charlesbronson
Greenlighter
- Joined
- Dec 23, 2002
- Messages
- 147
Yeah I don't think it is just a matter of saying it's all about safety and that's that. If it were entirely about safety, I would think that the government organisations involved in this whole initiative would place more emphasis on developing and implementing a system which ensures that only drivers with THC/meth saliva concentrations that are indicative of impairment are actually prosecuted. If it is done for alcohol, why should there not be arbitrary impairment cut-offs for drug concentrations? After all, if they claim that the issue is road safety, then it is irrelevant that the drugs are illegal and that you have consumed them - this initiative is apparently not aimed at using public roads to detect any and all illegal activity - the only issue that should matter is whether or not your driving ability is significantly impaired as a consequence. I don't think detecting methamphetamine use up to 24hours after administration is still a matter of targeting impaired drivers....
Until the issues are explained, and the current methods are justified or changed, I will continue to express my dissatisfaction with the road drug testing initiative as it currently stands, and I think people who do the same are justified in their stance. If governments are not ready to do this, then they shouldn't rush at the citizens' expense, they should take their time and do it properly. I don't see why drug users should take shit in the name of proposed 'safety'....and I don't think we should all be prepared to simply justify the actions of legislators in the name of road 'safety', without having more of a say about their methods other than just "hey, just don't take drugs and drive!!!!". I reason that if safety were the only issue here, a better system that leaves less margin for errors which cause unnecessary trauma for unimpaired or non-drug using drivers should be developed. Be careful how quickly you jump on the bandwagon of a given idea just because it seems to have an honourable cause....without scrutiny the police and government will never bother improving their methods and laws.
On a different note, I really don't understand how a roadside drug test can detect methamphetmine, and supposedly via the same method detect MDMA, showing a positive result for methamphetamine, yet it can somehow avoid a positive methamphetamine result from detecting dexamphetamine and the even more common OTC drug pseudoephedrine. Pseudoephedrine is structurally a more similar molecule to methamphetamine than is MDMA, and is such a common drug that I don't see how this testing kit could avoid a stack of false positives courtesy of drivers who use Sudafed, Demazin etc. Unless ofcourse it is true that the test can in fact identify MDMA and meth but not pseudo or dexamph. It would be interesting to conduct a saliva test on someone after they take a 120mg pseudo tablet....
Until the issues are explained, and the current methods are justified or changed, I will continue to express my dissatisfaction with the road drug testing initiative as it currently stands, and I think people who do the same are justified in their stance. If governments are not ready to do this, then they shouldn't rush at the citizens' expense, they should take their time and do it properly. I don't see why drug users should take shit in the name of proposed 'safety'....and I don't think we should all be prepared to simply justify the actions of legislators in the name of road 'safety', without having more of a say about their methods other than just "hey, just don't take drugs and drive!!!!". I reason that if safety were the only issue here, a better system that leaves less margin for errors which cause unnecessary trauma for unimpaired or non-drug using drivers should be developed. Be careful how quickly you jump on the bandwagon of a given idea just because it seems to have an honourable cause....without scrutiny the police and government will never bother improving their methods and laws.
On a different note, I really don't understand how a roadside drug test can detect methamphetmine, and supposedly via the same method detect MDMA, showing a positive result for methamphetamine, yet it can somehow avoid a positive methamphetamine result from detecting dexamphetamine and the even more common OTC drug pseudoephedrine. Pseudoephedrine is structurally a more similar molecule to methamphetamine than is MDMA, and is such a common drug that I don't see how this testing kit could avoid a stack of false positives courtesy of drivers who use Sudafed, Demazin etc. Unless ofcourse it is true that the test can in fact identify MDMA and meth but not pseudo or dexamph. It would be interesting to conduct a saliva test on someone after they take a 120mg pseudo tablet....