48 comments

  • michaelteter 3 hours ago
    This seems like an intentionally misleading title, since they don't mention that the study was for one county (Montgomery County) in Ohio, which is basically just Dayton, OH and surrounding rural area - < 600k people.

    I'm sure you can pick other counties in the US which have either very high representation of THC users or very low representations. Without knowing how other counties score in terms of driver fatalities and THC, this is not really very useful.

    To me it sounds like an effort to paint THC as big and scary. But in my experience living in a few large cities, weed is rare - but lots of people go out, drink, and drive home one or more times per week.

    ScienceDaily goes even further by rounding up to 50% and burying the location halfway down the summarization.

    "Nearly half of drivers killed in crashes had THC in their blood THC-impaired driving deaths are soaring, and legalization hasn’t slowed the trend. Date: October 5, 2025 Source: American College of Surgeons Summary: Over 40% of fatal crash victims had THC levels far above legal limits, showing cannabis use before driving remains widespread. The rate didn’t drop after legalization, suggesting policy changes haven’t altered risky habits. Experts warn that the lack of public awareness around marijuana’s dangers behind the wheel is putting lives at risk."

    Unless they publish who funded the study, I'm skeptical that the alcohol industry might be involved. It's absolutely in their best interest to paint marijuana as the devil (and take attention away from alcohol).

    Obviously nobody should be driving with any impairment, but people do - driving tired, texting, even talking to passengers and turning their heads to look at the passengers while they talk! (Really, why??? I see people doing this all the time.)

    • nateb2022 2 hours ago
      To give some statistical context, as of 2023, about 16.11% of people in the US have used cannabis in the past year; per that same dataset, about 16.53% of Ohio residents. [1] Given that Ohio’s usage metrics align closely with the national mean, I think it's fair to use the state as a proxy for broader domestic trends.

      Per more Pew Research data, also from 2023, Ohio seems to have an average, if not a less than average, concentration of cannabis dispensaries, compared to other states where CBD products were legal. Montgomery County, OH is located in the bottom-left quarter of Ohio, and sits in a region with lower dispensary density than many comparable U.S. districts. [2]

      Given that usage metrics mirror the national mean despite a lower-than-average retail presence, I think this dataset is a pretty fair "middle america" benchmark.

      [1] https://www.statista.com/statistics/723822/cannabis-use-with... [2] https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2024/02/29/most-amer...

      • nialse 40 minutes ago
        You cannot pick and choose one or two variables and then claim representativeness based on a numerical match. The first step is to identify the confounding variables that are likely to influence the outcome. Only after those are specified a comparison set can be defined and matching or adjustment criteria applied. Without that process, agreement on a small number of aggregate measures does not establish that the underlying populations or mechanisms are comparable.
    • stuffn 2 minutes ago
      > To me it sounds like an effort to paint THC as big and scary. But in my experience living in a few large cities, weed is rare - but lots of people go out, drink, and drive home one or more times per week

      This is absolutely a cope. THC is as bad as alcohol when it comes to the ability to use your executive functions. Just admit you are a massive pothead. My city has a huge problem with people smoking weed and driving. Since legalization DWI due to weed has massively increased and will likely eclipse alcohol in the next 10 years.

      Functional addicts are the only way who say it’s different. Just like any other drug. Weed addicts are a different breed though.

    • tsunamifury 2 hours ago
      You sound like the people who were outraged when drinking and driving was first banned. They had all sorts of made up logic to get around wanting to consistently being a hazard to others.
    • lelanthran 1 hour ago
      > I'm skeptical that the alcohol industry might be involved.

      So you don't think that the alcohol industry is involved?

    • alfiedotwtf 2 hours ago
      Upvoted!

      I’ve applied this same rule when reading news or watching tv - if your immediate reaction is shock, surprise, or anger, think of a list of organisations who would monetarily benefit [1] from that article or show etc.

      Nobody does a news story for the fun of it unless it genuinely IS news, but it’s been shown [2] that over 70% is PR pieces trying to make you think one way or another.

      [1] money talks, and bullshit walks

      [2] Australia’s Media Watch ran a piece about this a few years ago

    • EnPissant 2 hours ago
      You think 40% of the people in that area have THC in their system?

      Of course you don't. So why make this argument?

      Are you funded by Big Cannabis™?

  • tokai 15 hours ago
    An issue with having the legal limit at ~2-5ng/ml is that it makes habitual users be over the limit if they have smoked recently or not.[0] Making the prohibition seem unserious to some, not about safety but about punitive control, and in turn making it matter less if you smoke and drive as you are taking the risk of getting into trouble in any case.

    The impairments of driving under the influence of alcohol have been extensively studied, but unless I have overlooked the literature it seems that the same investigations have not been carried out with THC.

    [0] «Blood THC >2 ng/mL, and possibly even THC >5 ng/mL, does not necessarily represent recent use of cannabis in frequent cannabis users.»; https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S03768...

    • Youden 14 hours ago
      There was a larger discussion in a previous thread on this topic: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45494730

      Since then, [0] has been published and I think it's worth at least a skim. Since it's quite recent the introduction summarizes some of the most recent research.

      The things that jump out at me are:

      - [0]: Habitual users with baseline concentrations above legal limits perform just as well as habitual users with baseline concentrations below the legal limit, indicating that for habitual users, the legal limit doesn't have any relation to impairement.

      - [1]: A study in Canada analyzed crash reports and blood tests to look at the state of drivers responsible for accidents. While alcohol had a very clear and statistically-significant influence on the risk of a driver causing an accident, THC did not.

      To steelman the idea that THC causes accidents, [0] only looks at habitual users with baseline levels of THC and [1] only looks at non-fatal injuries.

      My conclusion right now is that the number of drivers in accidents with THC in their blood is going up because the number of people with THC in their blood is going up, not because drivers who use THC cause accidents.

      The law's assumption that this level of THC is evidence of impairment seems to be invalid.

      The law would be better off measuring impairment in some way and perhaps intensifying penalties when an impairment test fails and the user has THC concentration above some threshold.

      [0]: https://academic.oup.com/clinchem/article/71/12/1225/8299832...

      [1]: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31106494/

      • metadope 11 hours ago
        > the number of drivers in accidents with THC in their blood is going up because the number of people with THC in their blood is going up

        This.

        In just the short time since legalization, recreational use in my immediate vicinity (a small Ohio village, one stop light) has decidedly, undeniably increased.

        I offer only an anecdotal observation, but my evening walks around town are now accompanied by a dank potpourri of skunk scents, representing I-don't-know-how-many strains of Sativa...

        Indica to me that at least 30% of the population here is puffing.

        • Scoundreller 9 hours ago
          That's evidence of increased public/open-air consumption, which is to be expected with legalization

          Don't need to hide it anymore, especially if the local police don't have much to do otherwise

        • rayiner 10 hours ago
          Same thing in DC. I thought the new development in DC where we lived had a major sewer gas problem. Turns out it was marijuana.
          • chiffre01 7 hours ago
            Also the amount of people in DC who drive while smoking weed seems very high(no pun intended). Based on the number of cars that can be smelled from another car while in traffic.
          • boston_clone 9 hours ago
            Genuinely asking - had you never smelled cannabis before living in DC?

            To claim the odor is mistakable for sewer gas is borderline funny, unless you’re slyly trying to name a new strain.

            • malikolivier 5 hours ago
              I've never smelled cannabis before in my life and don't know what it's supposed to smell like. I live in an area of the world where it's illegal and I guess not many people are smoking it. I may also have had a quite sheltered education.

              This year, I went to British Columbia, and there was this weird scent everywhere that I could not describe. My wife said it was cannabis. I'm still not used to it so I don't know if I'll be able to recognize it next time I travel to North America.

              • bigstrat2003 3 hours ago
                In my experience, weed smells like a skunk. Which makes it really annoying to be around people who smoke, that stuff is really unpleasant to have to smell. Honestly I don't know how people can stand to smoke it with how bad it smells.
                • golem14 2 hours ago
                  Am I the only one that doesn't find skunk smell not so horrid as it's generally made out to be? It's very strong, yes, but between skunk and asa foetida, it would be hard to choose ;)
              • rayiner 4 hours ago
                I’ve never smoked it or been around anyone smoking it. It’s more of a lower class thing in the U.S.: https://news.gallup.com/poll/642851/cannabis-greatest-among-... (16% of households making under $24k smoke cannibis regularly, versus 5% of households making over $180k/year).
                • boston_clone 4 hours ago
                  hell yeah for being in that 5%! but why bring classism into it? in states where it’s more normalized, it’s pretty even across those differentiators:

                  https://doh.wa.gov/data-and-statistical-reports/washington-t...

                  • dpark 3 hours ago
                    This 100% matches my experience in Washington. I know a lot of upper middle class who use cannabis. I think the consumption of edibles might be higher in the upper middle class vs smoked. But that’s very anecdotal.
            • rayiner 6 hours ago
              I had never smelled it before. It smells identical to sewer gas to me—I know what that smells like because our house was missing several drain traps.
              • boston_clone 6 hours ago
                Fascinating. I wonder if this is a genetic thing similar to people who sense soap for cilantro, except with terpenes instead of aldehydes.
                • cj 5 hours ago
                  I mean weed really doesn't smell good. If you're not turned off by the smell, it's a learned pleasure. Similar to how nearly every child will dislike the taste of alcohol, yet after drinking for a while they'll learn to tolerate or enjoy it.

                  It can be a very overpowering smell. When an odor overpowers, it's harder to discern one scent from another.

                  • boston_clone 3 hours ago
                    there are strains that, to me, smell pleasant. maybe you’re extrapolating a bit? terpenes are what make up most essential oils, in fact.
                    • dpark 3 hours ago
                      I’ve never smelled pot that didn’t stink. It does not smell like a sewer to me but it distinctly smells like skunk.
                      • rented_mule 2 hours ago
                        A few years ago, I moved from San Francisco to a rural area. Smelling weed in SF was not at all unusual. One summer night in the rural area, I smelled it coming through open windows for the first time. I wondered which house it was coming from and how it still smelled so strong after traveling a hundred feet or more. Then I spotted the actual skunk in our yard.
                    • golem14 3 hours ago
                      Mango, especially dried, smells and tastes of terpenes sometimes. I sometimes question why I like Mango ;)
            • amyjess 4 hours ago
              As somebody who has no problem whatsoever with weed, it smells like pus from a tooth infection to me.

              I have had dental abscesses in the past that made my mouth taste like I was in a room full of cannabis smoke.

              • boston_clone 3 hours ago
                this is surprising to hear - thanks for sharing! i still can’t help but wonder if there are some perceptive differences at play here versus something learned.
            • cogman10 6 hours ago
              The first time I smelt weed it reminded me of a skunk.

              I could see how that might be mistaken as sewage.

              • dpark 3 hours ago
                It’s very skunky. I thought a skunk had been killed on an industrial road I drive sometimes. The smell was there for months. I finally realized there’s a cannabis processing facility there. Still stinks years later now.
          • lisbbb 6 hours ago
            In and around Minneapolis, I have given up counting the number of times my car got filled with that horrid stench because someone in a car just ahead of mine was hot-boxing the hell out of their commute. It's really nasty to have to drive through the awful clouds of that crap. I also pulled into a gas station recently and my entire car got fumigated. Already sick of it.

            Also, the guy who shot up the church school here and killed and wounded a bunch of kids was a massive pot smoker. It made him psychotic, or magnified that existing mental illness.

      • mattmaroon 10 hours ago
        But this paper specifically rules out legalization as cause because the numbers didn’t significantly increase after legalization.
        • ambicapter 7 hours ago
          How does this rule anything out? It is totally possible actual usage of THC didn't increase after legalization. It wasn't one of the hardest things to find when it was illegal.
        • NewJazz 9 hours ago
          Legalization does not signify usage.
      • seizethecheese 13 hours ago
        Sure, but in this study 40% of people had very high THC concentrations. Is it even remotely plausible this is the baseline population level?
        • bookofjoe 11 hours ago
          DEAD people
          • graeme 10 hours ago
            If the population of dead drivers with over the limit THC is 40%, and this dramatically exceeds the population average, that would strongly suggest the THC level IS an indicator of either:

            1. Impairment from THC, or

            2. Worse than average driving and risk management skills in those who use the drug

            • seanmcdirmid 7 hours ago
              Do we know what the THC levels are in (1) drivers who didn't die, and (2) the population in general?

              It could just be that 40% of the population is over the limit on THC all the time. Unless we can compare this against something else, and we can somehow normalize the comparison for other factors like age, I don't know how we can use the data.

              • cogman10 6 hours ago
                This is a knowable thing, it just needs to be studied (I'm actually surprised it's not been TBH). Give people a standard set of coordination tests and then draw their blood to see what the THC level is.
                • seanmcdirmid 2 hours ago
                  If we were just interested in outcomes (in an accident or not), we should just be measuring that. But I guess if we can’t measure that, a litmus test is better than nothing.
            • machinationu 10 hours ago
              2. young people are worse drivers and more likely to use
            • Retric 9 hours ago
              The expected number seems to be about 20+% (depending on assumptions) so this is higher than expected but not drastically so.

              Critically, people are more likely to get in accidents later in the day and after drinking both of which also correlate with relatively recent cannabis consumption.

            • sfn42 10 hours ago
              Right, so it might just mean that reckless drivers are more likely to smoke weed.
            • mindslight 10 hours ago
              The second seems eminently plausible with the correlation between driving skills and drug use both being due to higher risk tolerance.
            • hattmall 9 hours ago
              It's seat belts. People who die in wrecks are overwhelmingly not wearing seat belts. I would think marijuana users as a group probably have average seat belt usage, but people who don't wear seat belts probably have much higher than average marijuanna usage. Roughy 92% of people wear seat belts. But that 8% of people that don't wear setbelts makes up 50% or more of all fatalities. From my personal experience it seems easy to me to assume that 90% of the people that don't wear seat belts also use marijuanna.
              • phito 8 hours ago
                How are people not wearing seatbelt? I've never seen a car that doesn't make a constant annoying noise if you're not wearing it while driving. Do they mod the car to disable this safety system? That seems too far stretched...
                • scottyeager 7 hours ago
                  Older cars don't have these systems. Also they are easy to bypass with a dummy buckle. There are counties where seatbelt usage is far less common than the US.
                • Brian_K_White 6 hours ago
                  Sometimes you can change a setting in software with a programmer via the obd2 port. It's not "too far" it's easy.

                  But even simpler is just a pacifier. Trivial.

                • Mawr 5 hours ago
                  Then you've only ever seen fairly new, modern cars. Seatbelt warnings are a relatively new feature.
                  • Zak 4 hours ago
                    Seat belt warnings became mandatory in the USA in 1972[0]. From the mid 1970s until fairly recently, the warning tone would stop after a few seconds.

                    [0] https://www.nationalacademies.org/read/10832/chapter/5

                    • dpark 3 hours ago
                      Mawr’s out there driving his Model T around town.
                  • vel0city 4 hours ago
                    I've had annoying seatbelt warnings on my cars aging back to at least the 90s.
                • crustaceansoup 7 hours ago
                  Just click the belt in with no one occupying the seat and sit on top of it.
                  • vel0city 4 hours ago
                    I never understood this though. It seems like more work and even more uncomfortable just to knowingly make things worse for yourself.
                    • eimrine 2 hours ago
                      Either O B E Y or do what you named as "more work". Different person chooses different way of dealing with annoyances.
                • pepperball 2 hours ago
                  As a reminder of how little things change. I remember watching an old video from sometime when seatbelt laws were mandated in Texas.

                  People were rambling on about how they basically live in the Soviet Union.

                • bluedino 7 hours ago
                  Many of them stop beeping for a while (or beep way less often)
              • Panzer04 7 hours ago
                It seems much more straightforward to me to assume impairment. This is the obvious corollary, not seat belts.

                It could be seat belts, of course, but I don't think that's the obvious conclusion.

              • henearkr 8 hours ago
                I can't make sense of it mathematically. A statistical distribution fitting these characteristics does not exist.

                If non-weeders have an average seat belt wearing, and if weeders also have an average seat belt wearing, then the proportion of weeders inside of the seat belt non-wearing class is just equal to the proportion of weeders inside the whole population.

              • block_dagger 8 hours ago
                You had me until the last sentence. Your easy assumption seems nonsensical to me.
              • SoftTalker 8 hours ago
                Is this a joke?

                The people who don't wear seatbelts are in my observation old folks who grew up without them or before using them was mandatory. It's just their habit.

                I've almost never seen a person under about age 40 not using a seatbelt.

                • hattmall 3 hours ago
                  No. I don't know a lot of people that don't wear seatbelts, but they all smoke weed. All of my friends that died in car wrecks weren't wearing seat belts and would have definitely tested positive for THC.

                  I don't know any old people that don't wear seatbelts.

                  The people I do know that don't wear seatbelts also live pretty otherwise high risk lives, drug dealers, strippers, street gang members,etc.

              • SecretDreams 8 hours ago
                The seat belts comment is so apt. We should be looking at the full population of drivers involved in accidents, not just those that went through a windshield.

                Restraints play such a pivotal role in crash safety, but not wearing them isn't a meaningful indicator of impairment status.

          • jeremyjh 10 hours ago
            Doesn't that support the hypothesis that high THC levels are dangerously impairing people's driving?
            • lokar 10 hours ago
              You need to consider other confounding factors

              It is well shown that age (youth) is a major factor in accident rates.

            • mattmaroon 10 hours ago
              Not necessarily, they could both be a comorbidity of some other factor (bad decision making causes both, for instance) but it certainly doesn’t refute it.
              • LorenPechtel 8 hours ago
                That was my first thought on reading it. Dope is for dopes!
      • tqi 5 hours ago
        - [1]: A study in Canada analyzed crash reports and blood tests to look at the state of drivers responsible for accidents. While alcohol had a very clear and statistically-significant influence on the risk of a driver causing an accident, THC did not.

        I don't understand how this study can make that claim just looking at crash report data. The assumption that not at fault drivers are representative of people who aren't in accidents at all is pretty generous? It seems likely that folks who are unimpaired are also better at avoiding accidents / driving defensively

      • belorn 6 hours ago
        My preferred way to wade through a political research topic like this is to look at the aviation industry. If a pilot can not use a medical substance, then it is very likely that there is some thing there. Pilots are generally fairly high investment, and they are also fairly international in research and standards. All nations with an airforce tend also be interested in such research, regardless of current political flavor.

        From glancing at it, it seems that TCH impair pilots ability. Here is such study (done with flight sims). https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/1849400/

        "The results support our preliminary study and suggest that very complex human/machine performance can be impaired as long as 24h after smoking a moderate social dose of marijuana, and that the user may be unaware of the drug's influence. "

        • sokoloff 6 hours ago
          I think that aviation has a lot of factors that bias its decisions conservatively. The “cost” of being conservative can be pretty easily borne in aviation. As an example, Zyrtec is grounding for 48 hours after taking. I think most Zyrtec users drive daily and likely quite safely, but aviation can afford to ground pilots at a lower level of risk than probably makes sense for drivers.

          (I have very little doubt that THC is impairing; that pilots can’t legally use it is only very loosely related to that likely linkage.)

        • cogman10 6 hours ago
          I think you miss the point of the comment you replied to.

          > The law's assumption that this level of THC is evidence of impairment seems to be invalid.

          I think most will recognize that THC causes impairment. The question that (AFAIK) is unanswered is if it can be measured simply by looking at the concentration of THC in the blood.

          In fact, if you look into the mechanisms for alcohol tolerance vs THC tolerance. What you'll find is that alcohol tolerance is a result of the body developing fast paths for breaking down ethanol. Meaning the same BAC will have the same intoxication level, the body just works harder to keep the BAC down.

          THC tolerance, on the other hand, appears to be the THC receptors becoming desensitized to THC. Which means the body doesn't appear to metabolize THC faster as tolerance builds.

          That's where a blood test might not be a good indicator of THC impairment.

      • dang 10 hours ago
        Thanks! Macroexpanded:

        Nearly half of drivers killed in (Ohio County) crashes had THC in their blood - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45494730 - Oct 2025 (125 comments)

      • avereveard 8 hours ago
        If that's the conclusion you'd also expect 40% of the population using it.
    • terminalshort 15 hours ago
      But the truth is that habitual users are always impaired. Source: former habitual user.
      • Aurornis 13 hours ago
        I’ve never been a smoker, but I’ve known a lot of friends who went through periods of smoking multiple times per week or even daily for periods of time.

        Every single one of them denied impairment during those periods. Often vehemently so, belittling anyone who suggested they might be impaired as having succumbed to propaganda.

        Every single one of them remarked that they were sharper, more alert, and had better memory after stopping.

        It’s an interesting phenomenon to watch. I think it’s becoming more socially acceptable to acknowledge that marijuana causes impairment even after the obvious effects have subsided, which was a taboo topic in the years when saying anything negative about marijuana would get you attacked as being pro-prohibition or pro-imprisonment of drug users. I even remember one of the big technical forums in the 2010s had a long debate thread where people were claiming that THC made them better drivers and citing YouTube videos and “studies” to back it up. It would be rare to see anyone try to make that claim in today’s environment.

        • anjel 6 hours ago
          Anecdata: There are neurochemical upregulation effects to daily THC use over time, and upon discontinuance that upregulation (which can take months or even years to wear off and perhaps not) is in itself quite apparent.
        • NooneAtAll3 8 hours ago
          > Every single one of them denied impairment during those periods. Often vehemently so, belittling anyone who suggested they might be impaired as having succumbed to propaganda.

          isn't that just common addiction response?

          "no, nothing's wrong with me. my drugs aren't the problem - you are the problem"

        • renewiltord 8 hours ago
          Isn’t it suspicious that no matter what the circumstances, their current decision-making is correct and their past one wasn’t? It seems somewhat self-unaware.

          You have to tune down your self-estimate’s value if your self-estimate shows historical poor performance.

      • Sparkle-san 14 hours ago
        Got any real sources? I've been a daily user for over 10 years and also have a spotless driving record.
        • Aurornis 13 hours ago
          > I've been a daily user for over 10 years and also have a spotless driving record.

          I knew a guy who drove home from bars unquestionably over the legal limit (example: 4-5 drinks in 90 minutes) every single weekend for years without getting caught or getting in accident.

          It doesn’t mean he wasn’t impaired.

          • Sparkle-san 13 hours ago
            That's not quite the same though. The claim is that because I'm a habitual user, I'm always impaired. Which amounts to over 100k miles of impaired driving over the last decade.
            • strken 9 hours ago
              You're only expected to crash 500 or so times per 100 million miles as the base rate[0]. If you were impaired enough to have 2x or 3x the risk of crashing then it's entirely possible that you wouldn't crash, or that other factors would play a larger role.

              [0] https://www.friedmansimon.com/faqs/how-common-are-car-accide...

            • icefo 9 hours ago
              You probably are compared to your baseline self (another comment goes more extensively on this subject) but maybe you have enough driving skills and common sense to minimize the risks somewhat.
            • michael1999 10 hours ago
              Planning, good sense, and caution go a long way to compensate for physical impairment. Weed is different from booze in that booze increases risk taking, which makes driving such a danger. But that doesn’t mean weed doesn’t impair in some material way compared to baseline.
              • QuercusMax 6 hours ago
                Your average driver on alcohol: goes 100 miles per hour into a tree

                Your average driver on weed: drives 5 miles per hour to the taco bell drive thru

            • nh23423fefe 12 hours ago
              Being freshly high is probably 2 quick beers, I'd think I was baseline after maybe 45 minutes. A massive edible might be 5, and I'd take like 3 hours I'd guess.

              Alcohol is so much more impairing. I think just being a daily user isn't the issue. It's the proximity to last use and obviously quantity.

          • rayiner 10 hours ago
            In the south people drive drunk over the legal alcohol limit all the time, most don’t crash. Doesn’t mean you shouldn’t do it.
        • n8cpdx 14 hours ago
          It depends on the level of your habitual use. A 5mg gummy every evening is probably fine.

          I’ve seen plenty of people who are essentially using THC vapes like nicotine vapes, in that they use them every few hours and start to get anxious if they don’t. Stoned driving has become normalized - between seeing people lighting up behind the wheel on snap map, seeing it on TV (this happened in The Rehearsal season 1), and seeing it in person, it would take a lot to convince me otherwise.

          If you’re high all day every day, that may be your normal, but it doesn’t mean you’re competent to drive.

          In my personal experience, it took a very long time to fully get through a high dose of THC - usually at least a full night sleep, but sometimes more like two, before my reaction times came back. Notably, it takes much longer for the impairment of THC to wear off than the subjectively enjoyable experience of being high, so you can “sober up” but still be impaired.

          If you’ve been getting high every day for 10 years, it is hard to take seriously that you would know if you’re impaired. Kind of like vegans who haven’t tasted dairy for 10 years tend not to be reliable judges of the quality of vegan mayo - how could they possibly know?

          • 4q34qq 3 hours ago
            I've been high basically for 15 years straight and was a professional athlete during that time in a sport that requires a lot of coordination. I know many other athletes that are heavy users, the majority of the best athletes I've ever known were actually. So how do you think that works?

            I don't trust anyone else on the road because all of you are comically bad drivers compared to someone like me.

          • yesbabyyes 3 hours ago
            > Kind of like vegans who haven’t tasted dairy for 10 years tend not to be reliable judges of the quality of vegan mayo - how could they possibly know?

            Wait, how is mayo, vegan or not, related to dairy?

        • markeroon 14 hours ago
          If we're doing anecdotes I'm sure there are lots of drunk drivers with spotless records.

          I understand that you're taking issue with the idea of always being impaired, but the article indicates that there's a pretty clear association between having ingested THC and being in a car crash.

          • cortesoft 13 hours ago
            Don't we need baseline levels to see the association?
            • Panzer04 7 hours ago
              You think 40% of the population is using? That seems like a pretty big reach to me.
              • cortesoft 4 hours ago
                I have no idea, but we should know the baseline if we want to know the effect
          • solumunus 14 hours ago
            There’s also an association with having drank water and been in a car crash. This on its own can’t reasonably inform any opinions, more context is required.
            • Aurornis 13 hours ago
              > There’s also an association with having drank water and been in a car crash

              This is blatantly intellectually dishonest. If 100% of people drink water then it’s not surprising when 100% of people in car crashes have been drinking water.

              If less than 40% of the population has impairment levels of THC at any given time but 40% of deceased car crash drivers have impairment levels of THC in their blood, you can’t pretend that THC use is equivalent to drinking water.

              The mental gymnastics being done in this thread to try to ignore this study are fascinating.

              • ModernMech 13 hours ago
                > If less than 40% of the population has impairment levels of THC at any given time but 40% of deceased car crash drivers have impairment levels

                You're looking at two different populations in this and your other comments, drawing a false equivalence. The study is over a 6 year period, over which 103 people (40%) tested positive for THC. You're saying that because the number of people who self-reported consuming THC in the last year is 20%, that means the result of the study is eye popping and shocking because the number is 40%. But you cannot directly infer elevated risk just because a subgroup has a higher prevalence than the general population without controlling for exposure and confounders. Especially considering what we are talking about is people self-reporting they are criminals.

                Moreover, fatal crashes are not randomly distributed across age groups or vehicle types, and younger people, because they are not as experienced, they drive more often, in smaller cars with fewer safety features, are more likely both to smoke THC, and die in crashes even while sober. So there's a strong sampling bias here you're not accounting for.

                And this isn't downplaying the results, it's pointing out its limitations of the study and warning you not to read into it what isn't there. You seem to be shocked by the results which should cause you to dig deeper into the study. I would say the most surprising thing here is they found nothing changed before and after legalization.

            • markeroon 14 hours ago
              Enough with the pedantry please:

              "Driving under the influence of cannabis was associated with a significantly increased risk of motor vehicle collisions compared with unimpaired driving (odds ratio 1.92 (95% confidence interval 1.35 to 2.73); P=0.0003); we noted heterogeneity among the individual study effects (I2=81)".

              From https://www.bmj.com/content/344/bmj.e536

        • hyperadvanced 8 hours ago
          Source? Source? Got any source about me? Yeah well those statistics only deal with other people who aren’t me, so I guess you’re not really trusting the science :/
        • ekianjo 6 hours ago
          > I've been a daily user for over 10 years and also have a spotless driving record.

          n sample size of 1 does not prove anything.

        • formerly_proven 14 hours ago
          It is very noticeable to basically everyone when you consume cannabis regularly.
          • tptacek 14 hours ago
            I don't (I find cannabis unpleasant) but I don't think this is at all true.
          • pinkmuffinere 14 hours ago
            I think serious studies would be strongly preferred here, as compared to anecdotes or conjecture. I don’t even know if I disagree with your stance, it’s just an absence of data is not convincing.
          • throaway123123 12 hours ago
            not exactly. Depends how you consume it. Smoking, yes probably. The other forms of cannabis are less obvious. They are clearer highs without smell or smoke and much less burnout.
            • badc0ffee 9 hours ago
              Less coughing and effects of smoke, but the burnout is definitely due to daily THC, even if you vape it or do dabs.

              (To be clear, I don't think every daily user is a burnout.)

      • walletdrainer 14 hours ago
        Sure, but the problem isn’t whether or not a driver is impaired, but the degree to which they are impaired.
        • mrj 14 hours ago
          Well, it would be good for the rest of us on the road if people driving two tons of murder box are 0% impaired.

          I'm no angel but I have gotten more diligent... I'm just reacting to "the degree". The goal has to be zero degrees of impairment when a moment of inattention can kill.

          Also, my son was just hit by a driver while he was on a bike and in the bike lane. They claimed not to see him. He's fine thankfully but it's really scary to watch him ride off.

          • sethammons 22 minutes ago
            0% impaired? We know tired drivers are impaired. Should we require drivers to demonstrate 8hrs of sleep before operating a vehicle? What about people who do ok on less sleep? I think there are obvious issues with such a proposal and those issues transfer to THC usage. I would bet, if we could measure it, a large portion of fatal accidents would involve people who are not fully rested and had missed the 8hr target multiple times in the preceding week or two
          • wiml 12 hours ago
            There are some occupations where we aspire to that low level of risk. But it would mean that driving can't be an everyday activity for ordinary people.

            No driving if you haven't been getting proper sleep; no driving if jet lagged. No driving if your attention is impaired by grief, stress, or impatience. Or if your annual physical reveals a risk. Or if you've ever had psychological complaints.

            We should absolutely make transportation safer, but it's a continuum of tradeoffs.

            • mrj 12 hours ago
              That's probably not the thing to tell a parent whose kid just made a dent and a black smudge on a MachE. I don't want to over index on the "think of the kids" argument, but we don't take driving seriously enough. Wikipedia says:

                  Motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of preventable death for people aged 5–22, and the second most common cause for ages 23–67.
              
              The linked article is astounding. The attitude in this thread is astounding, too. Because driving is ubiquitous and necessary in most of the US, we've become too accepting of the problems. Yes, if you're hitting the vape pen every day you should absolutely not be driving. Jetlagged? Take an Uber. Stroke risk? Give us the keys.
              • wiml 10 hours ago
                Okay, that was insensitive of me.

                But yes, what you say is the logical consequence (except I'm not kidding about grief and impatience).

                My point really is that if we want our kids not to get horribly injured or killed, we can't just focus on "other people" making bad decisions like driving drunk. We have to acknowledge that we've collectively built a system that requires people to put each other in danger with cars, and we have to think about how to change that. Cars bring a lot of benefits like autonomy and decentralization, how do we keep that but kill fewer people?

                • Mawr 5 hours ago
                  > Cars bring a lot of benefits like autonomy and decentralization, how do we keep that but kill fewer people?

                  'No Way to Prevent This,' Says Only Nation Where This Regularly Happens

                  This is a solved problem: look at the current state-of-the-art road design documents from the Netherlands. Apply. Problem solved.

                  • MichaelNolan 4 hours ago
                    Per 1 billion vehicle-km the US has 6.9 deaths and the Netherlands has 4.7 deaths. That’s obviously better much but I wouldn’t call it “problem solved”.

                    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_traffic-r...

                    (Wikipedia links to itf-oecd.org/ where those numbers come From)

                    • rixed 2 hours ago
                      My guess is better road design means less miles driven by cars (as opposed to other, safer vehicles) and therefore fewer accidents overall, even if car crash statistics remain the same.
                • ElectronCharge 9 hours ago
                  Buy a Tesla with FSD. No, it’s not L5 autonomy, but it’s already safer than the average human driver…and autonomous cars will only get better.
              • Dylan16807 9 hours ago
                The solution is to make the roads safer in general and/or reduce road use, not to take away people's keys for relatively tiny risk factors.

                And in particular for the Uber situation, if taking a taxi 10 miles causes 15 miles of taxi-driving, that's less safe than driving 10 miles with a small to medium impairment.

          • Dylan16807 9 hours ago
            There's not really such a thing as 0% impaired. People fluctuate day to day, hour to hour, and have different baselines.
            • mrj 8 hours ago
              Sure.. I just was addressing the goal makes sense that drivers are not impaired. Of course nobody is perfect.
              • Dylan16807 8 hours ago
                A goal like that is far enough from what is actually possible that I think it's not a good goal. Maybe a slogan.
          • sallveburrpi 14 hours ago
            Zero degree of impairment is only possible if we don’t have access to 2 tons of murder box. I think the way cars dominate roads and our public spaces and how they are being used is inherently dangerous.

            I know this is going to get downvoted by people who cant imagine an alternative but it’s possible all the same.

            • the_gastropod 13 hours ago
              I borderline want a conscription-style policy, where young adults are required to live in Boston, Philadelphia, NYC, DC, Seattle, or Chicago, car-free for a year. Americans’ inability to even imagine a world where a car isn’t the way to get around is really a problem.
              • nradov 5 hours ago
                Some of those cities you listed have rather high death rates for young adults for reasons unrelated to cars.
            • Nasrudith 9 hours ago
              I don't think you understand what "inherently dangerous" actually means.

              FYI murder requires intent, otherwise it is just manslaughter. Your indoctrination is showing by your turns of phrase.

              • sallveburrpi 5 hours ago
                Inherently means “qualities or traits that are intrinsic and fundamental, not added or external”

                So yea cars are inherently dangerous.

                I’m not sure who you think I’m indoctrinated by but around 3000 people are killed every year in my country by cars.

                Meanwhile around 200 people are murdered each year.

                I’ll give you one try to guess which one dominates the newspapers and public discourse.

                And you tell me something about indoctrination, real funny

              • rafabulsing 7 hours ago
                Cars are inherently dangerous, though. They're multi ton hunks of metal moving at high speeds. That's dangerous from literally any angle you can imagine.

                There are ways to make it less dangerous, sure. But they're never 100% safe. Which makes them, by definition, inherently dangerous. That's... What those words mean.

                • sokoloff 6 hours ago
                  So long as you’re also willing to label swimming pools, grapes, and crayons as, by definition, inherently dangerous on account of not being able to be made 100% safe, then I’ll at least grant you a level of consistency in your argument.
                  • rafabulsing 5 hours ago
                    Swimming pools are absolutely inherently dangerous. Why do you think lifeguards are a thing?

                    Like, really man? If you can't even recognize as dangerous the one activity that famously requires someone specifically trained to save people to be present, then I'm happy to end this conversation right here. It's clearly just a waste of time all around. I just hope there's no one in your life depending on you to judge what's safe and what's not.

                    • nradov 5 hours ago
                      No lifeguard on duty. Swim at your own risk.
                  • Mawr 5 hours ago
                    Comparing "100% safe" vs the danger cars represent is so ridiculous I have to question if you're kidding? We're talking 40,000 people killed every year in the US alone on account of traffic accidents. And you're talking about grapes and crayons?

                    And swimming pools are pretty dangerous though? There are around 4,500 drowning deaths per year in the US, so on the order of 10x fewer than due to car accidents, but still quite a lot.

                    • sokoloff 4 hours ago
                      GP is the one who argued “not 100% safe” as evidence of inherently unsafe.

                      I agree with you that it’s a comically wrong threshold, which is why I offered that series that was progressively more safe but never 100% safe as examples against that line of reasoning.

                      • rafabulsing 4 hours ago
                        Make the threshold "won't kill you 99.9% of the time, even if you have little to no training at that specific activity" then. Is that specific enough for you to engage meaningfully with the conversation at hand, and show why you think driving is at the same side of this threshold as eating grapes or using crayons?
          • Mawr 5 hours ago
            > Also, my son was just hit by a driver while he was on a bike and in the bike lane.

            Let me guess, the painted line on the road did not in fact prevent the vehicle from crossing into the bike lane? What we as a society consider acceptable cycling infrastructure is pathetic.

    • marcinpieczka 14 hours ago
      That works the same with alcohol - heavy alcoholic would probably need to be over the limit to feel ok and sober.
      • Aurornis 13 hours ago
        An important point is that drug users (alcohol included) lose their ability to judge their own impairment after a lot of habitual use.

        They can even develop an ability to appear sober to casual observers while being impaired.

        Feeling sober is not a reliable indicator of being sober. It’s referred to as delusions of sobriety.

    • dmitrygr 9 hours ago
      Perhaps habitual drug users should not participate in operating heavy machinery around people?
      • wildzzz 8 hours ago
        Should alcoholics be barred from driving as well, even if they are perfectly sober when behind the wheel?
        • dmitrygr 5 hours ago
          Statistically, yes they should.
    • shtzvhdx 14 hours ago
      [dead]
    • iLoveOncall 15 hours ago
      Opening the article would have allowed you to see that the average was 30.7 ng/mL, it's in the very first bullet point!
      • tokai 15 hours ago
        If you calmed down and stopped snapping at everyone, you might understand that I'm writing about how the law and a lack of studies could make some people more willing to drive high. You are substantially diminishing the quality of the discussion here.
      • adgjlsfhk1 15 hours ago
        using a mean rather than median is fairly odd here. a mean is pretty much worthless without knowing distribution shape.
      • dragonwriter 15 hours ago
        The average (presumably arithmetic mean, though it could technically be any of a wide variety of measures) is not particulatly interesting, the median specifically would be more interesting, as a single figure.
        • iLoveOncall 11 hours ago
          I partially agree, but it is still relevant, because there is a relatively low upper bound to the values possible after which someone would literally be unable to even walk to their car to start driving.

          When the average is SO high above the legal limit, and with this constraint that there is an upper bound, it's absolutely relevant.

  • Aurornis 13 hours ago
    Some helpful context: The number of Americans age 12 and older who report using any marijuana product at least once in the past year is around 20% (Source https://apnews.com/article/marijuana-cannabis-alcohol-use-di... ) if I use one of the highest reported use numbers I can find.

    Even if you dismiss all of the questions brought up in these comments like the use of mean levels instead of median, not accounting for tolerance of habitual users, or debates about the threshold for impairment, the 40% number in this study is without a doubt far higher than the number of people who have detectable levels of THC in their blood at any given time.

    I see a lot of attempts to downplay the result of this study in the comments, but 40% having significant THC in their blood is a stunning statistic no matter how you look at it.

    • root_axis 1 hour ago
      The biggest problem with drawing conclusions from the 40% number is that THC use correlates with other well established crash death risks like being a young driver or the use of other impairing substances.

      The fact that legalization did not impact the crash rates is also a strong signal that THC itself is not causing the crashes.

      The presence of THC in the blood is not a reliable signal for intoxication, so further research is needed to draw any type of conclusion.

      Finally, it's also been noted that there are some sample bias concerns because the data comes from fatal crashes where it was determined that a drug test should be administered after the crash.

    • kristopolous 2 hours ago
      No not at all. Let's do it this way:

      What percentage of people who drive drunk have consumed thc within the time window of blood detection?

      Now this is a more reasonable number

      I really don't know why this number is significant. Accidents are situational and people who engage in situations where accidents are more frequent likely make other decisions about consumption and lifestyle which involve things like cannabis

      Who cares?

      You aren't going to elevate the behavior of the population by regulating a plant

    • wiml 12 hours ago
      The number of people who report using it is only a rough proxy for the number of people who are using it, though.
      • pretzellogician 9 hours ago
        Yes, very rough. Marijuana still being illegal at the federal level, and often illegal at the state level, means it's not always in your best interest to self-report.

        For example, in my doctor's questionnaires. "Have you used illegal drugs in the last year?" I'm always going to say no. I don't trust security and privacy enough to say otherwise.

        And yes, for HN scrapers, I'll mention this is all hypothetical.

      • jeremyjh 10 hours ago
        I think its much more significant than the studies done by potheads who think they are cool to drive.
    • kmnc 8 hours ago
      You really think there arnt 20% of people who use but don’t report? What a crock of shit.
      • mvdtnz 7 hours ago
        It is my experience that people who smoke weed won't shut the fuck up about it and will take ANY opportunity to make sure you know it.
    • dyauspitr 7 hours ago
      The n for the group is only 246 though. That’s very biased depending on where the stats are from.
      • mvdtnz 7 hours ago
        Very bold to claim it's a biased sample without any evidence or even a theory of how.
        • sanex 5 hours ago
          The evidence is the n being 246 lol
          • jmye 5 hours ago
            What, specifically, would be an optimal sample size and why, specifically, is 246 insufficient, in this case? “Lol”
            • sanex 2 hours ago
              I'm not a statistician but when I know when I've only gotten 250 users through a split test it's not even worth looking at the results. So just for you I'm going to say 10,000 and geographically spread from more than one county in Ohio which contains a University.
  • Someone 14 hours ago
    > In a review of 246 deceased drivers, 41.9% tested positive for active THC in their blood, with an average level of 30.7 ng/mL — far exceeding most state impairment limits.

    That could mean they all had levels far exceeding most state impairment limits, but it also could mean most of them had trace levels, while a few had levels way above 30.7 ng/mL. So, it says fairly little.

    Also (FTA) “Researchers analyzed coroner records from Montgomery County in Ohio from January 2019 to September 2024, focusing on 246 deceased drivers who were tested for THC following a fatal crash”. That means there could be selection bias at play.

    Finally, no mention is made on the levels of THC in the general population of of those driving cars. Both _could_ be equal or even higher.

    I’m not sure one should blame (only) the researchers for these statements, though. Chances are they didn’t intend to find out whether THC use is a major cause of vehicle crashes, but only in whether legalizing THC use changed those numbers, and someone managed to get some more juicy quotes from them.

    • notatoad 8 hours ago
      >focusing on 246 deceased drivers who were tested for THC following a fatal crash”. That means there could be selection bias at play.

      that wording definitely sets off warning alarms for selection bias. but it looks like there were approximately 350 traffic deaths in montgomery county during that period [1]. that probably about lines up with 246 drivers dying during that period, so it seems likely they tested all or almost all deceased drivers.

      [1] https://dam.assets.ohio.gov/image/upload/statepatrol.ohio.go...

    • themafia 8 hours ago
      They failed to present the average _age_ of the drivers as well. Young drivers are more often involved in fatalities than older drivers. This is clear if you look at the NHTSA's FARS database.
    • thrill 14 hours ago
      “Finally, no mention is made on the levels of THC in the general population of those driving cars.”

      How do you propose gathering that particular data?

      • Aurornis 13 hours ago
        One helpful data point is that only about 20% of people over age 12 report any THC use at all in the prior year. Some surveys have even lower numbers, around 1 in 8, but let’s take the highest number for the sake of this comparison.

        So the median THC level is 0%.

        Having 40% of people register high enough levels of THC to pass an impairment threshold is a remarkably high number no matter how you look at it.

        • VanTheBrand 9 hours ago
          I think there is definable a connection between cannabis use and auto accidents. It slows your reaction time and that’s a known factor with accidents. That said, substance use data is notoriously underreported[1] in surveys. So that 20% data point is not very helpful. Also 12-15 year olds are bringing that number down in your data and also can’t drive making it even less useful for comparison.

          [1]https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S089085672...

          • LorenPechtel 8 hours ago
            And substance use impairment is overreported. If the driver was impaired it's counted even if the impairment has no bearing on the accident. A drunk hits a red light runner--it's called alcohol even if he had no hope of avoiding it.

            My understanding of stoned drivers is they tend to be too conservative--waiting for the stop sign to turn green etc. If that's accurate it could also mean stoned drivers are worse at avoiding the mistakes of others.

    • flufluflufluffy 13 hours ago
      Came here to say most of this, also worth calling out the note at the bottom:

      > Note: This research was presented as an abstract at the ACS Clinical Congress Scientific Forum. Research abstracts presented at the ACS Clinical Congress Scientific Forum are reviewed and selected by a program committee but are not yet peer reviewed.

      My guess is when it gets to peer review, one of the reviewers will request at least mentioning these limitations. As it was only an abstract, it’s possible the paper itself does mention these limitations already as well.

      • lokar 9 hours ago
        They must have access to the full data distribution, right?
  • epistasis 15 hours ago
    Based on the headline, I was guessing it was any amount of positivity, and may be close to the population level, but it's actually impairment levels of THC:

    > In a review of 246 deceased drivers, 41.9% tested positive for active THC in their blood, with an average level of 30.7 ng/mL — far exceeding most state impairment limits.

    Since COVID in CA, it feels like driving has become far more dangerous with much more lawlessness regarding excessive speeding and running red lights, going into the left lane to turn right in front of stopped cars, all sorts of weird things. But I can't tell if my anecdotes are significant. It seems that Ohio's impaired drivers have been consistent through the past six years though.

    • Benjammer 15 hours ago
      >Since COVID in CA, it feels like driving has become far more dangerous with much more lawlessness regarding excessive speeding and running red lights, going into the left lane to turn right in front of stopped cars, all sorts of weird things

      NYC has had the same effect since COVID, and over the last year or two it's gotten to the point where every single light at every busy intersection in Manhattan you get 2-3 cars speeding through the red light right after it turns. I bike ride a lot so I'm looking around at drivers a lot, and for the most part the crazy drivers seem to be private citizens in personal cars, not Uber or commercial/industrial drivers.

      • macNchz 14 hours ago
        It’s a very widespread problem, I think, and probably has a complex mix of causes, but my perception as a NYC runner, cyclist, and driver is that there’s a fairly small percentage of extremely antisocial drivers who we allow to behave badly with relative impunity, which itself moves the Overton window of driving behavior towards aggression/chaos, so to speak.

        Very frequently when there is a newsmaking incident in which a driver runs people over in some egregious fashion, it turns out that they got dozens of speed camera tickets per year. We know who these people are, we just don’t seem to have any motivation to actually do anything about it.

        The city has published research on this, showing drivers who get 30+ speed camera tickets in a year are 50x as likely to be involved in crashes with serious injuries or death, but efforts to actually do something about their behavior are consistently stalled or watered down. Other research points to various causes, including backed up courts and decreased enforcement generally.

        https://www.nyc.gov/html/dot/html/pr2025/nyc-dot-advocate-fo...

        https://www.nyc.gov/html/dot/downloads/pdf/nyc-driver-behavi...

        • spamizbad 14 hours ago
          Yeah I feel like the United States could dramatically improve its road safety if it kept maybe 1-3% of its drivers off the road permanently.
          • cultofmetatron 13 hours ago
            the problem is that our urban planning is so F@#$ed that taking away someone's ability to drive is tantamount to sentencing someone to poverty. In most of the country, you are completely dependent on a car to hold down a job, get groceries and pretty much anything else. In most other countries, not having a car is a mild to moderate inconvenience you can work around.
            • dns_snek 13 hours ago
              That's not a good reason. Other forms of criminality and reckless behavior don't get this kind of extreme leniency.

              People shouldn't have their license taken away over 1 speeding ticket but there need to be escalating punishments that include license suspension, community service, jail time. If someone works their way through all of these and still ends up speeding then they can't be trusted to drive a vehicle on public roads.

              • tenebrisalietum 12 hours ago
                Drivers licenses in most if not all of the U.S. are a joke, and people will still drive with suspended licenses, especially if they have to for work. Driving on a suspended license should allow the state to impound your car, though, then it would be respected.
                • epistasis 10 hours ago
                  Jail time should also be considered too, for repeat offenders.

                  Cars are a weird sort of thing, where they both are the justification for a surveillance state and lots of monitoring, but we also have extremely lenient penalties. It's difficult for me to understand how the US arrived at our current set of laws.

            • estimator7292 12 hours ago
              Why do we care about this type of sentencing to poverty and not every other way we condemn our citizens to poverty, homelessness, starvation, and death?

              Maybe that shouldn't be the only alternative in our society

              • cultofmetatron 12 hours ago
                The alternative is that we invest in better public transport and walkable infrastructure. then we can both increase penalties for driving badly AND raise the bar for getting a drivers license in the first place.
            • SubmarineClub 12 hours ago
              Sounds like a good reason not to commit traffic crimes then.

              Start punishing these people severely so that they might serve as an example to the rest

              • kelseyfrog 12 hours ago
                Has that ever worked?

                AFAIK, all evidence says that people don't consider consequences. If they did, they wouldn't be behaving like that in the first place. Punitive punishment feels much much better for people who have a specific set of values.

                • almosthere 5 hours ago
                  Escalating punishments often tend to take the "1-3%" of the bad people out of society that cause all the crime.

                  Remember from recent history these people that had 34 arrests or 73 arrests and they're out murdering people?

                • AmVess 7 hours ago
                  Yes, it works. The state that I used to reside in has draconian DUI/Traffic laws, and not coincidentally low traffic death rates.

                  Driving with license revoked or suspended was a serious charge and resulted in impound of vehicle and mandatory jail time. Repeat offenders would have their vehicles seized.

                  DUI laws similarly brutal. 2nd time offenders faced potentially life-altering charges and penalties. Get into an accident with injury to another person while DUI? Huge jail time. Felony DUI results in permanent loss of driving privileges.

                  Speeding 20 over the limit? Enjoy your reckless driving charge which is as serious a dui charge.

                  I read that getting a license back after a 2nd dui carries and average cost of $50k. Getting 2 dui's within 10 years automatically bumped 2nd dui to felony....no more driving for you.

                  Lax driving laws and penalties do nothing more than get a lot of people killed.

            • BobaFloutist 12 hours ago
              >the problem is that our urban planning is so F@#$ed that taking away someone's ability to drive is tantamount to sentencing someone to poverty.

              We're talking about NYC, they'll be fine without cars.

            • spamizbad 8 hours ago
              If my choice is jail or relocate and find a new job and home in a city with passable public transit (even if its just the bus) I know which one I'd pick.
          • littlestymaar 11 hours ago
            The problem is how do you enforce that though.

            The modern world is so cat centric people would rather drive without a license than accept to live without a car. And until you can reliably catch and jail license-less drivers, the bet is worth it for them.

            • randerson 10 hours ago
              If they were to catch and jail just 1% of license-less drivers, in a visible way, it would be a deterrent to the other 99%. But the rate of being caught & punished is negligible (at least in the states I've lived in) so people know they'll get away with it.

              I previously lived in a country where the cops set up random roadblocks to check everyone's license & registration and look for signs of intoxication. When there's a real risk of waking up in a jail cell you're less likely to order that third beer. But in the US when renewing my tabs I feel like the joke's on me because half the cars here seem to have expired tabs or illegal plates and nobody ever checks.

              • littlestymaar 1 hour ago
                > If they were to catch and jail just 1% of license-less drivers, in a visible way, it would be a deterrent to the other 99%. But the rate of being caught & punished is negligible (at least in the states I've lived in) so people know they'll get away with it.

                1% is actually negligible, and would not have a deterrent effect. In fact I wouldn't even be surprised if the effective prosecution rate was somewhat higher than this already.

                > I previously lived in a country where the cops set up random roadblocks to check everyone's license & registration and look for signs of intoxication.

                I live in a country (France) where this is still the case, and where driving crimes are the second source of jail time after drug trafficking, yet alcohol is still the #1 cause of death on the road, and an estimate 2% of people drive without a license after having lost it (and are responsible for ~5% of accidents).

            • buildbot 7 hours ago
              > "The modern world is so cat centric"

              If only

        • carlmr 14 hours ago
          >it turns out that they got dozens of speed camera tickets per year

          To me the answer is quite simple for any of these. Treat repeated small infractions like bigger and bigger infractions. E.g. double the cost every iteration if it happens within a specific time frame.

          Ok, you speed once? $100. Twice $200. Thrice $400. And so on. We only reset if you don’t reoffend for any speeding in 5 years. If you want to speed 20 times in 5 years, ok, go ahead. You pay $52,428,800.

          Bonus points for making it start at something relative to your salary. People will stop at some point out of self-preservation.

          If you don’t believe high fines work, drive from Switzerland to Germany. In Germany the Swiss have no problem speeding, because the fines are laughable. While south of the border they behave very nicely on the street.

          You could extend this to other crimes. Google and Microsoft happily pay fines, since it’s cheaper than what they make from breaking anti-trust regulations. If you doubled it on each infraction they would at some time start feeling the pain.

          • __turbobrew__ 9 hours ago
            I’m strongly in favor of exponential punishment with very light punishments for first offences. It allows fluke infractions or bad luck to go without being punished too hard, but severely punish the small anti-social group that brings the rest of society down with it. So maybe if you accidentally run a red light once it is a $10 ticket, but next time it is $100, and then $1000, and then $10000, and then $100000.
          • LorenPechtel 8 hours ago
            I'm in favor of escalating punishment, but it doesn't reset, it decays. Say 3 years with not tickets and it goes down one level.
          • macNchz 13 hours ago
            I have noticed this going between Switzerland and Italy in particular—all of the cars going incredibly fast on the autostrada seem to have Swiss plates!
          • beAbU 12 hours ago
            Some countries have a points system, where every infraction gets points in addition to the fine. At a certain amount of points you lose your license. Pretty effective dissuade serial petty infringers!
            • apothegm 10 hours ago
              Most US states do, too. But people will drive without a license because it’s the only way to get to anywhere in most of the country. And I suspect we’re light on enforcement for the same reason.
          • lukan 13 hours ago
            "In Germany the Swiss have no problem speeding, because the fines are laughable. "

            That is because in germany, cars are a religion substitute and just like there can be no speed limit on the Autobahn in general, there can be no real enforcement of speeding.

            The fines actually increased a lot in recent years. Still cheap, though. And if there are radar cameras, they are often in places where speeding is quite safe to make money from fines vs places where speeding is actually dangerous (close to schools etc)

            It is basically a archaic thing, the bigger the man, the bigger and louder his car and the faster he goes. It shows status.

            So I imagine in New York City it works just the same. When the big guys like speeding and the big guys control the state .. then how can there be meaningful regulation of that?

            (To confess, I like to drive fast, too. But not in places where kids can jump or fall anytime on the road)

        • stevage 5 hours ago
          > it turns out that they got dozens of speed camera tickets per year.

          Are you saying you can legally keep driving despite dozens of speed camera tickets in a year, as long as you keep paying the fines?

          That's wild.

          Around here (Melbourne, Australia), you'd lose your licence very quickly. A single speeding ticket is a minimum of 3 points off your licence (of which you have 12), and bigger infringements lose more points. So at most you could speed 4 times, but probably fewer. And it takes a few years for the points to come back.

        • temp0826 14 hours ago
          What the heck? How can you get that many tickets and still have a license? (Or manageable insurance costs for that matter lol)
          • macNchz 13 hours ago
            When New York State authorized the NYC speed camera program they explicitly precluded it from reporting to insurance, and made it not part of the “points” system that triggers license suspension if you accumulate too many infractions, so all that happens is that you get a $50 ticket each time.

            If you don’t pay the tickets, your car is at risk of being booted, but if you don’t park on the street or choose to obscure your license plate when you do (how did that leaf get stuck there!?), there aren’t many repercussions.

            There was an attempt at a program to actually seize these cars, originally it would have kicked in at 5 tickets/year for immediate towing, but it was watered down to 15 tickets a year triggering a required safe driving class. They sort of half-assed the execution of that, then pointed at the limited results and cancelled it altogether. There’s an effort to pass a state law about this, we’ll see if it makes progress.

            • stevage 5 hours ago
              > When New York State authorized the NYC speed camera program they explicitly precluded it from reporting to insurance, and made it not part of the “points” system that triggers license suspension if you accumulate too many infractions, so all that happens is that you get a $50 ticket each time.

              At the risk of hearing a depressing answer...why?

            • LorenPechtel 7 hours ago
              Because they set the speeds too low to raise revenue.
          • xnyan 12 hours ago
            Unless you live in NYC or a handful of other places, an adult in the US who can't drive (or afford to pay someone to drive for them) is in the equivalent of economic-social prison. Almost all personal transportation infrastructure is designed around car travel, anything else is at best an afterthought and at worst impossible.

            Don't get it twisted, I agree with you. The US is far too tolerant of dangerous driving. We are too dependent on cars for travel, and this is a consequence of it.

            • temp0826 12 hours ago
              I'm just shocked that you can have that many offenses and not be in jail. I nearly lost my license in high school with FAR less than 30 incidents. That amount of leeway just doesn't make sense at all, you're so obviously a danger at that point.
              • toast0 9 hours ago
                Camera tickets are in a weird place legally. They might not be legal, because of the 6th ammendment and due process requirements, so states tread lightly. A light touch gets a lot of compliance and is most likely self-funding; enforcement by humans may be more effective for habitual violators, but you most likely can't have as much coverage and be self-funding.

                If you had 30 speeding tickets issued in person, it would be a lot different than 30 speeding tickets issued by machine.

              • jazzyjackson 10 hours ago
                If they're talking about automated speed cameras I guess there's the problem of not being able to correlate the plate of the car with a particular human, a bill simply gets sent to the owner of the car, but maybe if we impounded cars at some point people wouldn't be loaning cars out to their licenseless friends
          • ray_v 14 hours ago
            It's simple. People drive without a license. Having a license doesn't preclude someone from driving a vehicle
            • xnyan 12 hours ago
              I once drove my car a month after it's registration expired. I was pulled over twice in the same day on the same ride home from work, in two separate counties in two separate legal systems. Completely my fault of course. I went to the courts of each county on the appointed day on my tickets, explained what happened to the clerks and had both tickets waved after showing proof of current registration.

              The only problem was the two counties had shared but not integrated records systems with each other, as well the state drivers license authority. For two years, my cases got jumbled around the three systems, triggering plate and license suspensions which lead to me getting pulled over four times in that two year period.

              It eventually all got sorted out without a lawyer. I didn't have to pay for anything beyond the first two tickets, and many hours on the phone. What was really notable was that by stop number four, from the perspective of the cop who pulled me over, I was someone who had been driving with suspended registration and/or license three times in a row. I was allowed to drive away three out of four times including the last time, and one time the cop would not let me drive, he waited with me patiently until my wife could be dropped off to get the car.

              Maybe I'm just lucky, but to be honest I was surprised how not a big deal it was to anyone.

          • deep_merge 13 hours ago
            Perhaps they don’t have either.
        • BiteCode_dev 13 hours ago
          For these reasons, many countries have adopted a point-based system for driving licences. E.G: in France you have 12 points, driving over the speed limit is a fine, but also removes up to 6 points depending on the speed.

          If you go down to 0 points, your licence is suspended.

          If you stay without a fine for long enough, you get back points.

          Some countries have fines that depend on how much you make. Some countries will destroy your car if you really behave badly.

          • macNchz 11 hours ago
            New York actually does have a points system, but since they're tied to the driver's license rather than the car itself, you only get them if you're actually pulled over, not from cameras. Within NYC there's a fair amount of camera enforcement, but comparatively very little by the police directly, so drivers whose licenses might otherwise be suspended via points are still driving around.

            The mechanisms for keeping people off the road are also just weaker in the US—I believe the penalties for driving with a suspended license are comparatively lighter, plus if your license is suspended you can often still get a "restricted" license that still lets you drive to work.

            • BiteCode_dev 8 hours ago
              France gets around that by assuming it's the car's owner's fault. If you were not driving the car during the infraction, the person driving the car must fill out a form saying he or she did and take the hit voluntarily.

              If the car's owner is a company, the company must declare a default conductor for this purpose.

      • nothrabannosir 14 hours ago
        Funny I ride a bike in Manhattan & BK (but only post COVID) and I very rarely experience cars going through reds. IME cars here respect traffic lights and stop signs. I try and count cars actually running a red ("speeding" through it) and it's rare, say 1/mo tops. Ymv I guess :)

        They do not, though, give an owl's hoot about yielding to straight traffic when turning. I suspect NY drivers are on a big group chat encouraging each other to cut off cyclists and pedestrians, by turning into their lane whenever they see one, and promptly parking there for an hour.

        And there's the "squeeze", and "crowding the box". Almost like no car here is truly allowed to ever really stop so they're always gently rolling, just a little, juuuuust a little, just, maybe, I know it's red but maybe just a lil squeeze into the intersection, maybe, squeeze, ...

        I don't know how to explain it but if you've been here you'll recognize it I'm sure.

        • VerifiedReports 14 hours ago
          The worst are assholes "blocking the box" while there is space to pull forward along the curb or even the neighboring lane. This should be a tripled fine, simply for the monumental level of douchebaggery displayed.
        • eastbound 13 hours ago
          I remember seeing a PSA that it was legal to park (one row of cars only) on bike lanes in specific situations: In emergencies, when being arrested by cops, to get medecine for a sick relative, nearby schools at school time to pick up the children, to drop off a delivery, to pickup bread at the bakery when it’s very short, and when nearby car parks are full. I think it was on April Fools.
      • master_crab 14 hours ago
        I haven’t seen driving behavior change in NYC over the past two decades.

        Also, NYC has a different driving attitude than, say, Dallas. What people call aggression is often a difference in expectations. Drivers change lanes and merge far more assertively than in other parts of the country. As long as you aren’t causing the car behind you to panic brake, it’s considered acceptable. Hesitation from drivers tends to get more opprobrium than tight merges.

        People block bike lanes and the box all the time. It’s annoying and you shouldn’t do it. But a lot of the rage is often unjustified. That FedEx truck needs to park somewhere and they aren’t going to roll over a fruit stand to do it.

        It’s a dense, packed city. If you can’t give and take, you are going to hate it here.

        • woodruffw 13 hours ago
          I’ve lived here my entire life, and there’s a significant difference between normal “aggressive” driving and many of the driving patterns that have emerged post-COVID. For example: blocking the box is (unfortunately) somewhat normal, while running through red lights and making illegal turns has (anecdotally) increased significantly.
          • nobody9999 6 hours ago
            As the old saw about driving in NYC goes:

            Green means 'Go!'

            Yellow means 'Go faster!'

            Red means 'The next six cars may go through the intersection.'

            Okay, the third part is a little hyperbolic.

            The above is from the 1980s and AFAICT (I've lived here nearly 60 years) not much has changed.

        • bluGill 14 hours ago
          Traffic safety engineers do not agree with all of those things. don't be an agressive driver even if everyone else is.
      • SecretDreams 14 hours ago
        Could we verify this against data? Surely if people are trying way worse post covid, that would show up compared to pre covid data by way of accident, fatality, and ticket issuances, e.g.?

        To the OP, I'm not sure I buy into it being tied to THC which seems to be the implication. Canada isn't seeing this trend, afaik.

        • epistasis 14 hours ago
          Those who are autopsied due to traffic deaths clearly show a massive amount of THC impairment.

          But the data here also show that it's a consistent level before and after legalization of cannabis in Ohio. So legalization of cannabis in Ohio did not cause a big increase in impairment-levels of THC in those who died in traffic.

    • Aurornis 13 hours ago
      > I was guessing it was any amount of positivity, and may be close to the population level, but it's actually impairment levels of THC:

      A lot of people are trying to debate the impairment threshold or argue about mean vs median, but 40% of deceased drivers having this much THC in their blood would be a notable result for basically any sample of people for anything other than a music festival or something.

      The number of people age 12 or older who report any THC use at all, even once, in the past year is around 20% (or less depending on the survey). Having 40% of a group register levels this high is a very eye opening result.

    • bko 14 hours ago
      I think it's lawlessness overall. For instance, consider San Fransisco traffic citations. Went from around 11k in 2014-2015 steadily down and then fell off a cliff during covid but never recovered (around 1k in 2023).

      I remember the sad story of Eric Garner who was killed in 2014 while being arrested for selling loose cigarettes in Staten Island. Today, at least in NYC, you see people parked out in front of the same corner every day selling weed and loose cigarettes. Same people, out in the open. I'm pretty sure that's not a sanctioned dispensary.

      Just shows how much things can change in ten years. For whatever reason, police and prosecutors just gave up in enforcing any kind of laws. Seems like an overreaction to whatever problems we had with criminal justice

      https://www.reddit.com/r/sanfrancisco/comments/11nbnxw/san_f...

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Killing_of_Michael_Brown

      • roughly 14 hours ago
        I think it’s underappreciated the degree to which police and LEO have started behaving like political actors. NYC cops decided to “strike on the job” when the city started changing its stance in the mid-2010s, and in the Bay the cops responded similarly to Prop 47 by effectively not prosecuting shoplifting and other minor crimes anymore. Similarly, the recall of Pamela Price started almost the moment she took office and was accompanied by a work slowdown by the OPD in the interest of making the crime situation look worse. There’s other examples, but effectively the police have turned lax enforcement into a tool to preclude any shifts in policing policies. I’ve got my own feelings about those policies, but when you’ve got the cops acting like a political block that gets to set policies instead of a group of city employees tasked with enforcing them, I think that should concern the rest of us.
        • bko 14 hours ago
          There's probably some of this, but I think it's driven by district attorney not prosecuting people. We see people that have 20+ prior arrests. How many times can a cop arrest the same person and do the paperwork if he's not going to be prosecuted? I don't think people are pushing police to arrest more people.

          > Nearly a third of all shoplifting arrests in New York City last year involved just 327 people, the police said. Collectively, they were arrested and rearrested more than 6,000 times, Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell said. Some engage in shoplifting as a trade, while others are driven by addiction or mental illness; the police did not identify the 327 people in the analysis.

          Not clear if that's only in 1 year, but 6,000 arrests for the same 327 people means 18 arrests per person on average. Maybe if you see the same person shoplifting more than 5 times you put him away for some real time. 10 times? Hell even 20 strikes and you're out would make a real dent and serve as a deterrent.

          https://archive.is/VCKkk#selection-473.0-473.379

          • heavyset_go 11 hours ago
            I have to deal with the same kind of bugs all day long, doesn't mean I get to refuse to do my job for years at a time until someone I like is voted into office.
          • TimorousBestie 13 hours ago
            > There's probably some of this, but I think it's driven by district attorney not prosecuting people. We see people that have 20+ prior arrests. How many times can a cop arrest the same person and do the paperwork if he's not going to be prosecuted?

            There’s plenty of desire to increase prosecution rates in American jurisdictions but little desire to raise taxes high enough to pay for lawyers, judges, courthouses, and humane incarceration—let alone assistance for the otherwise innocent families of criminals. The victims of petty crime are usually poor or middle-class and therefore lack the political power to meaningfully change policy.

            • bko 13 hours ago
              > victims of petty crime are usually poor or middle-class and therefore lack the political power to meaningfully change policy

              This is just not true. Most of this is organized exploiting a lenient justice system. From my original NYT article:

              > Last year, 41 people were indicted in New York City in connection with a theft ring that state prosecutors said shoplifted millions of dollars worth of beauty products and luxury goods that were sold online.

              The idea that these 300 people are just stealing bread to feed their families is a myth.

              • heavyset_go 11 hours ago
                The idea that organized retail theft is significant or "most" is a myth[1]

                [1] https://www.brookings.edu/articles/retail-theft-in-us-cities...

                • bko 6 hours ago
                  Ah as long as Brookings Institute tells me it's a myth, I'll ignore the people selling basic toiletries right outside of drug stores, or bike messengers riding with suspicious taped up bikes that are poorly suited for heavy city use, or the videos of people coming in as a group, loading the bags and making off in get-away cars. Ignore what's in front of you, or the fact that nearly a third of shoplifting can be tracked down to ~300 people. These people maybe just have really big families to feed!

                  But you might ask why are stores closing? Why is deodorant behind lock and key?

                  > Finally, corporate claims are not holding up to scrutiny, and are being used to close stores that are essential assets for many communities.

                  Ah yes, evil corporations like to close stores and forgo profit for ... reasons.

                  Don't believe what's right in front of your eyes.

                  Nothing to see.

                  • LorenPechtel 4 hours ago
                    Where does that ~300 people figure come from??
              • TimorousBestie 13 hours ago
                I think you misread? That sentence isn’t describing the criminals, it’s describing the victims.

                Wealthy people (mostly) didn’t own the Kias and Hyundais that were stolen en masse during the early 2020’s for instance.

                https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kia_Challenge

                Targeting a wealthy person for property crime is a high-risk, high-reward scenario, but there is still the risk of enforcement. A poor person is a much softer target and law enforcement will almost certainly tell them there’s no hope of being made whole.

          • LorenPechtel 4 hours ago
            Welcome to the reality of the Black Lives Matters protests.

            They got what they wanted--fewer Blacks shot by the police. But that's because the police weren't being as aggressive in doing their job. Crime rates went up, the number of Blacks killed went up--fewer by cops being offset by more from other criminals.

            And we see the result of bail reform. The old system was not good--for lesser offenses they were typically sentenced to time served. This amounts to skipping over the determining guilt part of "justice". But when they took action on that they didn't notice that that was what was actually keeping them off the streets. The justice system simply does not have remotely the capacity to actually prosecute as many crimes as they catch.

          • porridgeraisin 14 hours ago
            Yeah, I always wonder why we can't have an "n strikes and you get the electric chair" type of law, where n can be decided. Clearly at that point that person is better off not alive.
            • roughly 13 hours ago
              That’s a hell of a take for shoplifting.
            • throaway123123 13 hours ago
              Yeah I definitely want the person who costs Wal-mart a couple thousand bucks to face execution. great idea.
              • porridgeraisin 2 hours ago
                It's not that walmart lost something, it's that it's a general menace to others, and if you do it once fine but if you do it 10 times you're out. Get them to leave the country, if execution is not your thing.
        • epistasis 14 hours ago
          It's not entirely new! In 1975 during labor negotiations the police detonated a bomb on the mayor's yard, partially damaging the front door, and left a note saying "Don't threaten us":

          https://cdnc.ucr.edu/?a=d&d=DS19750820.2.20

          Since then, the SFPF have always had a culture of being above the law. The monopoly on legal violence thing can be taken a bit too far.

      • antonymoose 14 hours ago
        I do believe you’re mixing up Michael Brown in Missouri who robbed a gas station and assaulted a cop and attempted to steal his pistol (per your own link) with Eric Garner in New York who was choked out by a police officer and subsequently died.
        • bko 14 hours ago
          Yes, I am. Updated. Thank you
      • nomel 14 hours ago
        https://www.nationalacademies.org/news/to-reduce-racial-ineq...

        Are there any stats for incorrect crime reporting based on political leaning?

        • LorenPechtel 4 hours ago
          And where does that suggest incorrect crime reporting for political reasons?

          Your article is just another version of pretending disparate outcomes is proof of discrimination. Totally wrong, but not what you say it's saying.

    • HarHarVeryFunny 14 hours ago
      The numbers do appear quite staggering. It can't just be the dead drivers - there must be similar numbers of stoned drivers who are causing accidents, maybe killing others, while surviving themselves.

      As far as driving goes, any amount of drugs or alchohol is going to reduce reactions times, in addition to any impaired judgement or ability to control the vehicle. Even a couple of 1/10ths of a second in increased reaction time is enough to make the difference between braking in time and hitting another car or pedestrian/etc.

    • estimator7292 12 hours ago
      It's the same everywhere. It seems like police have just stopped enforcing traffic laws. Multiple times per week someone runs the red light in front of my local police station, in full view of an officer in their car, and nothing ever happens. Same with the multiple near-misses I see every week. They don't care, and since there are no consequences, there are no longer any traffic laws. Couple that with the mass psychosis afflicting the US, nobody seems to care about anything and just drive as fast and hard as they want to, and fuck absolutely everyone else.
    • gretch 14 hours ago
      The running red lights thing is crazy. I think at it's height, I would maybe see 3 people do this in a single 20 minute drive.

      And not like running a late yellow, but a full on my-light-is-green-and-there's-a-guy-in-front-of-me-sideways

      It has dropped a bit now though.

      • dawnerd 14 hours ago
        I was tboned by someone that swore their light was green. I had a dedicated turn. Thank goodness for cameras.

        The trend I’ve noticed this year is turning right from the middle lane cutting off people in the turn lane.

        • VerifiedReports 14 hours ago
          Are they cutting them off, though? If the street you're turning onto has two lanes, it shouldn't be a problem for two cars to turn at once. The car on the inside is required to turn into the nearest lane (according to any state law I know), so why can't the car on its left turn into its own lane?
          • dragonwriter 14 hours ago
            > Are they cutting them off, though?

            Its possible for multiple lanes to turn without anyone cutting anyone off, but its also possible for people to turn right from the middle lane of the source street into the rightmost lane of the target street, cutting off people in the rightmost lane of the source street attempting to turn, or to make a right turn from a middle lane that is not allowed to turn, cutting of a legal right-into-any-lane from the rightmost lane when it is the only turning lane, so if someone explicitly says that's what they see and there is no available counterevidence that they are misreporting their observation, questioning it accompanied by a description of how it is possible for people to turn from multiple lanes into distinct lanes in harmony without anyone being cutoff is not particularly useful.

            > the car on the inside is required to turn into the nearest lane (according to any state law I know)

            That's the base rule in most jurisdictions, but there are places where it doesn't apply. See, e.g., for California: https://law.justia.com/codes/california/code-veh/division-11...

            • VerifiedReports 12 hours ago
              "cutting of a legal right-into-any-lane from the rightmost lane"

              "its also possible for people to turn right from the middle lane of the source street into the rightmost lane of the target"

              So you've created hypothetical situations that are no more useful than mine. I specifically mentioned having to turn into the nearest lane. If that's not true somewhere, then neither would adjacent turners be allowed. I simply asked if they were really cutting the other people off.

          • 1123581321 14 hours ago
            You’re not allowed to double right turn unless it’s explicitly marked, at least in the US.
          • lamontcg 13 hours ago
            If the right lane goes straight, you can't turn right from any other lane.
            • VerifiedReports 12 hours ago
              Obviously. But the comment said TURN LANE.
              • lamontcg 8 hours ago
                Read it again. They didn't say the middle lane was a turn lane.
                • VerifiedReports 3 hours ago
                  Nobody said he did. He said the RIGHT lane was a TURN LANE. Which means the lane to the left of it could count on the people TURNING, not going straight.

                  WTF, YOU made the comment: "If the right lane goes straight"

                  You might as well say, "if the people on the opposite side of the road cross the median..."

              • baobun 11 hours ago
                That would be the lane for turning, yes?
                • VerifiedReports 3 hours ago
                  Yep. Which is why "If the right lane goes straight" doesn't make sense. We've already established that the right lane does NOT go straight, because it's a turn lane.
    • Ancapistani 11 hours ago
      There’s no reliable way to determine impairment from a blood test. At most, this says that ~42% of people used it recently and/or frequently enough for metabolites to be present.

      https://forensicresources.org/2021/marijuana-impairment-faq/

      • jeremyjh 10 hours ago
        Sure, but if the baseline level of annual usage is only 20% in the general population then you still have a significant correlation.
    • spike021 5 hours ago
      I got a dog during COVID and I'm not sure if this is a related issue but the number of times I've had people not brake but accelerate as we're crossing the street or flash their high beams or try to drive around us at the last moment is insane.

      there are days where it happens multiple times during one walk and weeks where it happens at least each day of the week.

      i'm actually a car guy but when i drive if i see any pedestrians i always slow down and i take it even easier if i see they have small children or dogs since either can randomly stop or dart away.

    • asdff 3 hours ago
      If you have ever driven in Ohio the driving behavior is absurdly different than what you see in places like CA. People rarely speed. They willingly let you cut them off. And there are reasons for that too. Here is a map of where you are most likely to get a speeding ticket (1). The only place in california I've seen any enforcement of speeding or traffic behavior is along the 395 corridor in the Owens valley. Incidentally this region comes up in the map. It simply does not happen in LA county at least. Well, maybe they slap a speed ticket onto a pursuit case on top of everything else. But no sit and wait radar taking that I've seen.

      1. https://i.redd.it/f898arvdx6je1.jpeg

    • tiltowait 14 hours ago
      Traffic fatalities increased during the pandemic[1]. AAA released a study examining the effects in 2024[2].

      [1]: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10149345/ [2]: https://newsroom.aaa.com/2024/08/the-pandemics-tenacious-gri...

    • modeless 13 hours ago
      If you're in San Francisco, the city essentially stopped issuing traffic tickets when COVID started. It's no wonder lawlessness increased. https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/xMUFt/mobile.png
    • ok_computer 6 hours ago
      Non-scientific anecdote here but I feel like the lawlessness is due to lack of enforcement for traffic violations vs an uptick in weed usage. Possibly covid scrambled our brains and promotes aggressive impulsive behavior. Maybe cops are afraid to pull people over because they might inadvertently shoot them and become a national news story. Maybe the adoption of big trucks makes people feel invincible (two distinct trucks on my drive have cut in line at a left turn lane with a red arrow and crossed 2 lanes opposing traffic at different lights, what would possess someone to do that(?))

      Whatever the cause I feel in my gut that if our police did basic standards enforcement people would think twice about lawlessness. I’m in Pennsylvania.

    • VerifiedReports 14 hours ago
      The most galling and pervasive offense, though, is TEXTING. The rampant texting while driving is killing pedestrians (and other drivers), leading to oft-cited statistics about the failure of "Vision Zero" and the increase in pedestrian deaths. Not to mention the millions of hours stolen from us all by people BLOCKING TRAFFIC while texting.

      We should not tolerate the ignorant and ineffectual response from lawmakers on this issue. Year after year, they refuse to do the right thing: make texting a DUI-level offense, with the same penalties. You could even argue that texting while driving is worse than DUI: Drunk people suffer from impaired judgment; sober people texting have decided to endanger and steal from everyone else while in full command of their faculties. It's despicable.

      • eastbound 13 hours ago
        Yeah. Well on one side, sharing location on Whatsapp has reduced by 90% the need to text while driving.

        But we still need to address the rest. Radio is chokefull of ads and the usual radio content is often insufficient to overcome my loneliness, so I’m not gonna say it’s ok, but I listen to Youtube videos while driving. You can sanction me. But let’s make the radio less boring for the sake of safety.

        • slumberlust 11 hours ago
          'Entertain me better or I'll drive distracted' is a distorted view on your responsibility as the controller of a two ton missile.

          I don't like ads either, but that doesn't excuse my responsibility to drive safely for the betterment of myself and my community.

    • y-c-o-m-b 14 hours ago
      Before this year I had only seen 1 wrong way driver in 30 years. In the last year alone I've seen 6! I saw one person going the wrong direction in a round-about. Another person going over the inner portion of a round-about. People stopping in the road for no reason. It's insane. The strange driving patterns is indeed a major issue. I thought it was maybe a Gen Z thing, but often times these people seem to be between 30-50 in age.

      Edit: no offense to Gen Z with my earlier comment btw. My reasoning was maybe we're failing younger generations with drivers ed so the blame would be on us anyway.

      Also I've seen these strange patterns in many states in the last year+: Oregon, Washington, Wyoming, Idaho, California

      • zoklet-enjoyer 14 hours ago
        Come to Fargo. I see it multiple times a year. Usually right after a new semester starts and the farm kids don't know about one ways haha
        • y-c-o-m-b 14 hours ago
          I'm not talking about one-ways, those are confusing in general. I'm talking about clearly marked off-ramps from freeways. In one situation the person had to drive over a fairly large bump in the median just to enter the wrong side of the freeway; again many signs to prevent such a thing and they still ended up in that predicament. Sometimes miles down the freeway before a cop pulls them over. It's terrifying.

          I saw another one where the car tried to turn right into an off-ramp with a line of cars waiting at the light. Like wtf, do you not see the wall of cars and headlights in front of you? Where are you going?!

          • zoklet-enjoyer 13 hours ago
            Oh. That's completely different and frightening whereas what I see isn't too dangerous and is more comical
        • darubedarob 14 hours ago
          Its usually drivers license transfers from countries where small bribes can "buy" you a license? https://wise.com/us/blog/transfer-international-driver-licen...

          The worst offenders are usually the older generations of countries where driving en mass is a recent thing. The old red guard uncles and aunties regularly run red lights cause who gives a damn about the law when you experienced the rule of the mob throughout your formative years. So parents and grandparents of students would be my guess.

          • zoklet-enjoyer 13 hours ago
            I'm mostly talking about white college students, though I can think of one instance of a Nepali colleague's grandma hitting sometime in our parking lot and almost hitting my car in another incident.
    • swimorsinka 14 hours ago
      We've seen the same uptick in reckless driving in CO since Covid. Reddit Denver complains about it all the time. I think it's happening everywhere, and it's not clear why.
      • chasing0entropy 12 hours ago
        One of the lesser known dictatorship plays: the ostensible increase of police presence with a proportionate and perceptible increase in crime lead the public and local governance to embrace harsher rule of law and violations of their rights under the auspices therin.
      • assimpleaspossi 13 hours ago
        Cause there are fewer police watching and there are no consequences for these people's actions.
    • lamontcg 13 hours ago
      > Since COVID ...

      I was noticing driving getting worse before COVID.

      It is the plague of narcissism and individualism out there (which doesn't just affect "boomers" but also every millennial and zoomer that dreams of doing nothing other than becoming an "influencer" and posts their life on their Instagram).

      Social media, low attention spans, cellphone and driving distractions, narcissism, and "fuck you, got mine" culture is going to wind up being to blame. It is a population-wide axis II personality disorder.

    • elif 14 hours ago
      It is crucial to consider correlated variables in their correct context. This finding does not even imply impairment.

      A low emotional intelligence driver, one with depression or low self worth, perhaps a psychological pathology like narcissism or nihilism. This is the type of person to initiate vehicular homicide. Intoxicant intake is a SUBSET of this group of variables.

      The archetypical homicidal driver would of course have exceptionally high representation in cannabis use, and also likely cigarette use, and probably nitrous oxide but they don't measure that.

      EDIT: what I will say is that dab culture is something beyond traditional cannabis use, and I could absolutely theorize that dab use in a vehicle is the new drunk driving.

    • QuadmasterXLII 15 hours ago
      reading the paper, I’d say this is a case of hoofbeats meaning horses- people are just getting high and crashing.. Although, this seems like a case where the average is very vulnerable to a ‘spiders georg’ type distortion, especially because of the tolerances people build.
      • Y_Y 15 hours ago
        > "average person eats 3 spiders a year" factoid actualy just statistical error. average person eats 0 spiders per year. Spiders Georg, who lives in cave & eats over 10,000 each day, is an outlier adn should not have been counted
      • iLoveOncall 15 hours ago
        Wow, this is amazing, you managed to read a paper that is not published? Impressive!
  • 3eb7988a1663 15 hours ago
    Wish the paper were available - would love to know the percentage with alcohol.

    The other question I have - my prior is that a bad driver (tired, drunk, high) is something like 70:30 odds of killing themselves vs some innocent bystander dying because of their actions. I have anecdotally heard of several sad tales where some guy is on his Nth DUI and kills an entire family, while he walks away from the accident without a scratch. Meaning are the rates of fatalities involving THC actually higher, but the detectably inebriated person managed to walk away without dying.

  • m463 57 minutes ago
    I saw this and it was too funny:

      Over 40% of deceased drivers in vehicle crashes test positive for THC: Study (facs.org)
      281 points by bookofjoe 15 hours ago | flag | hide | 420 comments
                                                           =============
  • jjice 15 hours ago
    Feels like a low sample size, but I'm not statistician or doctor.

    That said, almost everyone I know that consumes THC has no qualms driving while doing it, and many of them also at work. It's a huge peeve of mine.

    • losteric 15 hours ago
      Wow, pretty much no one I know drives under any influence regardless what they use.

      I wonder how many of these people were under the influence of alcohol and other substances.

      • DontchaKnowit 15 hours ago
        There is a very common sentiment among weed users that it doesnt really count as far as driving goes. Stoners will be repulsed and outraged by drunk drivers and then think nothing about going for a "blunt ride"
        • seizethecheese 13 hours ago
          My friend group in college were heavy weed users, and generally all of them drove while high. I remember one saying he enjoyed it because he felt like he was driving a space ship. I asked if he still thought it was safe to drive, given that impression, and he said yes.
        • zoklet-enjoyer 14 hours ago
          I drove high a few times when I was younger and I had to set my cruise control to 25mph to make sure I was going fast enough haha never again. I just use before bed now or occasionally during the day if I know I won't have to drive anywhere.
        • SecretDreams 14 hours ago
          Even though their sentiment is wrong, I get why they would feel that way. Marginally drunk vs marginally high certainly feel* very different in how they would impact my own ability to drive.

          That said, I don't do either. I also wouldn't take any amount of weed while working, but I'd feel comfortable having a beer during lunch if appropriate (work lunch/celebrate, e.g.).

      • sa-code 14 hours ago
        The number of times I've heard "I'm good" honestly breaks my heart. Only to have people call me "Hermoine" etc (I am a straight cis man). I wonder what's the best way to talk about this
        • lostmsu 12 hours ago
          Report to police anonymously and have them stopped might be an option. If you can't convince them the money might.
    • dragonwriter 14 hours ago
      > Feels like a low sample size

      Its not a sample, it is the whole universe of analysis. (If you treat it as a sample of, say, US drivers killed in accidents in the same period, then errors due to sample size are probably the least of its problems.)

      • moefh 14 hours ago
        We don't know that. We don't even know if there's selection bias.

        The article says the research was "focusing on 246 deceased drivers who were tested for THC", and that the test usually happens when autopsies are performed. It doesn't say if autopsies are performed for all driver deaths, and it also doesn't say what exactly is "usually".

        If (for example) autopsy only happens when the driver is suspected of drug use, then there's a clear selection bias.

        Note that this doesn't mean the study is useless: they were able to see that legalization of cannabis didn't have impact on recreational use.

    • djeastm 5 hours ago
      That's genuinely frightening and possibly explains a lot about people on the road these days.
    • dyauspitr 7 hours ago
      Everyone I know, a pretty successful group of people, have no qualms driving when stoned.
  • golem14 2 hours ago
    It will be interesting to read the actual study when it comes out.

    Interesting questions: * What is the baseline of consumption / THC level?

    * what was the alcohol level in decesased drivers ? (e..g how many people only had alcohol, how many only THC, how many had both, how many had nothing.

    * Are there other test scenarios where THC screening is mandatory that could help getting to the baseline ? Are there ways to get an approximate answer from sewers, like they did for Covid?

  • teddy-smith 15 hours ago
    Whenever you think to yourself "People couldnt be that stupid, right?" read this study and plan accordingly.
  • neoCrimeLabs 15 hours ago
    I am curious what percentge of the general populous test positive for THC. It would give better context to a dead drivers testing positive for THC.
    • tasty_freeze 14 hours ago
      I don't think it is that simple. I would wager $$$ that dead drivers tend to skew younger, mostly young men who think they are great drivers, drive way too fast, pass with little margin, etc. Young people probably skew higher for THC use as well.

      Having said that, I think that effect explains only part of the 40%, but can't explain all of it.

    • iLoveOncall 15 hours ago
      > It would give better context to a dead drivers testing positive for THC.

      No it wouldn't.

      People make those excuses because it's weed, but you would have never posted that on an article about alcohol.

      • fn-mote 15 hours ago
        No need to be judgmental about statistics. They are just facts.

        A similar result about alcohol would be the (hypothetical) statement that the rate of drunk drivers in fatal accidents was constant before and after the enactment of Prohibition.

        I do agree that the fact that fatal THC% stays constant before and after legalization is a surprise.

      • watwut 15 hours ago
        It absolutely would. If 40% of people test positive for THC, then this would mean there is no effect. I find it unlikely 40% of people test positive for THC, but yes, it does matter.
        • gpm 15 hours ago
          That wouldn't actually mean no effect, you need 40% of people driving to test positive for it to be no effect. It's unlikely the population driving is equivalent to the population at large - for one there's a set of responsible people who won't drive while high. For another weed use isn't randomly distributed through the population but correlated with certain subsets, which probably have a non-average rate of driving just by coincidence.

          (Not that it really matters since I don't buy for a second that anywhere near 40% of people/people-driving are high at any given time. I also don't put much faith in numbers in the abstract of a a yet-to-be-published study...)

          • meroes 14 hours ago
            There is a case for the two populations to be quite similar.

            THC in the blood doesn’t mean actively high for habitual users, which would be most users if THC consumption is high. It means recent use, but not clear impairment.

        • Chris2048 14 hours ago
          > If 40% of people test positive for THC, then this would mean there is no effect

          Can you explain what you mean by this?

        • xienze 14 hours ago
          The article is not saying 40% of all drivers tested positive, it’s stating that 40% of people who died in a car accident tested positive, at pretty high levels too.
          • dragonwriter 13 hours ago
            > It’s stating that 40% of people who died in a car accident tested positive, at pretty high levels too.

            It doesn't say anything about the distribution, only that the "average" (presumably, the arithmetic mean, a measure particularly sensitive to distortion by outliers) was at a particularly high level.

          • leptons 13 hours ago
            The levels described are actually pretty low. The "legal limit" is so low for THC that anyone who's had THC in the previous days could test positive, even if they aren't "high" at the time of driving. It isn't quite the same as the BAC legal limits for alcohol. And it doesn't account for body weight, tolerance, and other factors that definitely contribute to how a driver reacts no matter how long it's been since they consumed THC.

            And the study doesn't seem to differentiate between the different types of THC either, some of which are not psychoactive at all and which people use to relieve pain and anxiety. There's quite a lot of people using non-psychoactive THC which wouldn't impair driving.

      • SecretDreams 14 hours ago
        Yes, it would be useful. When controlling for variables, you normally want to compare against a baseline.

        If 40% of the whole population has THC in them, we'd need a control population (maybe from earlier when thc was less prominent) to see if per capita deaths has meaningfully increased. I'd do the same study, tangentially, for tech workers to see if productivity has changed when controlling for other variables.

        • iLoveOncall 13 hours ago
          No it wouldn't.

          That would be true if you looked at a variable which is not influenced by driving, like the percentage that wear red jumpers, but one would hope that not everyone is reckless enough to be highly intoxicated and drive.

          This is again THC apologizism, nobody would even begin to suggest this if we were talking about alcohol.

          • ModernMech 12 hours ago
            > nobody would even begin to suggest this if we were talking about alcohol.

            When we talk about alcohol, we explicitly separate presence from impairment using blood alcohol concentration. We set legal thresholds because studies show a sharp increase in crash risk above those levels, relative to sober drivers. If alcohol were evaluated by merely asking "was alcohol present?" we would massively overestimate its causal role the same way THC is being overestimated here.

            The problem with THC data is not that baseline comparisons are illegitimate; it's that we lack an agreed-upon, time-linked impairment metric comparable to BAC. THC metabolites persist long after intoxication, so presence alone is a weak proxy for risk.

            So applying baseline controls to THC is not "apologism", it's applying the same evidentiary standards we already demand for alcohol, so the opposite of what you said.

          • SecretDreams 8 hours ago
            > This is again THC apologizism, nobody would even begin to suggest this if we were talking about alcohol.

            This is literally how safe legal limits were derived.

      • neoCrimeLabs 15 hours ago
        Wasn't so much looking for an excuse, so much as more information.

        Why did you automatically assume the point of bias?

      • root_axis 15 hours ago
        > you would have never posted that on an article about alcohol

        Well of course not, as the two drugs have completely different intoxication side effects.

    • epistasis 15 hours ago
      > “An average level of 30.7 ng/mL generally means those people must have consumed marijuana at some time close to driving. This isn’t about residual use; it’s about recent consumption.”

      If we are at 40% of the population being high at any given moment I think we are having extremely serious societal problems around mental health. Occasional use is not a big deal IMHO, but if a person is spending 40% of waking hours impaired that person has some serious unmet psychological needs.

      • fn-mote 15 hours ago
        This reading doesn’t make sense. There’s no way to extrapolate from this to any statement about 40% of the population, and even 40% of the day is a serious misread imo.
        • epistasis 14 hours ago
          I'm replying to a comment suggesting that this data may be close to population levels rather than something different in the autopsy population.

          I'm arguing that if the population data looks anything like the autopsy data, it would imply a massive epidemic of THC overuse.

          • squigz 14 hours ago
            > it would imply a massive epidemic of THC overuse.

            Not really, due to THC content in the body not being a reliable indicator of impairment or even time since use.

            If BAC were more like THC levels, I suspect the data would show 40% or more of the population has consumed alcohol - or, in your words, is drunk "at any given moment"

            • epistasis 12 hours ago
              My quote from a specialist disagrees with your assertion. Have anything to support your statement?
  • hereme888 9 hours ago
    Serum levels of THC do not correlate with degree of impairment. It's not linear, like alcohol.

    I thought this was common knowledge among physicians who have studied the subject.

  • Youden 15 hours ago
  • flaminHotSpeedo 7 hours ago
    > Researchers analyzed coroner records from Montgomery County in Ohio from January 2019 to September 2024, focusing on 246 deceased drivers who were tested for THC following a fatal crash.

    This paper would need to go into way more detail to be at all useful.

    40% is a staggering number, which makes me suspect that all it measures is Montgomery County police's pretty good track record for deciding when to test someone for THC during an autopsy

  • ChrisMarshallNY 9 hours ago
    I have a friend that's a mechanic.

    He says that he gets cars in that reek so bad, he can smell them from three bays away.

    I suspect that we'll soon be seeing a rapid "pullover-test," and that will probably knock that stuff down.

  • mchusma 11 hours ago
    Self driving cars can’t come fast enough to save lives. I’d love to have states start today at cracking down on unsafe drivers of all kinds. I suspect that converting just 10% of miles to self driving + getting rid of 10% most unsafe drivers would reduce fatalities 50%.
  • laughing_man 7 hours ago
    >The rate of drivers who tested positive for THC did not change significantly before or after legalization (42.1% vs. 45.2%), indicating that legal status did not influence the behavior of those who chose to drive after use.

    That being the case, I'm not sure what the policy prescription should be here, if any.

    • flaminHotSpeedo 6 hours ago
      > 103 drivers (41.9%) overall tested positive for THC, with yearly rates ranging from 25.7% to 48.9%.

      The statistics for this seem suspect at best, I'll believe it once it's peer reviewed

  • sfink 4 hours ago
    Don't be so judgemental, dying is traumatic! Who wouldn't want a little somethin' to take the edge off?
  • econ 5 hours ago
    You wouldn't expect sober people to be more likely to die.
    • sanex 2 hours ago
      I remember reading that in an accident with one party intoxicated and the other not, the intoxicated party is more likely to survive because they are more relaxed and can take an impact better. But of course sober people are less likely to get into single car fatality causing accidents I'm sure.
  • Merrill 8 hours ago
    Rather than trying to draw policy conclusions from an epidemiological study like this, wouldn't it be more accurate to give drivers measured amounts of THC, put them in a driving simulator, and measure their performance?
    • kmnc 8 hours ago
      Kind of a bad test since people know the goal is to drive well, most accident happen when people are complacent.
  • derriz 13 hours ago
    There is no mention that these drivers were ONLY impaired by weed. But I can’t believe a paper would not look at the confounders. I know quite a few who are not regular smokers but will imbibe after a few beers if it’s being passed around. Also weed is popular with consumers of stimulants. Without knowing the possible confounders, this statistic tells you very little.
    • LorenPechtel 4 hours ago
      If you do an adequate job of looking for confounders you'll likely torpedo the study because it will turn out to be something already known.
  • PlunderBunny 13 hours ago
    Here in New Zealand we’ve just started road-side testing for drug-driving [0]

    0. https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/581951/first-day-of-road...

  • bobro 14 hours ago
    One useful point of comparison here would be the percent of the driving population overall who have some THC in their system in the same way as these researchers are measuring it. I wouldn’t guess that 40% of drivers would test positive for recent THC use, but I can’t understand the 40% number here without knowing the percent for the overall population.
    • Aurornis 13 hours ago
      The number of people who use any THC at all isn’t even close to 40% thought. The highest survey numbers I found had 20% of people reporting any use, even once, in the past year.

      There’s no way to normalize a result of 40% of a population sample having significant THC concentrations. That’s way higher than any conceivable sample of the general population.

      • stonogo 8 hours ago
        There sure is, when the survey question boils down to "have you committed a Federal crime?"
  • leke 14 hours ago
    My question is, what is the difference in vehicle death mortality since cannabis was legalized in those parts of the country. If it's about the same, it just tells me that cannabis is a very popular drug.
    • wiml 12 hours ago
      From what I understand, the effect of legalization (or decriminalization) on the amount of cannabis use is not straightforward at all. You'd have to factor that in somehow.
  • pogue 11 hours ago
  • 8organicbits 15 hours ago
    The lack of change after legalization of recreational use is interesting. How many deaths related to medical use versus (previously illegal but decriminalized) recreational use?
    • loeg 14 hours ago
      I don't think the user population changes much whether it's illegal, "medical," or legal.
  • witte 15 hours ago
    This feels like we’re missing a dimension or threeve, the one that comes to mind immediately would be whether or not the deceased driver was at fault for the incident.
    • kube-system 15 hours ago
      Yeah, drug use is also influenced by social and economic status, which also influences driving risks. People of lower socioeconomic status drive less safe cars on less safe roads for longer commutes. This is something valid to evaluate with a drug like THC which is detectable long after use. It would be nice to see the distribution of levels detected and not just the average.
      • Chris2048 14 hours ago
        > People of lower socioeconomic status drive less safe cars on less safe roads for longer commutes.

        But can't you account for 'type of car', 'type of road', 'commute length' as direct variables pretty easily without dipping into social/economic backgrounds?

        • kube-system 12 hours ago
          The socioeconomics of the situation is why I'm questioning it, not what I think would be best measured.

          Although it certainly isn't "easy" to measure all of this directly; there are thousands of that constitute the type of driving scenario that someone might engage in. Even just "type of road" isn't a single thing, it's hundreds of things.

  • supersparrow 13 hours ago
    “Unaffected by legalisation” - so at least there’s more proof than outlawing drugs doesn’t work.
  • ck2 14 hours ago
    I live in a "working poor" neighborhood

    50% of the people on this street get stoned before driving to work, every single day

    dope isn't even legal here and even if it was DUI is wildly illegal

    We can only cure this if we get serious about penalties because we can't undo murder and injuries

    How about first time warning, second time weekend in jail, third time week in jail, fourth time month in jail, fifth time year in prison

    • dragonwriter 14 hours ago
      > We can only cure this if we get serious about penalties

      Saying that in the country with world-leading mass incarceration mostly due to its decades long “war on drugs” which has very much not cured drug problems is a perfect example of putting ideological preconceptions ahead of reality.

      • wredcoll 14 hours ago
        > Saying that in the country with world-leading mass incarceration mostly due to its decades long “war on drugs” which has very much not cured drug problems is a perfect example of putting ideological preconceptions ahead of reality.

        I wish I could emphasize this even more.

        There are some situations where certain types of punishments in certain situations will achieve societal behavior change.

        There's a lot more where it doesn't and people absolutely to apply any kind of scientific thought to it.

        • dragonwriter 14 hours ago
          > There are some situations where certain types of punishments in certain situations will achieve societal behavior change.

          > There's a lot more where it doesn't

          Or, at least, not the behavior change you are hoping for.

        • wredcoll 7 hours ago
          Hmm, that last sentence is really missing a "refuse to"
      • loeg 14 hours ago
        We have world-leading criminality rates. Given that, the only alternatives are world-leading incarceration, or just letting criminals roam around making law-abiders' lives worse.
        • dragonwriter 8 hours ago
          > We have world-leading criminality rates.

          That's what happens when you use criminalization and penal slavery to replace chattel slavery.

          • loeg 6 hours ago
            Progressive love to repeat this, but it doesn't make it true.
            • dragonwriter 4 hours ago
              > Progressive love to repeat this, but it doesn't make it true.

              Conservatives love to deny this, but it doesn't make it false. That criminalization was an immediate, direct substitute for chattel slavery is extensively documented, and that the patterns of criminalization used for that purpose became culturally entrenched and spread (even where the particular practices on top of that served to make it a replacement for chattel slavery, like convict leasing, generally did not in their original form beyond the South, though commercial exploitation of coerced prison labor did become a widespread national phenomenon, even though there has been some winding back in some jurisdictions of that particular practice in recent years.)

        • ben_w 10 hours ago
          There's a lot of different ways to measure crime, making it hard to compare between nations.

          The people who try anyway, mostly put the USA as fairly middling, nothing special either way.

        • wredcoll 6 hours ago
          > We have world-leading criminality rates. Given that, the only alternatives are world-leading incarceration, or just letting criminals roam around making law-abiders' lives worse.

          Somehow every part of this paragraph just keeps getting less correct.

          America doesn't have "world-leading" criminality by literally any metric you care to choose.

          Even if it did, also having world leading incarceration rates might make a rational, scientific type fellow wonder about how those could both be true!

          Also, those are not in fact the only alternatives. It's not even difficult to think of more than those two. Have you even tried?

      • jama211 14 hours ago
        Very well said. It worries me how quick people are to leap to “we’ll just imprison people that’ll help” despite endless data that says the opposite
      • ck2 14 hours ago
        most people who get put in jail/prison for drugs do not get a "taste" of how horrible it is and get years right off the bat for first offense

        that's why I proposed five steps starting with warning, weekend, then week in jail

        if you spend a weekend in jail and don't change your behavior from doing something wildly dangerous yet absolutely not addicting, well then proceed to a year in prison

        note I am not saying put people in prison simply for smoking dope, it's not legal here but there are no serious penalties if caught

        I don't care what people do in their homes

        You drive on the road stoned when I am riding my bike or running and put my life in danger, you definitely deserve some time to think about it behind bars

        I've been "grazed" on the road many time over the years, I have no idea if people are drunk or stoned or just looking at their phones but I am okay with my five step idea for ALL of those cases, but they will never be caught anyway until they murder someone and then it's too late

        • fatal94 14 hours ago
          Driving towards a solution of "imprisoning more people" as punishment rather than other punishment have never succeeded. Many states already have first time drug offender and strike programs, people are already imprisoned over a weekend for things even as simple as misdemeanor possession until they can get a bail set. Rehabilitative forms of punishments such as severe fines, community service or mandatory classes and broadcasting them is much more effective in actually driving down rates of impaired drivers.

          Whats more, police officers already have a wide authority of judgement when considering these factors around marijuana impairment currently. Relying on subjective evaluation from FST and physical presentation will only result in a higher rate of non impaired drivers being imprisoned.

        • galleywest200 14 hours ago
          WA state already has a "three strikes you are out" law (life in prison), but laws like this are racially biased and used against minorities far more.

          https://www.courts.wa.gov/subsite/mjc/docs/2024/Three-strike...

    • Sparkle-san 14 hours ago
      Maybe we can declare our intent to eliminate drug use with harsh penalties using a metaphor, like going to war against them. That should do the trick.
    • walletdrainer 14 hours ago
      > How about first time warning, second time weekend in jail, third time week in jail, fourth time month in jail, fifth time year in prison

      Those laws exist, and often result in people who should be receiving treatment spending years of their life in prison.

      Someone who gets 5+ DUIs isn’t likely to be deterred by schemes like this

    • shiandow 14 hours ago
      It's interesting. You begin by describing the circumstances and then conclude the problem must be fixed by changing individual behaviour.
  • hermannj314 9 hours ago
    I need to know the rates in the general driving population before I can assume driving high is dangerous.
  • scythe 9 hours ago
    >An average level of 30.7 ng/mL generally means those people must have consumed marijuana at some time close to driving.

    Averages do not work that way! The average of 48, 48, 48, 3 and 3 is 30. The study findings remain interesting but the actual proportion of impaired drivers may be less than 40%.

  • mperham 9 hours ago
    Phones are by far the biggest source of dangerous driving.
  • cess11 15 hours ago
    Is there a full study somewhere? I'd expect them to screen for other psychoactive substances as well, of which I see no mention here.
  • blell 14 hours ago
    Remember when people in this web site would blame the recent increase in accidents on the supposed cognitive decline from COVID and how hooked we are on our phones because of the evil tech companies.
  • IAmGraydon 9 hours ago
    Does anyone else constantly smell weed while driving around? Several times per week I find myself behind a car that wreaks so bad of weed that I can clearly smell it driving a few car lengths behind. I have to wonder…if so many people are smoking enough to smell it in another car while moving, exactly how many people on the road are high?
  • throw20251220 9 hours ago
    That may mean a lot of things. Maybe non-smokers got good at eliminating people who recently smoked.
  • skywhopper 13 hours ago
    This stat beggars belief. I think the headline is phrased incorrectly, and the overall stat is misleading. The actual stat is only from dead drivers who were tested for THC.

        Researchers analyzed coroner records from
        Montgomery County in Ohio from January 2019
        to September 2024, focusing on 246 deceased
        drivers who were tested for THC following a
        fatal crash. When autopsies are performed,
        drug screening is typically part of the
        process.
    
    The unanswered and unaddressed questions here are, how often and why were the THC tests administered? The article says that’s standard for autopsies. But how often are autopsies conducted on deceased drivers? I would be truly surprised if it’s 100%. In fact, I would expect it to happen only in cases where there was some suspicion of intoxication. In which case, this finding isn’t very surprising after all.
  • cubefox 15 hours ago
    Could this mean that THC is more dangerous for vehicle safety than alcohol?
    • pixl97 15 hours ago
      With this information alone, no we cannot tell.

      For example if we took random samples of the population and tested them for marijuana usage, what percentage would test positive?

      Next, this study is only talking about marijuana testing, how many of the same group also tested positive for alcohol (or other impairing drugs). Lets make up fake numbers and say 60% of total fatalities had alcohol or other impairing drugs and the overlap between them and marijuana use was 80% then marijuana is rather insignificant.

      We have to have all the details so we don't fall into a base rate fallacy.

    • dragonwriter 15 hours ago
      Well, its the wrong universe of analysis to make that claim and there is no comparative measure of alcohol exposure in the same universe of analysis so it also fails to provide a basis for any alcohol/THC comparison, so, no?
    • reop2whiskey 11 hours ago
      It is entirely possible THC is more dangerous for vehicle safety than alcohol and that wouldn’t surprise me. But based on this study alone? No.
  • iLoveOncall 15 hours ago
    And what share of the remaining 60% were killed by the initial 40%?
    • kube-system 15 hours ago
      And likewise, what share of that 40% were killed by the other 60%? Fault was not evaluated here.
  • SilverElfin 15 hours ago
    I’m not surprised so many deceased drivers were under the influence of THC. I see people smoking and vaping at stoplights all the time. I am however, surprised this study claims legalization didn’t change the rate. Anecdotally, on the west coast, I’ve seen far more of this, and also people casually smoking in public spaces (parks or train stations or whatever) since legalization.
    • gitaarik 28 minutes ago
      Just that you see it more doesn't necessarily mean it happens more
    • fn-mote 15 hours ago
      Obviously the study is not claiming that rates of THC use in general remain the same.

      One possible reason: the “new recruit” people who are now willing to use cannabis BECAUSE it is legal are also rule-following by being willing to stay off the road after using it. Perfectly plausible to me.

    • delecti 14 hours ago
      Are they necessarily smoking and vaping cannabis though? My vape is visually pretty similar to a tobacco vape, and vaping doesn't usually have much odor either way (unless it's scented vape juice, but I'm not terribly worried about cognitive impairment from bubble gum).
      • SilverElfin 9 hours ago
        As far as my experience goes, yes. I can tell by the scent. And actually at stoplights I can smell it even with windows rolled up.
    • didibus 15 hours ago
      That could mean that THC is not causative, just coincidence.
  • morpheos137 8 hours ago
    The push for marijuana normalization has been one of the stupidest things in recent memory. It's a drug as harmful as alcohol or nicotine if misused.
  • theturtle 11 hours ago
    [dead]
  • amazingman 15 hours ago
    Cant wait for this tissue-thin abstract to drive weeks and years of anti-cannabis nonsense.
  • codr7 14 hours ago
    I bet 100% of them had been drinking water recently.
  • reactordev 15 hours ago
    Just noting there’s a difference between THC in your system and THC in your blood. THC leaves the bloodstream after your high. Goes into fat cells and other areas to be broken down and processed (up to a month) later. Having it in the bloodstream after an accident means they were intoxicated at the time according to science. Whether their CB1 receptors were letting it through is another matter. I can smoke a lot of weed and not “feel high” yet I would test off the charts on this test.

    For drunk drivers it’s rather easy to assess whether someone is impaired. With marijuana it’s not. So until we have a valid method of testing if someone is “too stoned to drive” we have to push back on any attempt to classify marijuana users as ineligible to drive.

    • mantas 14 hours ago
      It should be the other way around. If there’s no good way to test, then no driving with any THC in blood.
      • reactordev 13 hours ago
        so we're all going to subject ourselves to blood sampling to get behind the wheel?
        • mantas 12 hours ago
          Maybe just not legalize THC if there is no easy way to test if THC users are intoxicated.

          And punish illegal users regardless of intoxication level. Medical users should just abstain from driving while in it.

    • quickthrowman 14 hours ago
      > I can smoke a lot of weed and not “feel high” yet I would test off the charts on this test.

      > With marijuana it’s not. So until we have a valid method of testing if someone is “too stoned to drive” we have to push back on any attempt to classify marijuana users as ineligible to drive.

      I agree. As someone who regularly consumes 250mg of edibles daily at a minimum, I’m sure my levels would be off the charts on a constant basis, even when sober. With the tolerance I currently have, it’d take a ridiculous amount to put me into a state where I felt driving wasn’t safe.

      • nobodyandproud 14 hours ago
        There are individuals that have a high tolerance of alcohol.

        Thankfully society didn’t make exceptions. Eventually.

        I see THC taking the same, slow, tortured approach.

        • reactordev 13 hours ago
          Sadly, I tend to agree with you.

          Anecdote, I'm a user, by choice, and by habit/addiction. I was first exposed to it through, oddly enough, martial arts as a young teen. The punk rock scene of the 90s didn't help much either. Both me and my ex-wife were what you would call "techno-hippies". We would smoke as much weed as we could, and I would code and she would do her thing (she was a biologist so I have no clue, something genes). We had a rhythm and we liked the high grade one hit and you're good kind of marijuana.

          When 2018 came around, The Farm Bill (tm) passed and it loosened the terms of what "hemp" was. The budding cannabis industry saw this as an opportunity to mess with genetics. They discovered that if you harvest early, immediately freeze it, D9-THC doesn't convert from it's precursor - THC-A. So then they started shipping "hemp" in the form of THC-A all over the states. All you have to do to "finish" the process is to decarboxylate it into D9-THC. However, there's also D8-THC which doesn't get you nearly as "high" and only lasts minutes. It, too, can be frozen to prevent it from converting from it's precursor - THC-A... What?!? So you really don't know whether it's D8 or D9 from the dispensary (and neither do they) and the quality is all over the charts.

          I think this is why it's affecting driving so much. People who are used to the smoke shop D8 weed get their hands on some real D9 and it blows their minds.

          God I wish we had a breathalyzer test for D9-THC. Without it, it's going to get legislated to the point where you're on the disabled "can't drive or operate any machinery, ever" list. You already give up your right to own a gun when you sign up for medical marijuana. (and when buying one, it asks you if you use...)

          I'm definitely for making the roads safer, but I'm also pro-rights and liberties so this one is hard for me. Yes, there should be some legislation around marijuana, no it shouldn't be a schedule I-III but looked at like hops and barley. Tax the shit out of it. Like you do cigarettes. Don't prevent me from driving because I smoked a cigarette.

          • nobodyandproud 13 hours ago
            Right. Taxing could (and should) fund the research needed for better testing.

            Also put a stop some of the bad actors and bad behaviors of growers (all night daylight…).

    • xienze 14 hours ago
      > So until we have a valid method of testing if someone is “too stoned to drive” we have to push back on any attempt to classify marijuana users as ineligible to drive.

      You’re not really going to win anybody over to the legalization side when you basically say that people can consume as much THC as they want and drive without any penalties because of testing limitations.

      • Arainach 14 hours ago
        On the contrary: we should test for the actual issue (impairment) rather than an arbitrary number.
        • nobodyandproud 14 hours ago
          • squigz 14 hours ago
            That link doesn't appear to say that blood tests are reliable

            Literally in the summary

            > While blood alcohol content (BAC) level represents an accurate measurement of alcohol impairment, the presence of THC in a driver’s body has not been shown to be a predictable measure of cannabis impairment.

            But further on

            > Because THC in the blood can result from both recent as well as past use, impairment cannot be inferred from blood levels.

            • nobodyandproud 14 hours ago
              That’s not the relevant bit. A blood test detects recent use of THC.

              Which other, less invasive methods cannot. Like alcohol, impairment is highly individual and so we set a threshold.

              • squigz 14 hours ago
                It is not a reliable indicator of recent use though, since it can also indicate past use.

                I agree we need to set a threshold for impairment. I just want that to be measured reliably so that people who had a brownie last weekend aren't getting in trouble.

                • nobodyandproud 13 hours ago
                  Driving isn’t a right. No matter how steeped the US is in car culture, it’s important not to lose sight of this.

                  Now blood tests show a 12-24 hour window of usage. Much tighter than the 2 to 30 days of other tests. In terms of window of time, that’s essentially good-enough.

                  Of course anyone who consumes cannabis has a strong desire for a tighter and more accurate test, but you’re really fighting against growing masses of irresponsible users.

                  If the problem is truly wide-spread like alcohol was (and still is), it’s just a matter of time before states or feds push for a good-enough (for the rest of us) solution.

                • reactordev 13 hours ago
                  THC leaves the bloodstream within 24 hours just to be clear.

                  I know this is a giant hairball and the downvotes and passionate discussion is why I said what I said but in the end, until we have a breathalyzer for THC, it is what it is.

        • xienze 14 hours ago
          So you’re advocating that a cop makes a subjective judgement about your impairment level? I don’t see how anyone could find an issue with that.
          • Arainach 12 hours ago
            Then develop more empirical measures of impairment. A device that tests response time, etc. Doctors have been doing that with a hammer to the knee for decades, optometrists do it with a headset that flashes lights where you have to press a clicker, etc. - we have the tools.
          • loeg 14 hours ago
            They are doing this every day for drunk drivers already.
            • leptons 13 hours ago
              They also frequently arrest people who have not had any alcohol or drugs at all for being "drunk". It happens far too often.

              Just one example of many:

              https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mFuVdlKD00s

              • loeg 9 hours ago
                Impairment is somewhat orthogonal to drug or alcohol intoxication. It's not safe to drive if you've been awake for 24+ hours, for example, or have some other medical condition (hypoglycemia, whatever) that impairs your ability to drive safely.
                • leptons 9 hours ago
                  This has nothing to do with "intoxication" or sleep deprivation, or medical conditions. Some police will lie and charge people with "DUI" when there is zero justification, and they ruin lives because too many of them are sadistic assholes. It's in epidemic in Tennessee and other parts of the country, but it really could happen anywhere to anyone. Police unions are a problem, and taxpayers pay for the litigation when someone actually fights back against false charges.
                  • loeg 8 hours ago
                    So what? This line of argument can be used to dismiss essentially any crime, because police can always lie about whatever the particular crime is. It's not a principled reason not to have laws or enforce them.
                    • leptons 6 hours ago
                      Glad to know you're perfectly fine with lives being ruined for no reason at all.
            • xienze 13 hours ago
              And field sobriety tests are routinely challenged in court because they aren’t objective and at best, they’re taken into consideration with other things like BAC.
              • reactordev 13 hours ago
                my ex-girlfriend challenged this in court last year and lost. She was pulled over coming home and forced to take a field sobriety test. She was angry and was refusing, trying to explain that she just got off work. They arrested her for DUI. Called me to get the vehicle with her crying in the squad car. I bailed her out of jail for $500 two days later. Her BAC was 0.

                Her attitude when asked to perform the field sobriety test was taken as a refusal and she lost her license, now with a DUI on her record.

                We all like to think that these methods work, and they do most of the time, and yet there still are cases where a normal person is subjected to them and they deem them "unworthy" to pass.

          • reactordev 13 hours ago
            Field. Sobriety. Tests.

            "Say your ABC's backwards starting from Z"

      • nobodyandproud 14 hours ago
        Given that driving isn’t a right, there’s more leeway to be more strict.

        I used to bike-ride a lot, but the number unaccountable drivers and the increase in dispensaries in the NYC tri-state gave me pause.

        • leptons 13 hours ago
          Fun fact, you can be arrested for DUI on a bicycle, and it counts the same as if you were driving a car.