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Should There be Laws Against Drinking and Driving?


http://www.libertarian.co.uk/multimedia/2013-01-22-sig-drink.mp3

Sean Gabb, Director of the Libertarian Alliance, speaking on BBC Radio 4 on the 22nd January 2013.

The excuse for this discussion was a story about an Irish local authority that wishes to relax the drinking and driving laws.

Sean argues these points:

Sean was asked by the presenter if he thought the current laws had reduced the amount of drinking and driving. Sean answered that shooting drunk drivers out of hand on the roadside would be more effective, but that it would not be done for obvious reasons.

The woman from a charity called Brake came in to say that the right to life is the most precious right. Sean decided, because he would have been silenced, not to make the following reply:

Note: Brake has been called a “fake charity” on the grounds that the majority of its income is from the taxpayers. According to Mark Wadsworth:

Their website screams fakecharity – it uses the same template as all the others, with sub-pages for ‘Home’, ‘About us’, ‘Contact us’, ‘Our supporters’ (as a variant on ‘Support us’ or ‘Donate’), ‘Jobs’ and ‘Links’.
The income in their 2007 accounts (see page 8) was as follows:
Corporate partnership £285,718 Donations £333,057 Road Safety Education £296,984 BrakeCare £75,979 Fleet Safety Forum £66,535 Research £3,360 Investment income £15,759
Their list of corporate partners seems innocuous enough. Donations include “Community Fundraising £236,319” (which might or might not be suspect). Note 3 to the accounts discloses income of about £70,000 from the Department for Transport, the Youth Justice Board, the Office for Criminal Justice Reform and the Scottish Executive. Those government departments are all duly listed on their site, along with Children in Need, which you might argue is not a fakecharity.
So far, so not so bad, really. Where it starts to stink a bit is on their list of Organisations working with Brake, which includes, along with some genuinely interested private groups, the following:
British Transport Advisory Committee Chief Fire Officer Association Child Accident Prevention Trust Community Transport Association Disaster Aftercare Services European Secure Vehicle Alliance GMB The Intensive Care Society Learn + Live Motabillity Pre-Hospital Care Never Away Parliamentary Advisory Council for Transport Safety Prospect Public & Commercial Services Union Road Operators’ Safety Council Road Safety Markings Association The Slower Speeds Initiative Transport & General Workers Union Transport Management Association of the NHS University of Huddersfield
All of which appear to be quangos, fakecharities, public sector pressure groups and/or wholly or party funded or arganised by the government (there may be exceptions and I am happy to edit that list down a bit).
So, to cut a long story short, Brake appears to be, to a large extent, a fake.

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