Motion of the day
Tuesday, May 19, 2026

This House would treat repeated drunk driving as a violent offense.

ethics

Drunk-driving fatalities have plateaued after decades of decline. Existing penalties are clearly not deterring the repeat-offender population. Critics warn that reclassification is a punishment-creep slippery slope.

Background

NHTSA data: 13,500 US drunk-driving deaths in 2022, up 14% from 2019. About 30% of fatal DUI crashes involve drivers with at least one prior DUI conviction. The "repeat offender" population is concentrated (fewer than 2% of all licensed drivers), and that subset is responsible for a majority of fatal incidents. Idaho and Tennessee already classify a fourth DUI as a felony with mandatory prison; the deterrence data is mixed because the same population responds poorly to incarceration generally.

Government opens with
A 0.20 BAC driver on a third offense is choosing to point a weapon at strangers.
Opposition responds with
Treating impaired choice as intentional violence erases the line that makes intent meaningful.

Take it. Against the AI.

Pick a side. Three minutes per speech. The AI takes the other side in your chosen format. Judge ballot at the end.

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