lsslave said:The worst part of this is in my state of drunkenness I am looking at my mouthwash and wondering how it is :lol
no more MW2 for you. :$whitehawk said:It's 3:44 am where I am(canada, toronto)./ Overall a good new years except I slipped on some ice on the way out of a house party and hurt my thumb.
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lsslave said:This is something I'd like to touch upon, Amir0x is anti drinking and driving (like all mods here, and any sane poster but most of the pro drinking and driving ones have been LONG since removed and its usually quite quickly.
This, ladies and gentlemen, is why NO MATTER WHAT you should find a way to not drive home. If you know its a risk lock your keys in the vehicle (if you have a spare at home) or something.
Ami, I understand the situation, all I am trying to say is that when you include alcohol into the mix it starts to seem more and more likely that someone will drive. And designated drivers ALWAYS get drunk like the bastards they are (and wonder why I tell them until they take their turn I am not being the sober fucking pilot again) but this is what happens with the majority of drivers, the situation changes and they drive.
I am glad you were safe, and I am not going to rip on you or anything, but sadly this just shows how quickly the rules change. On that note I want another drink :lol
ZROCOOL said:no more MW2 for you. :$
well at least for now.
Toronto is completely covered in a thin layer of ice. The cab I was in almost crashed into a pole.whitehawk said:It's 3:44 am where I am(canada, toronto)./ Overall a good new years except I slipped on some ice on the way out of a house party and hurt my thumb.
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Amir0x said:It was just a shitty situation with no alternative. We were an hour from his house for the party, and someone else was the designated driver. That person gave about two hours into the party and was far more shitfaced than I was by the end.
The person had to get to his job by 2am, or else risk being fired (since he is already on thin ice), and so I did what I had to do since he doesn't have his license.
Like I said, I am strongly against drinking and driving. Strongly against. I think it gives responsible drinkers a bad name. So I did my best to sober up before the drive - I stopped drinking altogether an hour before midnight, and I drank some coffee, and I planned a route that was pretty much completely no-travel. And we were right, there were barely any cars on the road. Back mountain roads and whatnot.
I'm not advocating what I did at all, but there was literally no other way out. An hour cab ride in the Poconos can be obscenely expensive, and none of us had the money. Plus the cab would have taken FOREVER to get to us, probably making the dude too late to his job.
It's not even something I want to bother defending since I'm so against drinking and driving, but rest assured I did not go out on the road barely able to walk or something. I did everything I could to get as sober as I could before handling this responsibility.
The snow was the hazard far more than the level of my sobriety.
Truth.PhoenixDark said:He should have thought about the consequences of his actions before getting shitfaced. I'm sorry, but endangering his life, your life, and others on the road just to get him to work is beyond poor judgment. It's reckless, dangerous, and could have landed you in jail for a long time.
Amir0x said:It was just a shitty situation with no alternative. We were an hour from his house for the party, and someone else was the designated driver. That person gave about two hours into the party and was far more shitfaced than I was by the end.
The person had to get to his job by 2am, or else risk being fired (since he is already on thin ice), and so I did what I had to do since he doesn't have his license.
Like I said, I am strongly against drinking and driving. Strongly against. I think it gives responsible drinkers a bad name. So I did my best to sober up before the drive - I stopped drinking altogether an hour before midnight, and I drank some coffee, and I planned a route that was pretty much completely no-travel. And we were right, there were barely any cars on the road. Back mountain roads and whatnot.
I'm not advocating what I did at all, but there was literally no other way out. An hour cab ride in the Poconos can be obscenely expensive, and none of us had the money. Plus the cab would have taken FOREVER to get to us, probably making the dude too late to his job.
It's not even something I want to bother defending since I'm so against drinking and driving, but rest assured I did not go out on the road barely able to walk or something. I did everything I could to get as sober as I could before handling this responsibility.
The snow was the hazard far more than the level of my sobriety.
PhoenixDark said:He should have thought about the consequences of his actions before getting shitfaced. I'm sorry, but endangering his life, your life, and others on the road just to get him to work is beyond poor judgment. It's reckless, dangerous, and could have landed you in jail for a long time.
You're not his parent. And even if you were it wouldn't make sense to risk lives to bail him out.
Uh, there's nothing responsible about driving drunk, regardless of degree of inebriation.lsslave said:I understand, I was getting that from your situation which is why I didn't rip on you and I am proud that you decided to be responsible and attempted to sober up a little before you left.
BobFromPikeCreek said:Uh, there's nothing responsible about driving drunk, regardless of degree of inebriation.
Blablurn said:just woke up. no hangover. fuck yeah.