swee'pea99
Squire
Hmmm. How long have they been doing that?scoosh said:They test anyone involved in any way nowadays - and probably check over the vehicle too.
Seems to me out of keeping with basic principles of civil liberties (not that that surprises me in the least, given the way things have gone in that sort of arena in this country over the last decade or so) - an analogy being the way police are (or at least were - what the current situation is, I've no idea) required to have a specific and specified object in mind when applying for search warrants. In other words, they weren't allowed to go on so-called 'fishing expeditions'.
Seems to me that in justice, in order to be subjected to any kind of a drink test, there ought to be a requirement that there are reasonable grounds for suspecting that you have committed an offense. 'Having been crashed into' does not seem to me to constitute any such grounds.
I stress, I'm not saying you're wrong - far from it, I'm sure you're right. It just seems to me yet another example of the way 'they' have been quietly salami-slicing our basic freedoms away while we were looking in the other direction.