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Thursday, January 24, 2013, 8:24 AM

Here’s a classic case of local interests pitted against national administrative despots: some Irish locals want to moderate the drunk driving laws, because the practical effect they have is to keep older rural citizens isolated in their homes at night, killing the pubs. Losing one’s driver’s license in a rural area in modern times radically demotes one’s quality of life, and since less than a pint is enough to put one at risk of that under newer laws, the elders stay home, no doubt for some high-quality telly and internet-browsing. All part of a broader trend, some say, of declining Irish “sociability.”

pub

Or as the NRO writer of the piece indelicately puts it, these Irish localists are for moderate drunk driving.

Hmm…how about you? Willing to raise the BAC levels, or lessen the drunk-driving penalties, for the sake of great sociability?

WWWCMCWD?

(That’s united-front pomocon/porcher talk for “What Would Wilson Carey McWilliams Do?”)

WWHDD?

(That’s aging Gen-X once-hipster talk for What Would Husker Du Do?) Husker Du were an 80s punk band, and one of my favorite lyrics of theirs was:

Safety is a big disguise,
as they divide and conquer!

husker du

Bob Mould and co. probably never fully admitted to themselves that the “they” in these cases tended far more often than not to be liberals. Our Porchers still can’t really admit that, since it would point to well more than a “dime’s difference” existing between the two parties.

But whoever they might be, Carey wouldn’t have had anyone put up with their administrative fiat (or national legislative power) at the expense of being able, with one’s fellow community members, to collectively govern one’s own affairs. (BTW, Mr. President, that’s “collective action” in the real sense of the word. See, Aristotle, “Ruling and Being Ruled in Turn”)

So yeah, I’m with these Irish localists 100%. Carve out a local exception to the national law. That’s what follows from real Porcherism. (It also means we let not a few localities do very dumb things…i.e., in the hope of more township liberty and community, we’d accept that there will regrettably be more drunk drivers out there, and worse, more petty bullying town councils dotting the landscape.)

And make no mistake, we need real Porcherism, i.e., real local government empowerment, in America too, probably even on this particular issue.

4 Comments

    Colin Brown
    January 24th, 2013 | 9:55 am

    I wonder if some sort of local public transportation system would work here. There could literally be busloads of people arriving at the pubs. And if these were owned and operated by the towns/villages/whatever-form-of-local-governance, it might also provide revenue that isn’t seen as more taxation.
    Of course, it all depends on 1) the size of the locality and 2) how far out from town these rural citizens are.

    Also, speaking of St.Paul/Minneapolis bands….what about Craig Finn/The Hold Steady?

    Brian
    January 24th, 2013 | 10:20 am

    I know it’s not THE answer, but can’t these places just stop enforcing “drunk driving” laws, unless the instance involves clear and obvious public danger?

    Save the Pubs! The Whales Are All Right. – First Things (blog) | Whales
    January 24th, 2013 | 10:25 pm

    [...] Save the Pubs! The Whales Are All Right.First Things (blog)Here's a classic case of local interests pitted against national administrative despots: some Irish locals want to moderate the drunk driving laws, because the practical effect they have is to keep older rural citizens isolated in their homes at night … [...]

    CJ Wolfe
    January 25th, 2013 | 8:12 pm

    More Beer regulations are being pushed in the Czech republic too. The health minister there wants to set the price of water lower than beer in bars. Damn the buerocratic managers, this must stop!: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324039504578260013720445452.html#slide/1


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