I love publicly posting personally identifiable information about crimes I committed. Almost as much as I love drunk driving on July 16 in my Cybertruck!
Did the 16 year old son not have a license or learners permit? I picked my mom up from a bar a few times as a teenager, I get it.
edit: wait hang on, the son DID have a permit, so why wasn't the son driving? This guy had everything he needed to get home legally and he chose not to.
How does he think this is going to work? Some lawyer for the prosecution has almost certainly seen this post by now, and all they need to do is point out in court that the "self-driving" update for the dumptruck was installed weeks after the guy was arrested for the DUI.
Worst case Ontario, you tell the Khybertruck to self smart itself and drive ya home, then the computer thing's the one gettin' a DUI, not you. Doesn't take rocket appliances to figure out, I mean I wasn't even in the fuckin' drivers seat and Trinity was in the back keeping an eye on shit, and that dick George Green was the one who arrested me and he was probably fuckin' drunker than I was. This is fucked
A lot of people seem to be missing something. The cybertruck doesn't have self driving yet.
He was driving drunk and when he got pulled over for being all over the road, he slid over into the passenger seat and tried to pull the "welll ossifer, it was driiiiving itself" excuse but now he's scared it won't hold up in court because FSD is still not available on the cybertruck.
He's such a fucking idiot, you're not supposed to leave the drivers seat vacant just because the car is self-driving. Why would you? You're supposed to be able to take over in an emergency. It's not legal to be drunk in a self-driving car anyway, this moron is just making himself look more guilty.
Hurry Elon, I need your independent space colony on Mars. The judge said if I am on Earth, I will have to come to court. When is it happening Elon? I need it!
Feel good movie about Musk pushing out a self-driving update so this heroic patriotic alcoholic dad gets his son back on Christmas. Make it a Kelly Cartoon too
I once went to some colonial America living history museum thing once and some guy playing the "town constable" or whatever said that riding a horse in town while intoxicated was indeed a crime back then and could land you jail time. Idk if he was BSing or not.
I just did some searching, and I couldn't find a single reference to any law criminalizing drunk riding that isn't fairly recent.
Looking at some of the state laws criminalizing drunk riding: Minnesota only criminalized it in 2000, Oregon explicitly extended the motor vehicle code to riding animals, and it appears several other states(NH,SD,MA) it was the courts determined that horses were considered vehicles under the law. Interestingly SD explicitly excluded horses from the definition of vehicles back in 2006. I didn't look at every state, but from those laws and a few articles I found about the earliest drunk driving laws(this one about Vermont is interesting) it seems likely that the constable was wrong.
I think the reason drunk riding probably wasn't illegal before cars is that it didn't really need to be. Horses aren't machines, they don't do exactly what the rider wants them to do at all times. If a rider is completely wasted and passes another horse or pedestrian, the horse will instinctively avoid them even if the rider directs them toward collision. It really only becomes an issue when 2000+lb machines zooming around that have the potential to scare the horse that the rider needs to be fully capable of taking control.
I don't know why I just did an effort post about this, but I found it interesting.
It's intersting topic. Currently in Poland it's in the somewhat gray zone - you can lose licence and get heavy punishments for driving a vehicle when drunk, but horse isn't a vehicle according to the law definition (some paragraphs even specify "mechanical vehicle"). But in the road codex there are some exclusions where you can ride a horse or horse wagon, so you would need to pay attention to those. Also riding horse when drunk on the road would met the definition of "causing a danger in road traffic" and this is punishable too, though lighter than drunk drive.
Finally there is interesting loophole (afaik not checked yet) where a horse would go on autohorsepilot while the human would be lying drunk to total unconciousness on its back or in the wagon, so it would be unclear if he could be even counted as rider/driver.
Of course all this was nonsense in the relevant 70's/80's back then it was afaik legal and even if not, nobody i knew ever got into trouble for this. We also had maybe 1% of current cars so understandably the regulations were more relaxed and on such villages horse wagons and tractors were equally common sight as cars on the roads.
You can get a DUI even if the car does have self-driving. No car is fully autonomous and you're supposed to be capable of taking over if needed. There's no legal exemptions for self-driving cars anywhere AFAIK.