balanovich said:
So if I go to Vegas and gamble my lose my house away, I can come back and ask the casino my money back ? I was extremely drunk,and on camera...
And...? Gambling at a casino doesn't require any sort of given consent. If you're of age and in a casino, you can gamble. If your logic was anything resembling true, why would they serve drinks at casinos?
balanovich said:
The army owns your ass even if you signed up totally wasted ? ..
Erm...no. No, they don't. Do you honestly think that
joining the military is something you can do while heavily intoxicated? Find a recruitment station, sign your name on the dotted line, and you're given a deployment date?
balanovich said:
but they are a particular branch of assholes.
Know what? I'm just going to ignore this. It seems fitting that someone making wild assumptions like this would also think that the US Army would actively seek to shanghai someone into service because they showed up to a recruitment center drunk.
balanovich said:
What about all the business deals that are signed after a business lunch where there was wine ?
Oh, of course.
Those business deals. Humor me for a moment, though: name one from the past decade. Because it sounds like you're imagining a scene from any movie that features a character working for a corporation 'sealing the deal' with another group, but forgot the line that usually comes at the end: "I'll get the paperwork over to you tomorrow."
It's not always in those words, of course, but the message is the same: absolutely nothing has been agreed upon except what the
proposed contract will say. That discussion you alluded to? It was discussing the terms of the agreement
that would then be put into contract form. Both parties still have to sign it, and neither is under a legal obligation to do so.
balanovich said:
Maybe there is a point where your consent is invalid, but there has to be a line. If you want to use alcohol to invalid your consent, I expect you have to prove you were THAT drunk.
...how? Unless you're going to hook a flux capacitor up to a breathalyzer, I don't see how you could retroactively determine how drunk a person was at a past date.
balanovich said:
And if you want to go further and accuse someone of abusing you in that state, I hope/think, you have to prove that he knew you were to drunk to think.
You know what? In a perfect world, there would be a way to provide concrete evidence of intent for every alleged crime. But this
isn't a perfect world. There are only two pleas I know of that work for defendants who didn't know they were doing anything wrong, they're both mutually exclusive, and they both only work once.
You can plead 'guilty' but without willful intent/knowledge of the law. Despite the famous Roman phrase, ignorance
is a defense, but only if you can prove that you had no intention of doing anything illegal and could not have reasonably been expected to know that said act was illegal. This, obviously, is rather difficult to prove.
The other is a bit more straightforward: you didn't know what you were doing was a crime because you are insane in such a way that prevents you from being able to distinguish between right and wrong.