Lilani said:
Queen Michael said:
I read something that made me think. Someone wrote that if you can't consent to sex when you're drunk because of how impaired your thinking is, then drunk drivers shouldn't be held responsible for their drunk driving either, since they're too drunk to be held responsible for their actions.
I don't like to admit it, but I can't really find any major flaws in that logic. So does this mean that really drunk people can consent to sex, or that they shouldn't be held responsible for driving drunk?
The difference between drunken rape and drunken driving, at least in the way they usually happen, is that in the case of drunken rape the victim is drunk, and in the case of drunken driving the perpetrator is drunk. I'm not sure about all cases, but I'm pretty sure in many cases people have been prosecuted for raping someone while drunk (that is, they were the one drunk and they were the one who raped someone). So it's less about who's drunk and more about who committed the crime.
I will agree that treating drunk drivers like murderers is not the way to go, however. People who drive drunk, especially chronically, aren't criminals. They're addicts. They don't need jail time, they need support. That is one of many things our criminal system gets wrong about both alcohol and drug addicts, at least here in the US.
I think your comment about "the victim being drunk" is sort of the point though. I'm not sure if you are referring to drunken blackouts in your example, or just any situation where someone has had alcohol and then had sex. I think his main question is when the person who is drunk is still concious, and is making clear sexual advances on someone. It's not that they are passive in the scenario, but actively engaging another person, and trying to have sex. Is this person not responsible for their own actions, just like the drunk driver? And if not, then why have the difference in responsibility?
A woman gets drunk, and makes the choice (under impaired senses) to have sex with someone. Not her fault.
A woman gets drunk, and makes the choice (under impaired senses) to go driving. Her fault.
In both scenarios above, even if they don't remember it happening, that doesn't mean they didn't make the choice.
Personally I don't see why this is the case. I don't agree with the idea that just because someone is under the influence of mind altering substances, they are free of blame for what they do, and neither does our court system. I've done plenty of drugs in my life, and if anyone tried to tell me that
I didn't make the choices I made, and that it wasn't my fault what I did, I would think they were crazy.
Now I agree that it's a very tricky subject when talking about sex, and possible rape scenarios, but it's still an issue. Personally, the few times I did some kind of drug and had sex, I was fully aware of it, and wanted it, and still wanted it after the fact. The only time in fact that I ever regretted deciding to have sex with someone, I was sober. So it's not just an issue of "sober regret" I think. If someone had tried to say that I was raped by the woman I had sex with, simply because I wasn't sober, well, again I would think they were crazy.