R&D dept. One of my last jobs before I left 10 years ago was evaluating all of our competitors driving assistance systems (and our own). This was when active cruise control (ACC), lane keeping assist, and blind spot monitoring were beginning to be widespread. I was able to fault every system from every manufacturer. Every single one. Meaning I could set up a scenario driving down the road where the automatic system would make the wrong call. So I have my own bias/personal filter AGAINST these systems, particularly when someone (no one here, unless Elon Musk browses the forum occasionally) claims they can "fix" human driving.
Putting both of our biases together, if the systems fail 2% of the time, and we've swapped 2% system failure for 2% drunken shiny happy people, have we fixed/improved the situation? Or spent a lot of time, cost, and effort to trade one set of problems for another? I genuinely don't know the answer, but that is where the root of my skepticism and counterpoints come from. It's a tough issue to talk about, and it must hit home for a lot of people that have experiences like yours, so I hope the added explanation helps a bit. Please know I always find these discussions on GRM helpful and insightful to see things from a different perspective