Drunk Driving
Compulsory alcoholism rehabilitation for people behind bars for alcohol-related offenses and hard-hitting
changes in our feelings and mind-set about drinking alcoholic beverages, when added to the current anti-drunk
driving campaigns and laws, are likely to make a profound affect on reducing the shocking number of
alcohol-related traffic accidents that occur in our society on an annual basis.
Please continue reading for more relevant information about drunk driving in the United
States.
Some Sobering Information
An article entitled "Drunk Driving" was featured on the "Insurance Essentials Install" website in February of
2007. Excuse the pun, but the following three statistical facts that were articulated in this article are quite
sobering.
Alcohol-Related Deaths
First, in spite of increasing the large number
of anti-drunk driving laws and programs, the multiplicity of individuals who died in alcohol-related accidents
declined by only .2% from 2004 to 2005 (16,919 in 2004 versus 16,885 in 2005).
Even though every life saved is vital, this trim down, from a statistical standpoint, at any rate, was not
considerable.
That is, the fact that 34 fewer people died in alcohol-related accidents in 2005 than in 2004 could have
happened entirely by chance and not due to the more stringent drunk driving laws or to the influence of citizen
activist groups such as Mothers Against Drunk Drivers (MADD).
Repeat DUI Wrongdoers
Second, even with the passing of more severe DUI laws and outcomes, more than 50% of U.S. drivers arrested for
drunk driving are repeat lawbreakers.
This statistic is distressing when perceived on its own merits. What has also become newsworthy,
nonetheless, is the multiplicity of repeat offenders who have received a shocking number of DUIs.
For example, in early 2006 an Ohio man who got 12 DWIs within a ten-year period of time killed two Hiram college
students in an alcohol-related accident.
Not surprisingly, numerous
people in the local towns and cities were livid with the driver who accidentally killed the two college
students.
What was perchance more instructive in this situation, all the same, was the multiplicity of phone calls made to
the radio talk shows by people wondering who the judges and prosecutors were and what the consequences were for
this driver after he got his 3rd, his 8th, and his 11th DWIs.
That is, individuals starting asking the complex questions concerning the integrity of those who acquired quite
a few DWIs as well as the accountability of the judges and prosecutors who were involved in the repeat wrongdoers'
legal proceedings.

Too Many Drivers with Suspended Licenses Still Drive
Third, 67% of U.S. drivers with suspended licenses still drive. From a reasonable point of view, numerous
people must be wondering how this is possible in an age of technological progress that features capabilities such
as "real-time" computer access to driver registration facts and data that are obtainable by the law enforcement
establishment.
| According to the American Medical Association, scientific evidence suggests that
even modest alcohol consumption in late childhood and adolescence can result in permanent brain
damage. |
Drunk Driving Projects
According to the authors of "Drunk Driving," more than a few projects have been created that have focused upon
alcohol-related deaths on the U. S. roads and highways.
For example, existing drunk driving laws have become more stringent, new laws have been passed, drunk driving
task forces have been implements by several states, and citizen activist groups like MADD have impacted some of the
feelings and attitudes toward drinking and driving in our society.
As considerable as these anti-drunk driving laws and campaigns have been, then again, the fact remains that only
34 fewer individuals died in alcohol-related accidents in 2005 than in 2004.
Evidently, other approaches must be undertaken in order to substantially diminish the number of U.S. individuals
who die in alcohol-related traffic accidents.
| According to a report published by the National Center on Addiction and Substance
Abuse at Columbia University, the gender gap for drinking is disappearing. What's the evidence for
this? The fact that female ninth-graders are just as likely to be drinkers as male
ninth-graders. Now this is true progress! |
Supplementary Anti-Drunk Driving Initiatives
In response to the need for more ammo in the battle on alcohol-related traffic accidents, I offer two
complementary anti-drunk driving proposals.
First, those who are jailed due to alcohol-related offenses need to get required alcohol dependency
rehabilitation while they are in jail or in prison. True, other drivers are safer when the offending persons
are off the streets and incarcerated.
When the jail or prison sentence is completed, then again, the vast majority of alcohol-related lawbreakers will
return to the real world.
Recognizing
this truth, I recommend that alcohol-related offenders who have received alcoholism treatment while imprisoned
are more likely to become more accountable individuals who abstain from drinking while driving and less likely
to become repeat DUI wrongdoers once they go back to society.
Second, demonstrative and recognizable modifications in our views in relation to drinking alcoholic beverages
needs to transpire in our society.
Given that drinking alcoholic beverages is so available, acceptable, and comprehensively embedded in our
society, moreover, it has been awfully hard for various people, especially the teenagers, to justly conceptualize
the deleterious, injurious, and terminal aspects of alcohol abuse and alcohol addiction. This needs to be
addressed and significantly modified.
| Even if you do not personally own a vehicle, but wish to have your driving
privileges restored after a DUI conviction, you still must provide a SR-22 form by buying a
non-owner policy. In other words, you will have to buy insurance for a car that you do not even
own. |
Our Insightful and Aware Society
Our society
has become more insightful and more mindful of the mental and physical risks, deaths, and ruinous outcomes of
alcohol abuse and alcohol dependency.
It is therefore time for us to balance the existing marketing "message" with a more undeniable and healthy
perspective in connection with alcohol intake.
Stated differently, drinking alcoholic beverages needs to be less advertised, less glamorized, and seen as less
"cool" while the commercials, advertisements, and public service proclamations that underscore healthy, safe and
sound, and alcohol-free actions and lifestyles need to be increased and put in the forefront of people's
awareness.
| Human studies of addictive behaviors have clearly implicated both environmental and
genetic influences, as well as interactions between the two. While genetics play a major role in
defining who we are, the environment in which we are raised is just as influential. |
Drunk Driving: Conclusion
Apparently, something above and beyond our current anti-drunk driving laws and initiatives needs to be done in
order to substantially decrease the alcohol-related deaths on our highways.

It is asserted that basic alcohol dependency rehab for individuals who are incarcerated for alcohol-related
offenses and more relevant and powerful modifications in our feelings and mind-set toward drinking alcohol are
crucial factors that will help contribute to the substantial reduction in the unacceptable numbers of people in our
society who die in alcohol-related traffic accidents every year.
| It's not a question of whether you are legally intoxicated, it's a question of
whether or not it is safe to drive when you have consumed any amount of alcohol. Research shows
that impairment begins long before a person reaches the blood alcohol concentration level of
.08. |
| Children who begin to drink at a very early age (before age 12) often share similar
personality characteristics that may make them more likely to start drinking. Young people who are
disruptive, hyperactive, and aggressive—often referred to as having conduct problems or being
antisocial—as well as those who are depressed, withdrawn, or anxious, may be at greatest risk for
alcohol problems. |
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