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Transportation United States

NTSB Wants Alcohol Detection Systems Installed In All New Cars In US (arstechnica.com) 279

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: The US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) yesterday recommended that all new vehicles be equipped with alcohol detection systems that can stop people from driving while drunk. The NTSB can't issue such a regulation on its own but urged the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) to do so. The NTSB said it "is recommending measures leveraging new in-vehicle technologies that can limit or prohibit impaired drivers from operating their vehicles as well as technologies to prevent speeding." If adopted, this would require "passive vehicle-integrated alcohol impairment detection systems, advanced driver monitoring systems or a combination of the two that would be capable of preventing or limiting vehicle operation if it detects driver impairment by alcohol," the NTSB said. The agency urged the NHTSA to "require all new vehicles to be equipped with such systems."

Under a US law enacted last year, the NHTSA is already required to examine whether it can issue this type of rule. While drunk driving is a longstanding problem that has caused many deaths, the NTSB said its recommendation was spurred by its investigation into one crash that killed nine people -- including seven children -- in January 2021 on State Route 33 near Avenal, California. On that two-lane highway with a speed limit of 55 mph, an SUV driver leaving a New Year's Day gathering "was driving at a speed between 88 and 98 mph," the NTSB report said. [...]

Section 24220 of the Bipartisan Infrastructure LawSection 30111 of Title 49 in US law, it can delay issuing a rule for three years and submit annual reports to Congress describing the reasons for not issuing the rule. Each annual report would also have to contain an update on "the deployment of advanced drunk and impaired driving prevention technology in vehicles." In writing the law, Congress noted that "in 2019, there were 10,142 alcohol-impaired driving fatalities in the United States involving drivers with a blood alcohol concentration level of .08 or higher, and 68 percent of the crashes that resulted in those fatalities involved a driver with a blood alcohol concentration level of .15 or higher." Congress also cited a study by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety estimating that "advanced drunk and impaired driving prevention technology can prevent more than 9,400 alcohol-impaired driving fatalities annually."

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NTSB Wants Alcohol Detection Systems Installed In All New Cars In US

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  • Wrong direction (Score:5, Interesting)

    by ebrandsberg ( 75344 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @04:48PM (#62902433)

    and how would it distinguish between a driver and a passenger that was drunk without having a breath interlock in every car? Plus, with the self-driving car technology getting better and better, the aim should be to be able to have a car that can get a drunk driver home without issue vs. preventing them from getting home.

    • by Mitreya ( 579078 )
      You know the system (DADSS) is really good because they use words like "accurately" and "reliably". Well, I am sold.

      A breath system, which measures alcohol as a driver breathes normally, when in the driver's seat. It will be designed to take instantaneous readings as the driver breathes normally and to accurately and reliably distinguish between the driver's breath and that of any passengers.

    • Re:Wrong direction (Score:5, Interesting)

      by larryjoe ( 135075 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @04:59PM (#62902497)

      and how would it distinguish between a driver and a passenger that was drunk without having a breath interlock in every car? Plus, with the self-driving car technology getting better and better, the aim should be to be able to have a car that can get a drunk driver home without issue vs. preventing them from getting home.

      That's a laudable wish, but we're not to the point where we can guarantee that a self-driving car decreases the probability of avoiding a drunk driving death more than increasing the probability that the self-driving car's malfunction results in a death.

      Using breathalyzers to immobilize a car is tricky (e.g., how to know who's breathing). Maybe using self-driving car tech to monitor the sanity of driving might be a better way to determine when to declare a driver to be either drunk or otherwise incapacitated (e.g., sleepy, distracted, heart attack, etc.) and then immobilize the car. In that use case, false positives are annoying (like a flat tire) but the probability of a fatality is hopefully very low.

      • Re:Wrong direction (Score:5, Interesting)

        by TheGavster ( 774657 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @05:16PM (#62902573) Homepage

        Using breathalyzers to immobilize a car is tricky (e.g., how to know who's breathing). Maybe using self-driving car tech to monitor the sanity of driving might be a better way to determine when to declare a driver to be either drunk or otherwise incapacitated (e.g., sleepy, distracted, heart attack, etc.) and then immobilize the car. In that use case, false positives are annoying (like a flat tire) but the probability of a fatality is hopefully very low.

        You bring up a critical point here: we persecute drunk driving mainly because we have an accepted way to measure it (it also helps that there's a pre-existing puritan vilification of alcohol). Tired and distracted driving are just as bad, and probably more prevalent, but there's no roadside test for fatigue or a failing marriage. If we can leverage lanekeeping sensors to detect the actual problem (ie, reckless driving patterns), that would be a massive improvement.

        • My lanekeep on my Honda Insight would have to get an order of magnitude better but I like the idea. Right now, it can do straight-aways just fine. It can even take a single slight curve and do fine. Asking anymore then that and it quickly starts to over-correct then over-correct some more.

          It's a nice assistant but can easily get confused. A Y in the road will confuse it unless you are really off to the side of the lane. Once you learn these things about the software/sensor setup it's a nice assistant but it

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        I imagine most manufacturers will use passive monitoring, i.e. a camera (using IR to see through sunglasses) to monitor how much attention the driver is paying and if they appear alert. The same stuff already used by some driving aids, and to warn the driver if they appear to be getting tired.

        Rather than immobilize the car, it would probably present a warning to the driver. Like the incessant noise cars make when you fail to put your seatbelt on. That alone would probably save quite a few lives by making dr

        • The tech will have to get better first. The speed sign recongnition is kind of neat but sometimes it will pickup streets while you are on a freeway. Be very lame of my car to decrease to 40 or 35 while I'm suppose to be at 65.

          I would love gps-based governor's for all new cars. No reason to be going more then 10 over the limit. Primarily this is for dense cities which is a lot of California. Each state could choose to use the technology or even each city.

          If it was only ever used in major city limits that wou

          • by guruevi ( 827432 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @08:50PM (#62903311)

            No reason to go 10 over? How about not being rear ended on the highway by the entire stream of cars and trucks going 20-30 over.

          • Re:Wrong direction (Score:5, Insightful)

            by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @09:24PM (#62903375) Homepage Journal

            I would love gps-based governor's for all new cars. No reason to be going more then 10 over the limit. Primarily this is for dense cities which is a lot of California. Each state could choose to use the technology or even each city.

            If it was only ever used in major city limits that would go a long way to helping with traffic accidents where speed is the primary factor.

            I do not think it will ever happen but I would be totally cool with it. Way to many people drive way to fast in city centers. Do that in the country side.

            Sorry, and respectfully, but FUCK all of that.

            This isn't about safety, it's about control.

            And I just can't believe how many of the younger people are so willing to cede control of their lives, their possessions, everything to the government.

            I guess it's true...what one generation tolerates, the next generation embraces.

            Just wait till we're all in EVs that are all remotely controlled, and the social credit score disables your vehicle, 'cause it knows you want to go to a protest rally...

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Locke2005 ( 849178 )
      Currently Teslas interpret motorcycles with low dual taillights as cars very far away... and go ahead and hit them. Too motorcycle riders have been killed by being rear-ended by Teslas on "autopilot" so far.
      • Re:Wrong direction (Score:5, Insightful)

        by RightSaidFred99 ( 874576 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @05:10PM (#62902539)
        Great, now do humans. How many motorcycle riders have been killed by being rear-ended by barely functioning morons behind the wheel?
        • by Xenx ( 2211586 )
          Further, ostensibly, there should be a driver paying attention behind the wheel. Both systems would need to fail for the accident to happen.

          To be clear, I understand there are concerns about whether someone will pay attention when the Tesla is doing the driving for them. My opinion is that a good driver would pay attention like they're supposed to. Anyone that that doesn't would be classified as an inattentive driver either way, and would be a higher risk behind the wheel regardless.
      • by steveha ( 103154 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @06:03PM (#62902777) Homepage

        Currently Teslas interpret motorcycles with low dual taillights as cars very far away... and go ahead and hit them.

        I hadn't heard anything about this so I did a Google search for "Teslas on autopilot hit motorcycles" and came up with a news story about two incidents where a motorcyclist was hit. Two.

        Oh, I guess you said two, but you had a typo and I couldn't figure out what you meant. (I thought you were saying "too many")

        Let's widen the scope a bit. How many deaths has Autopilot caused? I discovered the macabre website Tesla Deaths [tesladeaths.com] whose whole purpose is to count people dying in Teslas, and this site's number for total deaths caused by Autopilot: 15. That's in about six years (the first one recorded was in January 2016).

        Tesla Autopilot is, on average, safer than a human [cleantechnica.com] already. But it's hard to count how many crashes didn't happen.

        And Autopilot isn't finished yet; it's still improving.

        It's very sad when anyone is killed for any reason, but it's clear that Tesla Autopilot is overall a good idea that saves lives.

        IMHO the whole "alcohol detection system" thing will be forgotten in just a couple years when Teslas with Full Self-Driving are running the non-beta version of the software and are driving several times more safely than even a sober human.

        And when inexpensive robotaxis are widely available I hope judges will have a low threshold for revoking the driver's license from drunk-driving offenders. "But I need to drive to my job" (totally unsympathetic) "Take a robotaxi"

        P.S. I just discovered the TESLA_saves_lives [twitter.com] Twitter account, devoted to "tracking all accidents avoided thanks to Tesla Autopilot and safety features".

        • by Junta ( 36770 )

          Note that that chart can't compare apples to apples.

          It compares miles that autopilot deign to be activated for to total miles. So it can be that the autopilot is safer than a human in the same circumstances, or autopilot nopes out of scenarios that a human deals with no matter what. The data does suggest less ambiguously that the active safety features mitigates risk, since those are more applicable across the board. Of course, there's also the possibility that the sort of person that turns off the safet

    • and how would it distinguish between a driver and a passenger that was drunk

      Let me think for 0.1 seconds...

      Maybe it could have a sensor on either side of the car and calculate the difference.

      It won't matter though:
      a) This won't fix old cars
      b) Full self driving will probably arrive long before this gets passed.

    • Thanks for posting this, if you hadn't, I would have.

      If we assume that drunk driving is a problem in America... and having lived nearly half my life in the U.S. and watched pretty much half the country or more drink with dinner and say "one beer per hours is ok" rather than "one been then wait and hour"... which where I live (Norway is one beer, wait overnight)... at least half the country is probably driving impaired at least sometimes.

      Basically, the US is one big fat nation of drunk drivers and pot heads.
  • Any estimates? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by gnasher719 ( 869701 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @04:49PM (#62902443)
    How much will this cost (installation, time spent for testing, delays due to false positives), and how much will it safe (accidents, deaths, injuries)?
    • Not enough saved, too much cost.
    • And how easy to bypass this bullshit if it's issuing false positives.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Don't try that defence if you kill someone while driving drunk. "Your honour, my client may have killed this one person, but think of all the time and money saved by driving inebriated over the years! You can't put a price on a human life, but you can put one on taxi fares."

      • I donâ(TM)t know if you can read, but part of the cost, as I write, would be the cost of _false_ positives. Stopping drivers who produce true positives will save money, no doubt.
        • How exactly will you have false positives for alcohol?

          Maybe you meant "false negatives".

        • Re: Any estimates? (Score:4, Insightful)

          by getuid() ( 1305889 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @05:40PM (#62902705)

          Doesn't even has to be a false positive.

          Think: an accident or a medical emergency (heart attack, or injury with large blood loss), impossibility to call an ambulance, and a slightly inebriated potential driver with a car. The chance of actually making an accident are a lot higher than with a sober driver, but fairly low altogether. All while death is a certainty for the one who's had the accident.

          Before you say "...but drunk!", remember that specific Western European states had their legal limit at 0.8 per thousand -- for decades. Eventually they changed it, but it wasn't like there was an epidemic of accidents. So where would you draw the line for a driver? 0.3? 0.5? 0.0 in accordance possibly with local legislation? 1.0, just to be sure?

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          My point, which apparently went over your head, is that while there may be a cost to false positives, using that as a justification for bypassing the system isn't going to get you very far.

    • How much will this cost (installation, time spent for testing, delays due to false positives), and how much will it safe (accidents, deaths, injuries)?

      I dunno, but I'd be totally in favor of convicted drunks having to pay for this to be installed and put up with the hassle of using it for the rest of their lives.

      If it were up to me I'd also mandate a pink flashing light on top of their cars so everybody would know...

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by wkk2 ( 808881 )

      If this passes, I think the manufacture should be required to cover all legal, towing, repair and alternative transportation costs related to any fault with the detection system for the life of the vehicle.

  • Disaster (Score:5, Informative)

    by topham ( 32406 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @04:52PM (#62902463) Homepage

    Having worked with people that had interlock devices ( IID or BAIID ) installed, all I can say is: it'll get people killed.

    Their failure rate is very high, and people traveling in adverse conditions will get stranded.

    As for the drunks? They'll just bypass the system anyway.

    • The classic work around is to just force your kid to blow into the tube.
      • If using this is the law, then I assume the penalty for driving drunk while circumventing that system would be a lot, lot higher than current drunk drivers get.
      • Re:Disaster (Score:4, Funny)

        by AmazingRuss ( 555076 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @05:26PM (#62902645)
        Well that's definitely a plus on the "should I have a kid" checklist.
      • The classic work around is to just force your kid to blow into the tube.

        You have to take a kid out drinking with you and have him sit in the car because he's not allowed in the bar?

        The third line of the summary says "...passive vehicle-integrated alcohol impairment detection systems, advanced driver monitoring systems or a combination of the two that would be capable of preventing or limiting vehicle operation if it detects driver impairment by alcohol,"

        The kid will also have to sit on your lap all the way home and pretend to be driving?

        I ain't seeing it.

        • Different states have different laws on children in bars. Florida doesn't mind one iota. I remember playing a lot of billiards and darts before I was ten. Also grew fond of karaoke in those days. Good times.

          By age twelve I could have a single drink(not, not at the bar) but wasn't allowed to leave the house if I did. Every so often I might have a wine cooler (remembers those?!).

          I imagine all this is why alcohol was never a big deal to me and I'm a very light drinker as a result. I did a bit of bar drinking i

      • Would a bicycle air pump work?

    • Re:Disaster (Score:4, Informative)

      by nealric ( 3647765 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @05:00PM (#62902501)

      I think there is pretty much zero chance they would recommend actual interlock devices in every car. They are way too expensive and impractical for such purposes, and the automakers would fight them tooth and nail (because nobody would want to buy a new car with them).

      More likely they go for some modification to existing lane tracking technology that looks for patterns indicating an impaired driver and then gives a warning in the cabin.

      • You kidding me? If everyone has to do it, then they make money off of selling it. Same with crash standards, emissions, ABS, airbags, backup cameras..... It's called regulatory capture.
      • by PPH ( 736903 )

        modification to existing lane tracking technology

        Like rousting all the cops from Li'l Jon's cocktail lounge and putting them on the roads to watch traffic.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Even if that wasn't the case, it'd still be a bad idea.

      Drunk driving is a people problem, people failing to take responsibility. You can't fix that by adding more tech to the mix. That'll just get people worked up and those most irresponsible with be the first to remove, bypass, disable, subvert the things.

      Worse, the most irresponsible are the newly minted drivers, ie So no, this isn't going to work. And the NTSB has to know this, so why the fuck do they even suggest it?

    • Re:Disaster (Score:5, Insightful)

      by fatwilbur ( 1098563 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @05:20PM (#62902593)
      Very true. It also perfectly exemplifies why individual rights must always be a key argument. I see too many full wokesters who think it’s vogue to denigrate those who argue for freedoms and use phrases like “muh freedumbs” (not understanding it’s their own freedoms they are sacrificing).

      Here we have a law that ostensibly prevents a crime we all despise and want eliminated. The logical facts of it are that interlocks will prevent drunk driving. You must be in support of drunk driving if you object to this right?!? The true reality, that anyone with experience, brain cells, and a critical eye is that it will inconvenience or harm untold masses who were never going to drink and drive. Further, its adding one more penalty on top of the much more punitive laws a certain few are already willing to ignore. I’m totally sure the threat of jail for drunk driving didn’t stop them but a $200 fine for disabling your mandatory device will stop them in its tracks.

      Think about this the next time you support a “protect the children from evil pedos” or “let’s make guns illegal to keep people safe” bill.
      • Re:Disaster (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Trailer Trash ( 60756 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @06:05PM (#62902779) Homepage

        Fine points, but the other aspect of this is that we have unelected bureaucrats who believe they have the power to force the equivalent of billions of dollars of cost on everybody. Our federal agencies badly need to be reined in.

      • Re:Disaster (Score:4, Insightful)

        by PPH ( 736903 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @06:41PM (#62902919)

        The logical facts of it are that interlocks will prevent drunk driving.

        But it approaches a search without probable cause. Or a sobriety checkpoint. Or stop and frisk*. I don't need to be tested for drunk driving as I gave up drinking 40 years ago (but then all the drunks will say that too). So why should I have to put up with the inconvenience? This may actually generate a lot of hate by those inconvenienced, directed against the groups stereotyped (rightly or otherwise) of frequently driving drunk. Same way gun owners dislike "those other people" who always seem to shoot each other and provide statistical justification for more gun control.

        *At least an automated system won't wave the mayor's nephew through and harass all the colored people.

        • OH! You just gave me an idea - this might actually be called a violation of the one Amendment that has never come up in a court case! That is, the 3rd Amendment. Yes, it's a machine, but the government would be forcing you to pay for it and maintain it so they could monitor you.
          • by PPH ( 736903 )

            Good one.

            Justice William O. Douglas used the amendment along with others in the Bill of Rights as a partial basis for the majority decision in Griswold v. Connecticut (1965), which cited the Third Amendment as implying a belief that an individual's home should be free from agents of the state.

            Link [wikipedia.org]

            So, software agents as well.

      • The fuck is a wokester?

    • This is a typical example of the kind of advice you get from someone with a single focus or concern. For example, if your single concern was on minimizing traffic deaths, you would pass a law allowing no one to drive over 3 mph, and no one could effectively go anywhere. If your single concern was minimizing COVID deaths, you would lock down a nation and allow no one to go to work or school, causing a massive disruption in the supply of goods, the loss of 1-2 years of learning, an increase in deaths due to v

  • by awwshit ( 6214476 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @04:52PM (#62902465)

    What is next?

    Testing for... marijuana? xanax? opioids? unpaid taxes?

    Hey kid, blow in this tube or I take away your phone.

    • Alcoholics with court-ordered alcohol testers in their cars have already used their kids to activate the vehicle. Of course, then you have to leave your kid sitting outside in the car all night until the bar closes. But I've been there and done that... in Alaska, in midwinter! I spent many, many hours sitting in an unheated car as a kid.
      • Are you saying that you support this kind of mandate for all cars at all times?

        I'll just say that there is no way to prevent all accidents, whether they involve alcohol or not.

    • Hey kid, blow in this tube or I take away your phone.

      I think there are Internets videos that start that way...

  • "All cars"? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Locke2005 ( 849178 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @04:54PM (#62902481)
    So, Fire trucks, ambulances, and cop cars too? Because that emergency can wait until you prove you're sober!
  • by King_TJ ( 85913 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @04:55PM (#62902483) Journal

    They often pull out the "children" card: "...the NTSB said its recommendation was spurred by its investigation into one crash that killed nine people -- including seven children".

    • They often pull out the "children" card: "...the NTSB said its recommendation was spurred by its investigation into one crash that killed nine people -- including seven children".

      And it could have been a mass suicide -- they don't know for sure.

  • But then how will police departments, state troopers, etc... make money?

    • I'm much safer at high speed that the old man I was behind this morning who was driving 25mph on a busy 8 lane freeway. Both of us would pass this blow test but I'm much less likely to cause a traffic problem or be in a collision.

      • by OrangeTide ( 124937 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @05:25PM (#62902639) Homepage Journal

        if you're under 25 the statistics [nsc.org] indicate that you're not safer than the old man. The best drivers are in their 60's although the difference between 30's and 60's isn't really that meaningful when comparing individuals.

        • if you're under 25 the statistics [nsc.org] indicate that you're not safer than the old man. The best drivers are in their 60's although the difference between 30's and 60's isn't really that meaningful when comparing individuals.

          Statistics are actually made up of individuals though, and while stereotyping is absolutely often the goal with statistics, individuals may take it more personally.

        • The best drivers have more training, at any age.

  • ... entirely outside of water bodies.
  • Last thing I do before heading into the office is brush my teeth and use listerine. It's been known to set off other alcohol breathalyzers, typically cheapos, so I love this idea. Excuse to work from home forever? Sure. Thanks.

  • another sensor on my car that I don't need that costs me $300 to replace.

  • by AmazingRuss ( 555076 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @05:23PM (#62902613)
    that diverts alcoholated air away from the sensor.
  • With ultrasonic, radar and/or lidar, it should be possible to have the brakes automatically applied to avoid collisions.

    This would reduce collisions dramatically for all causes, including distracted drivers as well as those who are impaired.
    • With ultrasonic, radar and/or lidar, it should be possible to have the brakes automatically applied to avoid collisions.

      Most cars without a full self driving sensor suite can’t tell the difference between a turning vehicle and an imminent impact. I get warnings about every two days that an impact is less than a second away when it’s not even in my path anymore because it can’t even tell the road is curved. Happens alot when a vehicle is exiting the freeway ahead of me. Never had to pay in an accident because I was always legally in the right and yet if the car got it’s way I’d be on my 40th

  • speed limit DB needs $299/year map updates

    • Mine are included free. Find a less greedy car maker. Or get a car that includes road sign recognition, but for you it is probably enabled by a subscription.
    • Yes but we should just have it connect to your phone and bam, it has maps. Numerous options in faction. For free! I'm sure they are paid ones too.

  • DUI defense to get off?
    Say you blow the car starts and then later you get pulled over for DUI then this may make it easy to win in court even more so it's an government one.

  • So to be civilized and not do harm to the drunks, we all have to be inconvenienced and expensed? I would rather a DUI result in amputation of something than this crap. Clearly the punishment is not high enough - start taking limbs.
  • "I Can't Drive 55"

    One foot on the brake and one on the gas, hey
    Well, there's too much traffic, I can't pass, no
    So I tried my best illegal move
    A big black and white come and crushed my groove again

    Go on and write me up for 125
    Post my face, wanted dead or alive
    Take my license, all that jive
    I can't drive 55, oh no, uh

    So I signed my name on number 24, hey
    Yeah the judge said, "Boy, just one more, huh
    I'm gonna throw your ass in the city joint"
    Looked me in the eye, said, "You get my point?"
    I say "Yeah!, Oh yeah"

    Wr

  • I wonder how fast we'll go from "no one needs to speed" to "not enough social credit to start your own car".

    Ya ya, conspiracy theory...but they keep coming true.

  • No wonder they wanted to pretend this was a 'bipartisan bill' and the timing is perfect. Obviously no, since congress lacks the authority to do this these agencies do as well but that isn't the point.

    Just like that the Democrats forgot their prohibition initiative was a flop and made a move to lose most of those Gen Z votes they bought with my tax dollars right before the midterms.

  • by kackle ( 910159 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @06:03PM (#62902775)
    Why not?
    -Time-consuming annoyance, forever.
    -Cars will cost hundreds more, forever.
    -This will add to overall repair costs, which will likely require dealer involvement.
    -What if one wants to go back and forth between the hood and re-starting the car during a driveway repair?
    -By definition, this will make cars less reliable.
    -There are rare times when an emergency requires the car start immediately.
    -This increases pollution and e-waste, increases energy use and costs energy to manufacture. Why the dubious feature--is the planet warming or isn't it?
  • The NTSB needs to have their budgets cut severely.
    I don't drink/drive, I ride motorcycles on the street and offroad. It's called personal responsibility.

  • by An0nYm0u5c0wArD ( 6251996 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @09:35PM (#62903413)

    We need a bat (I'll even allow a NERF bat) with an end shaped like an interlock device. Whenever any politician mentions this type of legislation, they are immediately hit in the face, repeatedly, by the bat until they stop talking about such nonsense.

  • by sabbede ( 2678435 ) on Thursday September 22, 2022 @12:30PM (#62904819)
    I hardly ever drink, yet some bureaucrat wants to raise the price for new cars so I can be forced to prove to them that I haven't? F-k that and the authoritarian twats who think they should have that power.

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