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nostr:npub1hg5g87620a3vhpgmna2pzevhj88lkt3lezus76p7u5y37sfcszsszktya9 there's no source on this graph and seems like propaganda. here is a .edu source

>Every standard drink that a 140 lb. woman consumes will raise her BAC .032. So, 3 drinks x .032 puts her at .96, which is over the legal DUI limit of .08 for those 21 and older. Every standard drink that a 180 lb. male consumes will raise his BAC .02. Four standard drinks would put him right at .08.

https://health.arizona.edu/sites/default/files/How%20Many%20Drinks%20Will%20Get%20You%20To%20The%20.08%20Limit.pdf

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nostr:npub1hg5g87620a3vhpgmna2pzevhj88lkt3lezus76p7u5y37sfcszsszktya9 here is another edu source. everything to the right of the red line is at or beyond the legal limit (from a separate .edu source)

https://www.utc.edu/enrollment-management-and-student-affairs/center-for-wellbeing/alcohol-and-other-drug-education/blood-alcohol-content

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No source for that data either. This one is from Forbes, and is sourced from government data. https://nostr.build/i/d87f283245208c8692078f654336621e2370c541f4633f3d4abea8dc96c73ff4.webp

All of these charts are ignoring the passage of time. Consuming 4 drinks over the course of an evening vs smashing 4 drinks and getting in a car. Your body is processing alcohol the whole time so your breath/ blood tests will be different.

The first one I posted mentions it.

Should have read the whole thread but couldn't be bothered clicking up 50000 times lol

There’s no source for the data on that poster.