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  • Dads Against Monthly Murder

    Mothers Against Drunk Drivers

    Them Mothers Is A Mess



    October 22, 2005

    I begin to think that Mothers Against Drunk Drivers constitute a public nuisance, and need to be stuffed down an abandoned oil well. And indicted for fraud. We could dangle a microphone down the well on a wire so that they could testify.

    These tiresome biddies aren’t against drunk driving, which anyone with a possum’s brains is against. Your dangerous drunks are incorrigibles who time and again blow horrific BACs and wobble around the roads like student unicyclists. The proper response is permanent revocation of driver’s licenses. If they need to go to work they can buy a horse.

    But the MADD girls are not against drunk driving. They are prohibitionists pretending to be something else. Their name is artfully crafted to make them seem to be no end virtuous—moral bidets squirting purest goodness. What could be more pure than motherhood? But it is like calling the Spanish Inquisition a society for the protection of orphans. It still isn’t.

    An example of the swindle: Texas sends undercover cops into bars to arrest drunks before they drive. (Links below.) A bit shaky, that. You are talking to your date over a bottle of wine and dinner when the guy at the next table pulls out a badge and a Breathalyzer. “Step this way, sir….” But never mind.

    At The Agitator, I find this: “Heather Hodges, an Abilene-based MADD victims advocate, said her group is working closely with the TABC on the project.”

    Says Heather, ''We believe responsible adults should drink responsibly. And those that serve them should be responsible. A lot of people think it's OK to be drunk in bar, but it's illegal. A bar is not intended to be a place to get fall-down drunk ... . You don't have to be fall-down drunk to be considered drunk. Even after one drink, you aren't 100 percent.''

    Following the introductory platitude, note the logical sequence: Falling-down drunk is bad. If you aren’t falling down you are still drunk. After one drink you are impaired. Therefore if you have a glass of wine at dinner, you should be arrested. This is not opposition to drunken driving. It is prohibition in drag, to be enforced by disguised police.

    Let’s think about this. After one drink you “are not a hundred percent.” Heather believes that we must keep people from driving who are “not one hundred percent.” OK. I’ll buy it. Let’s get impaired people off the road.

    Going to the web site of The Women’s Health Channel, I find the following listed as symptoms of PMS:

    "• Mood-related ("affective") symptoms: depression, sadness, anxiety, anger, irritability, frequent and severe mood swings.
    • Mental process ("cognitive") symptoms: decreased concentration, indecision."

    Does that sound like one hundred percent to you? I figure it’s a pretty good description of an unstable borderline psychotic. Oh good. I want to drive on the roads with someone who doesn’t pay attention, couldn’t decide what to do it she did, and wants to kill something. Me, probably.

    We need to recognize the seriousness of PMS. People joke about it, as they do about drunkenness, but these women are public hazards. “Anger, irritability, frequent and severe mood swings”? (Now that’s a revelation.) “Decreased concentration”? Sounds like a bad drunk in a pool hall, a recipe for inattentive homicidal road-rage. I think the police should send squads into supermarket parking lots to check for these impaired women. Other cops should wait outside churches. To better protect the public we should have checkpoints on highways.

    How does an officer tell when a woman is irresponsibly driving while under the, er, influence? Not by asking her. The impaired lie. With drunks, the dissimulation is often obvious. (“Jush two beersh, offsher.”) Those suffering from PMS can feign sanity, however briefly. Perhaps they should be required to carry a notarized letter from a gynecologist, like a hall pass. Or a governmentally issued calendar.

    Ponder this from Planet Estrogen: “Additionally, several studies demonstrate reduced reaction time, neuromuscular coordination and manual dexterity during the pre-menstruation and menstrual phases.”

    Are not these the classic symptoms of a snootful? The police might reasonably carry a device to test reaction times. They might profitably lurk in nail salons. Disguised.

    But there is hope in technology. Last year for a newspaper I covered a proposal in New Mexico, supported by MADD, to make it impossible to start your car if you have been drinking:

    From The Agitator: “People across the state are upset with House Bill 126, which would require ignition interlock devices be installed on all new cars sold in New Mexico by Jan. 1, 2008, regardless of the purchaser's driving record..." (It didn’t pass.)

    "...The interlock device uses a blow tube which activates sensors when one blows into the tube. If alcohol is detected, the sensors activate a mechanism which shuts down the vehicle's ignition system and the car cannot be started.”

    The approach illutstrates the weird totalitarianism of the female. Anything, anything at all, to increase security, security, security. We are all two-year-olds in need of diapering. The Mommy State is well named.

    The wisdom of the ignition-interlock is of course evident. You go camping with your daughter. While you sit around the fire heisting a brew, she falls and cuts herself on the ax. She is bleeding badly. You rush her to the car to go to the hospital and…it won’t start. What the hell. You can adopt.

    I believe that cars should be equipped with hormone-level detectors, similar to the blood-sugar monitors used by diabetics. At the very least, to start the car the potentially impaired driver should have to insert her governmentally-issued calendar into a slot and put her hand in a fingerprint-reader.

    Whatever the solution, society should not have to tolerate such threats to children. Note that women are in fact sometimes around children, when they get home from work. Further, research shows that they are habitual offenders. Drunks can sometimes be weaned off the juice, but here we are dealing with assured repeaters. At the very least perpetrators should be required to undergo therapy, perhaps in twelve-step programs. Should this not work, electronic ankle-bracelets might protect us. Institutionalization could help.

    Nelson Soucasaux, gynecologist: “Psychological signs and symptoms: Increase of nervous tension, anxiety, irritability, changes in the personality, emotional instability, depression, as well as increase or reduction of the sexual desire.”

    Irritable sex-crazed depressives at the wheel, with bad reflexes. Alternatively, frigid nut-cases. This is the adult responsibility that Heather wants? I am going to start a group called DAMM, Dads Against Monthly Murder. We will meet in tree houses, above the roofline of an SUV.

    ...people like to cry a lot... - Pekka
    ...we just argue without evidence, secure in our own superiority. - Snotty

  • #2
    He'll soon become head of Dads Against Monthy Neuterings, or DAMN, once his woman puts him in his place.
    B♭3

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    • #3
      MADD arn't prohibitionists, they're just overprotective moms made paranoid because drunk driving accidents are always in the local news constantly.



      Ozzy in 3... 2... 1...

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      • #4
        Hi!
        Captain of Team Apolyton - ISDG 2012

        When I was younger I thought curfews were silly, but now as the daughter of a young woman, I appreciate them. - Rah

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        • #5

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          • #6
            Originally posted by OzzyKP
            Hi!
            Come on, you can do better.

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            • #7
              I just blogged on MADD a few days ago, and discussed the guy/blog the above other refered to: http://www.oneandfour.org/archives/2...ging_anti.html

              MADD

              They aren't really against drunk driving since they go after all drinking. And they aren't really mothers since now they are run mostly by men.

              Plus they have like a junk-bond rating by some ethics group that rates the ratio of fundraising to programatic spending by non-profits. Its something like 50% of the money they raise goes straight to raising money. They exist for existence's sake.
              Captain of Team Apolyton - ISDG 2012

              When I was younger I thought curfews were silly, but now as the daughter of a young woman, I appreciate them. - Rah

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              • #8
                Originally posted by Odin
                MADD arn't prohibitionists, they're just overprotective moms made paranoid because drunk driving accidents are always in the local news constantly.
                If the government can cover up its ****ups, private citizens should be able to as well.
                Visit First Cultural Industries
                There are reasons why I believe mankind should live in cities and let nature reclaim all the villages with the exception of a few we keep on display as horrific reminders of rural life.-Starchild
                Meat eating and the dominance and force projected over animals that is acompanies it is a gateway or parallel to other prejudiced beliefs such as classism, misogyny, and even racism. -General Ludd

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                • #9
                  I too think they are the new prohibitionists. Here is an article by someone who also thinks so.

                  Too Drunk to Drive, or Just Too Drunk?



                  By Joe Bob Briggs
                  July 4, 2002

                  This is the time of year when we get assaulted with "Don't get drunk" ads.

                  Of course, they don't call them that. They're "Don't drink and drive" ads, or "Know when to say when" ads, or "Be a real friend--take the car keys" ads.

                  But I've noticed something over the past five years or so. Gradually the messages are changing from "don't drive drunk" to "don't get drunk at all." They're not so much about protecting lives on the highways as about making alcohol into this Evil Thing that no right-thinking person should ever over-indulge in.

                  Didn't we go through this once before? Didn't Carrie Nation fight this battle a hundred years ago? Didn't we have ten years of total alcohol probition, thereby proving that it doesn't work?

                  The difference a hundred years ago is that we had women saying "We don't want you men to drink," and the men saying, "Well, we like to drink, so we'll do it at the club where you can't catch us." Women hardly drank at all, and when they did it was some sort of fruity thing like a julep. (Come to think of it, not that much has changed.) The battle over drinking is partly the ancient battle of the sexes. Women could live without it. Men couldn't.

                  Earlier this month the Michigan legislature put into effect a new law saying that "I was too drunk" can't be used as a defense to any crime or behavior, no way, no time. I would be surprised if it's constitutional--you're supposed to be allowed to put on any defense you want the jury to hear--but let history record that the bill was sponsored by a female. And Michigan wasn't the first to do it. Ten other states have outlawed a defense that was previously honored for almost a thousand years: admitting intoxication as a way to plead that your judgment was impaired.

                  The only way this can be interpreted is that drinking too much is now a crime in itself. "The defense that you don't have to take personal responsibility because you are drunk," said State Representative Ruth Johnson, sponsor of the legislation, "is against everything this country stands for."

                  Well, not really. Laws like that weren't even common in Communist Russia, where they penalized you for the slightest outrages against public "normalcy," but where drunkenness was still regarded as a partial defense. When the Constitution was written, public drunkenness was a crime, but when other crimes were committed while drunk, it was considered a mitigation. That principle lasted about 200 years, and I don't think the courts enforcing it were unAmerican.

                  It's not a crime to get drunk. Let's start with that. We're going through some kind of retro-Puritanism phase right now in which any kind of benevolent depiction of intoxication is banned. Foster Brooks, Red Skelton and Dean Martin, entertainers who traded on their intoxication, doing "drunk acts" onstage, would probably be picketed by the PTA today, and they certainly wouldn't be allowed on national television.

                  The reason given, if you press for an explanation, is to cut down deaths on the highways. But what if, like me, you have no car? Why is it assumed that everyone is driving? Even if you do have a car, you might not have it with you. And how is the bartender--on the hook for "over-serving" laws--supposed to know whether the person he's serving has a car or not? Haven't we passed laws that essentially say it's no longer legal to get drunk, even in a bar, regardless of whether you're driving or not?

                  So the whole driving issue is a red herring. The real truth behind all this legislation is that the authors of it simply don't like liquor. If they could bring back Prohibition, they would. And making it illegal to do anything WHILE drunk is just a back-door way of saying you should sip one wine spritzer per day and then go home and have some coffee. It's yet one more example of government trying to legislate lifestyle.

                  It also assumes that everybody is drunk in the same way, at the same level, in every case. It makes no distinction between actual blackouts--when you really don't know what you're doing-- and being one-tenth of a point over the legal level of drunkenness. It makes no distinction between the guy who is impaired after one drink, because he's an alcoholic, and the guy who can drink ten but still make judgments. There was a time when it was believed that judges and juries should make these kinds of fine distinctions, but now we have one of those "zero tolerance" laws.

                  "Zero tolerance" is the solution for people too lazy or stupid to figure it out. "Zero tolerance" is for people who think every court case is the same, every defendant is the same, and every judge is a child who shouldn't be allowed to look the accused in the eye and make a judgment call. (Increasingly judges aren't allowed to judge anymore.) "Zero tolerance" is the language of the fanatic, the zealot and the witch-hunter.

                  I'll give you an illustration. In any drunk-driving case, there are three factual points in time that have to be studied by the court:

                  1. When the guy started drinking.

                  2. When the guy got into his car.

                  3. When the guy got stopped, either because of an accident or because he was pulled over.

                  The number of drinks has to be divided by the time that elapsed between point 1 and point 2 in order to figure out how drunk he was.

                  At point 2, there could--under the old laws--be two types of mitigation. He might know he's had too much to drink but get in the car anyway. He might think he's under the limit. Or he might be so blind drunk that he doesn't even know what city he's in or what day it is. Under the old system, evidence would be presented to determine what kind of decision he was making, if any at all.

                  This is all moot now. The legislatures and courts have essentially said, "People who drink have no rights." A person having an actual alcoholic blackout--a person who is, according to the American Psychiatric Association, clinically ill--is regarded at point 2 as a person who is rationally choosing to endanger other people's lives.

                  But the law goes even further. Current DWI laws say that, if you cause an accident while drunk, you're punished more than a person who drives recklessly for some other reason--for example, a person who's just angry, or stressed-out, or sleepy. The logic here is that you always know what you're doing when you get into the car, even if later events prove that you don't know what you're doing. You get an extra year, or ten years, tacked onto your sentence for choosing to get behind the wheel, even if you can prevent evidence showing that you didn't choose to get behind the wheel--evidence that is now forbidden anyway.

                  What this does is hammer you for point 1--having the first drink. It's a law against drinking. And maybe that's what they want. God forbid anyone should suggest that every case is different, that types of intoxication are as variable as types of people, that levels of responsibility are as complex as human beings. God forbid we should go back to having real trials instead of kangaroo courts. God forbid the courts should ever show an iota of mercy to a sick man.

                  That would be so 19th century.
                  "In Italy for 30 years under the Borgias, they had warfare, terror, murder and bloodshed. But they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci and the Renaissance. In Switzerland, they had brotherly love. They had 500 years of democracy and peace. And what did that produce? The cuckoo clock."
                  —Orson Welles as Harry Lime

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                  • #10
                    MADD sucks

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