- Joined
- Aug 4, 2003
Just thinking about it scares me--I could've hit another car.
Better the car than the person.
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Just thinking about it scares me--I could've hit another car.
... I am sure he is reading about this issue and thanking God that he didn't cause a similar event.
Only a danger to himself, on a moped? Ok. Supposing Oda, driving drunk on a moped, had fallen asleep, or lost control on wet pavement, or for some other reason lost control of the bike and gone out into the path of traffic...causing a car to swerve to avoid hitting him, which then hits another car, killing one person and injuring several others. At that point, was he "just a danger to himself"?
All this crap about "Oda was just on a moped" is just that, crap. He had an above limit alcohol level and was on a vehicle on a public road. Period. End of story. I am sure he is reading about this issue and thanking God that he didn't cause a similar event.
If you note, that whole article is not very well translated. The last sentence is "Vesselina was expecting on Tuesday the dead body of her fiancé at the home of his parents". This is not a professional translation, so I think the word "murder" is likewise inaccurate.Hopefully the word "murder" was just the result of translating one language into another.
He thought he had sobered it up. My point is his case has absolutely nothing to do with Maxim Staviisky's.
Grief stricken people are also not likely to use the correct legal term.. She wants an admission that he killed her son. After all, how often do people say "I was robbed" because someone broke into their house and stole something, even though there was no force or fear (so no robbery), and the crime was a burglary?
Following your logic, a pickpocket and an armed robber are basically guilty of the same crime...Both are guilty of the same offense. [...]. But both were DRIVING DRUNK.
IMO, there is a huge moral difference between a young kid who takes affirmative steps to eliminate (or at least minimize) the danger he might pose to other, both in choice of vehicle and in steps to get the alcohol out of his system, even if he fails at doing so as opposed to a grown man who has repeatedly been warned about reckless driving, and still makes choices (again dealing with vehicle and alcohol amount) that endanger others.
Oda -- by trying to "sleep it off" and only driving a moped effectively acknowledged that other people have rights and lives that need to be respected and protected, even if his attempts to honor that principal did not succeed. Staviski, OTOH, if all reports are true and they may not be all true , made it clear by ignoring warnings, drinking, and driving a Hummer that he didn't give a rat's a** about respecting/protecting the rights/lives of others.
Reflecting on Oda, how many of you still think that Oda should not have been punished for dui?
Following your logic, a pickpocket and an armed robber are basically guilty of the same crime...
If a pickpocket isn't armed, then he has absolutely no ability to commit armed robbery. If someone has 2 drinks and drives, they have the same ability to kill someone as someone else who is older and a more experienced drinker who has had 3 or 4 drinks. They are both "armed" the same. The same potential is there.
... If someone has 2 drinks and drives, they have the same ability to kill someone as someone else who is older and a more experienced drinker who has had 3 or 4 drinks. They are both "armed" the same. The same potential is there.
Following your logic, a pickpocket and an armed robber are basically guilty of the same crime...
(emphasis added by yuriko)Nobody has said Oda is guilty of 2nd degree murder or 1st degree manslaughter or any other charge that might result when one's actions cause death. Only that he was no less in violation of local *DUI* law than was Maxim.