Given the ineffectiveness of previous attempts to persuade drivers to give up the lethal habit, which puts both drivers and the rest of society in harm's way, creating a new crime and spelling out sufficiently serious legal penalties carries our last ray of hope for a difference in driver behavior.
As lawmakers deliberate on the amendment to the Criminal Law that criminalizes drunk driving, there are complaints about it being unnecessarily harsh.
However, criminalizing drunk driving is based on a clear and present danger to society, one whose potential harm far outweighs all the above considerations.
Drunk driving, not driving under the influence, is a proven cause of traffic accidents on our roads. Given its potential harm to both the drivers, passengers and others on the road, there is a widely shared consensus that this risky behavior should be prohibited.
Drunk driving does absolutely no good and is harmful and threatening to all parties involved. Making it taboo, by means of criminal penalties, is the only sensible answer to the pervasive phenomenon.
Many had hoped the law to be strict enough to deter drunk driving.
Chinese characters "drunk" and "crime" are cuffed together |
If the draft is made into law without modifications, it will surely send the wrong message, which would be against the proclaimed purpose of discouraging drunk driving.
We urge the legislators to not lose sight of the devastating consequences of drunk driving and society's imperative need for an effective legal deterrent against it.
The least they could do is to delete the only if "circumstances are serious" precondition, and make the punishment for drunk driving as strict as possible.