Some would argue that the French, in general, do not need to drink in order to drive ..uuummmm..
'courageously',
but those of us who have been living in France and driving on the excellent French roads, would differ with them. As a friend of mine used to say -- "They take risks, but they are always calculated risks."
There is a media campaign running in France at the moment against drink/driving in an attempt to cut down on the number of drink/driving related accidents and deaths on the roads. On the radio the ads are comedians joking about drink/driving with a laughing audience in the background and a voice that comes on to say: "It would be funny, if it weren't so sad."
Reading the following article on the Expatica site, I have to admit that I laughed, shook my head -- and then immediately sobered up and thought just that: "It would be funny, if it weren't so sad."
22/08/2008 00:00
A blind Frenchman was given a month's suspended jail sentence and fined EUR 500 for driving while drunk and without a license.
22 August 2008
NANCY-- A blind journalist was given a month's suspended jail sentence and fined EUR 500 by a French court Friday for driving while drunk and without a license.
The owner of the car, who was also drunk as he sat next to the blind man when he drove the vehicle, was given the same sentence and had his license suspended for five months by the court in the northeastern town of Nancy.
The pair was arrested on a country road in the early hours of July 25 by police who spotted their car zig-zagging suspiciously and moving at a very low speed.
The police were astounded when the 29-year-old driver informed them that he was blind. The police breathalysed the driver and his passenger, a 52-year-old photographer and found they had drunk twice the permitted level of alcohol.
"I really wanted to do it (drive the car)," the blind man told the court.
"I expressed this wish. He (the owner of the car) agreed."
The owner said he saw "a lot of happiness emanating from him" as he drove, adding that he had "one hand on the handbrake and one hand on the steering wheel" as the blind journalist drove.
"I was very concentrated on the road," he said.
The judge retorted that, as he was well over the legal alcohol limit, "that didn't make you a vey reliable monitor."
The blind journalist had previously driven on a closed circuit, an experience which he had recounted in a regional newspaper in an article which was accompanied by his photographer friend who was in court with him Friday.
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