Understand that one can be impaired even on a prescribed amount. The onus is on the person taking the medication to understand its effects on them. It is not a defense to DUI to have consumed only the prescribed amount because even that could - and likely will - result in impairment.
They are essentially two different issues. You have to be medically capable of safely operating the motor vehicle while UN-impaired, and cannot operate it while impaired. The medical evaluation would simply have said that when not under the influence your condition should not negatively effect your ability to safely operate a motor vehicle. it does not grant you a pass to drive with impairing medication in your system.
Ok, if I understand that one can impaired even on a prescribed amount.
bear with me wise sage.
So if one can be impaired even on a prescribed amount, one can also NOT be impaired on a prescribed amount. The onus would be on the state to prove that rather than an assumption of guilt until onus is proven. I certainly can prove it, if they want eegs, emg wires to my muscles proving, ct's mri's, surgery you name it I got it. But what vexes me is that the extent of ME being honest and the extent of their intentional fraudulent documents filed against me.
I am by my own phsycians capable to drive. Neurologists and physicians who have doctoral degrees in their speciality, 20,000 hours of experience vs. a DRE of 100 hours of training and self supporting field time. If I have top notch neurologists curious as to what exactly is wrong with my brain and wanting expensive PET scans and all sorts of tests. I am pretty dang gun sure that some guy with a 100 hours of biased training can discern the extent of my brain damage. I mean it falls into the "gimme a break" category. How can I have a dozen different doctors offer a dozen different dianoses with a combined experience of what, 500,000 years of clinical experience vs a 3 week DRE training course?
Its like a bizzaro world in the USA where you are not innoncent until proven guilty. The onus is on the innocent to prove the state wrong, but through alot of this, I mean anyone can meet the definition of impairment if there is anything in there system. All it takes is a blood test and an FST that is designed to fail.
Look, like I said, I dont give a **** about myself, its just sad that this country has come to up-end the very liberties that we fight for all for political marbles or greed. Very sad, human dignity and personal privacy as well as eroding the rights of the common man. Thats what I fought for.
Now I am just discarded flesh for the dui cops looking to get another pizza party by MADD, **** the guy with the documented head injury. I got my extra pepperoni cheezy pizza "lets go whack a mole"
Point being, if someone asks to be sent to a surgeon and ask for it, I say welll hold a second before I send you to a surgeon, lets figure out what to do. Mainly b/c if I sent you to surgeon, guess what you'll get? surgery. When you are a hammer, everything looks like a nail ( a flaw in human sociology, characterized by several studies). Meaning if you send a patient to surgery, you close them off to more effective treatments and proper evaluation as to what may be happening. The trap usually is set with bleeding issues. Particularlly in the head but occuring anywhere. If they have a clotting disorder like Leiden factor V etc... they are escpecially prone to airborne clots forming in their legs and then growing large enough to dislodge and block pulmonary arteries leading to death within a few minutes.
The huge issue is the fact that, there is inherent bias to these tests.
Isnt there got to be a better system than to actually gauge a person who is impaired versus me? Why should I show that I was not impaired? Why is the onus on me? Someone with traumatic brain injury? How does it square with the framers of the constituion?
Guess Ill just have to go to foxnews or some place. Id like to have cameras in the courtroom on this one.