The government acts as if booze is the root cause of all our social problems, says Leah McLaren, but it’s not. Drinking is an important part of British culture, the pub is the hub of the community, and health warnings can even be counterproductive
Strangely enough, this cultural shift flies in the face of recent scientific evidence. The amount of research to suggest that regular drinking has health benefits (particularly for the heart) is far higher than the number of studies that suggest the opposite. In fact, a recent Spanish study published in the respected cardiology journal Heart concluded that in men between the ages of 29 and 69 ‘alcohol intake was associated with a more than 30 per cent lower incidence of coronary heart disease’.
Obviously, I’m not suggesting anyone kill a Texas mickey a day in the hope of fending off a stroke, but the study does offer some solace for those of us who, like me, have spent years feeling guilty about splitting a bottle of wine with a companion most nights over dinner. According to the government guidelines, this makes me a raging alcoholic on the verge of liver failure. But according to Professor David Hanson, a sociologist at New York State University and an expert in the sociology of drink, the UK government stats on what comprises unhealthy are wildly exaggerated.
‘There is this idea that almost any alcohol is bad and it’s moving very quickly across Europe,’ he says of the recent spate of anti-binge-drinking campaigns sweeping Britain and continental Europe. ‘You’ve got this idea that alcohol is poison and that we need to reduce consumption and that will solve all our social problems. That simply doesn’t bear out historically. In the United States, for instance, prohibition actually introduced the practice of heavy drinking by making liquor an illicit substance.’
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Nicholas
December 31st, 2009 6:25pm Report this commentThe little "Drink Responsibly" tag line that appears on every TV advert for drink infuriates me. To a responsible person it is a superflous, patronising and irritating nonsense (nannysense?). To the irresponsible it won't make a bit of difference. So what is it for?
It is there to "send a message". A typical, priggish, patronising, puitan, "that's all right then", "something must be done", infantilising, essentially Leftist wimmen message of the sort we are so inundated and vexed by. The frowning, concerned, oh-so-earnest disapproval of arch-Nannies Yvette Cooper and Dawn Primarollo summed up in two verbs.
Whenever I see those two prim little verbs I think "Bollocks".
First cigarettes, now alcohol. The habitual banners, nose-pokers and do-good, bleeding-heart bleeders won't leave us alone. What's next - meat?
John David Barnett
January 1st, 2010 6:49pm Report this commentHoilday season? I thought it was Christmas.
Roman Kirillov
January 2nd, 2010 5:20pm Report this commentThe biggest problem with all these campaigns against drinking and smoking is â” if you're drinking (or, say, smoking) socially, say, on Fridays or may be couple of times a week, without getting plastered (smoking 2 boxes a day), then it hardly will do any harm to you â” thus these campaigns are largely irrelevant (read: wasting taxpayers moneys). On the other hand, if you're heavy-drinker (heavy-smoker) these ads are still irrelevant because they will unlikely change your habits. So what's the point?
Cuffleyburgers
January 4th, 2010 10:23am Report this commentThe other problem facing rural pubs is of course the hoo ha about drink driving, which is mostly exaggerated.
Yam Yam
January 4th, 2010 1:45pm Report this commentThe best way to 'moderate' drinking is to revive the traditional British pub. This means:-
1) Freeze or reduce duty on draft beers and whack it up on canned beer sold in supermarkets instead.
2) Get rid of heaving, standee bars and ensure your clientele can all sit down instead. This reduces the potential for shoving (and hence fighting).
3) Get rid of the loud music so that your patrons can engage in conversation once more. Furthermore, turn the huge Sky Sports TV off unless it is conveying a sporting contest of truly national importance. These measures will hopefully encourage a wider age spread of patrons back into our pubs once more (whereby the older age group have always largely acted as a brake on the riotous and immature behaviour of the youngsters).
3) Instruct the police and the courts to come down heavily upon drunk and disorderly behaviour. Likewise, hospital casualty units should not be treating drunks until they have sobered up (preferably in a police cell).
Behaviour in traditional pubs was largely self-regulating, with drunkenness for the most part being frowned upon. However, far too many town centres nowadays are the preserve of uncouth young drinkers, for whom the sole objective is to get as blotto as possible as fast as possible. Not conductive for good health and certainly not conducive for cutting alcohol-related crime.
The only bright spot is that, with evening television viewing as dire as it's ever been, at least the broadcasting authorities appear to be doing their bit to save the trdaitional British pub from extinction!
FatDuck
January 13th, 2010 6:55pm Report this comment"Guidelines on unit measurements ... vary widely from country to country." What is the recommended number of units per week in the more generous countries? I thought this info would be easily available, but it's harder to find than you'd think.
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