Back to Colorado DUI Front Page
  • getMADD.com: no one has successfully challenged the statistics on these pages ... provides information related to Driver's Rights, DUI laws, the Anti-Alcohol Movement, & Prohibition
  • Time for a Sober Assessment of Checkpoints
  • Drunk Driving Laws Are Out of Control
  • Blaming Jessica: Drug Use, DUI or Reckless Driving
  • The Non-Crime of Drunk Driving: The state criminal statutes concerning drunk driving are unjust, and are so vague and broad that certainty of compliance with the law is impossible. The law threatens anyone who mixes drinking, no matter how temperate, with the operation of a vehicle. I should know. I worked briefly as a deputy district attorney in a rural California county, prosecuting DUI cases. And I sincerely regret having had anything to do with the enforcement of the drunk driving laws.
  • Drunk Driving Information: This site contains information about the many serious problems with the laws and enforcement of the laws related to driving while intoxicated and driving with a prohibited BAC. The discussion focuses on Wisconsin drunk driving law. All states have similar OWI, DUI and DWI laws that have similar serious problems. Initially, the topics will be somewhat random but will become more organized as this page is developed.
  • LA MOVIDA - 2004: Politics and Alcohol, a volatile mix.
  • Drivers Against MADD Methods: DAMM is an organization that was founded by a group of responsible citizens who were astonished to learn how legislators and other politicians have created an entire DUI Industry in their quest for easy votes and increased government revenues.
  • DUI Gulag: What happens when our DUI laws reach the point where hundreds of thousands of American citizens are being criminalized each year for "drunk driving" even though they were not impaired at the time of their arrests? What happens when our laws reach the point where eating yeast bread or a pack of M&Ms can produce an Intoxilizer reading that results in a citizen being arrested for DUI?
  • Prohibition Times: Driving is an American way of life. Hundreds of millions of Americans do it every day. With the destruction of mass transit and the unchecked sprawl of urban and suburban jungle, automobiles are the only method of transportation that lets citizens work, play and take care of their families. Loss of this licensed "privilege" negatively impacts the lives of 10-million Americans every year, thanks to current "drunk driving" laws. Loss of employment often follows, resulting in economic and psychological devastation to millions of families. Are these "convicts" really brain-damaged alcoholics? Or are they ordinary, hard-working, honest Americans who failed to realize a Prohibition of Alcohol when they see it? Since 1988, 18 to 20 year old "underage" adults faced their own Prohibition with the full support of mass news media, politicians and police forces. What about the rest of America's adults? Are they equally "underage" and don't even know it? Waiting until an actual Prohibition situation is too late to start learning the rules of the government's secret games. Procrastination can prove very, very expensive.
  • Hunter S. Thompson: The Sharp Necklace Agreement: Decency, security, and liberty alike demand that govemment officials shall be subjected to the same rules of conduct that are commands to the citizen. In a government of laws, existence of the government will be imperiled if it fails to observe the law scrupulously. Our govemment is the potent, the omnipresent teacher. For good or for ill, it teaches the whole people by its example. Crime is contagious. If the government becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law; it invites every man to become a law unto himself; it invites anarchy. To declare that in the administration of the criminal law the end justifies the means - to declare that the government may commit crimes in order to secure the conviction of a private criminal - would bring terrible retribution.