The War Against Alcohol is Escalating

in law •  8 years ago  (edited)

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Don’t look now, but alcohol is in danger of becoming the next tobacco or marijuana. Armed with a new set of studies showing that drinking ANY alcohol is unhealthy, governments around the world are eyeing new sets of regulations. If you thought alcohol was taxed enough already, strap on your seat belt, ladies and gentlemen.

Unfortunately, governments are ignoring the fact that banning and taxing things has not worked well. If there is a health danger to drinking alcohol, it would be far better to let society discuss this issue and decide how to address it. Social change is more effective than regulation.

Alcohol is very costly for society. If there is an area of the economy that deserves more regulation and taxation, maybe this is it. But the top-down wars against drugs and prostitution haven’t gone all that well. The problems these bans were intended to alleviate simply continued in an underground or black market dominated by organized crime.

Change should come from society and not from government.

In fact, history shows that the most successful prohibition-type campaign was society’s pushback against drunk driving. That was a citizen-led campaign to change society and have government follow, not the other way around. In the United States in 1980, some 25,000 people were killed by drunk drivers. By 2014, that number had fallen to 9,900. Meanwhile, we’re still spending billions of dollars to fight against drugs, which hasn’t helped society’s drug problem much at all.

Top-down government solutions have not worked. Bottom-up citizen-led solutions have been much more successful. Maybe that’s what’s needed again now.

Banning or Overtaxing Booze is Not a Solution. What We Need is Social Consensus. That’s How Drunk-Driving Fatalities Were Cut By More Than 50% While the Top-Down Drug War Still Rages On

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Banning or over-taxing a sinful practice does not make it go away. It leads to a black market, organized crime, and a stigmatization for the people who have dependency problems. As a society, we would be better off admitting that we have a drinking problem and entering into a mature discussion of how best to address it.

Isn’t this how we cut down on drunk driving? When I was younger, people drove drunk and laughed about it. Drunk driving was socially acceptable. But society learned how dangerous this was and began to expect a new community standard. Behaviors changed. Today, we know that a drunk driver is the equivalent of a lethal weapon on the roadways and people do not laugh anymore.

WE did that. Society achieved a better result in limiting drunk driving. The laws simply backed up that consensus and a means to enforce social consensus, but that victory didn’t start with laws. It came from people and organizations like Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) recognizing the problem and educating others that it was a bad idea.

And in the end, while drugs and prostitution are still just as bad as they ever were, society has managed to cut down significantly on drunk driving (reducing drunk driving fatalities by more than 50% in less than three decades).

To a lesser extent, the same kind of public campaign and social change has succeeded in limiting cigarette smoking, though the evidence there is more muddled by a shorter time frame and additional government regulation. If you’re in need of other examples, then look at society’s eating habits and how we’ve generally moved towards healthier foods, which are now prevalent in grocery stores and fast food restaurants that never used to carry them.

If we’re serious about limiting alcohol consumption, we need a mature response from society. We do not need governments jumping out ahead of society to create new regulations just for the purpose of taxing people and further controlling the private sector. Real change can only come from society itself.

Alcohol Can Be Very Harmful

Alcohol can ruin peoples’ lives. Some get addicted to drinking or make the bad decision to drink and drive. They may live to regret it, they may die, or they may kill someone else. As with any powerful substance, alcohol should be consumed in moderation. For various physical or emotional reasons, some people have a hard time following those limits.

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I accept that alcohol can be very harmful. Personally, I’ll have the occasional beer or wine, but I can take it or leave it. I don’t touch hard alcohol. We all have our struggles in life. I have plenty of other problems, but booze is not one of them. Yet I truly understand why some people think alcohol is dangerous, harmful or even evil.

Have A Drink – It’s Good For You!

What if there were a major scientific study concluding that your product was good for people? Wouldn’t that give people another reason to buy it? If governments were trying to pass laws and tax it more heavily, they might be persuaded not to do so if your product makes people healthier.

Hard drinking is not good for you. We can agree on that. But haven’t you heard that social drinking is acceptable? Don’t you know that people are healthier when they have light to moderate doses of alcohol? One or two drinks a day is fine, right?

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Decades ago, a doctor named Arthur Klatsky published a study showing that light to moderate doses of alcohol are healthy. And the beverage industry, which thrives on selling wine and beer and other spirits to people, jumped all over this study. They publicized Klatsky’s work widely and he continued to publish additional follow up work confirming that a little alcohol is good for the body. Alcohol companies re-focused their advertising on this premise that one drink or two per day can make you healthier.

And they used this as a basis for their lobbying efforts to change the laws and regulations of powerful governments. For example, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services changed its dietary guidelines from saying alcohol had “no health benefits” to saying that it does have health benefits, including a decreased risk in heart disease. Harvard School of Public Health doubled down, listing a range of ailments that might be helped by moderate amounts of drinking.

The “health halo” of alcohol was born, a buzz that has continued until now.

Don’t Drink Any Amount of Alcohol – It’s Bad For You

What if that balloon deflated? Given all the terrible effects that alcohol has on the human body and on society, what would happen if the evidence of a health benefit evaporated? Would it be like Oprah Winfrey endorsing someone’s book, even a bad book, and then pulling away her endorsement?

That is happening now with alcohol. The World Health Organization (WHO) released a study that isolated other possible factors contributing to health, such as diet and exercise. It focused much more clearly on the effects of drinking alcohol. What remained was a clear link between alcohol and health.

This time, the link isn’t a good one. Alcohol can cause cancer.

Modern medicine makes many things possible, including more targeted research that can eliminate other possible factors. Today, a growing body of research shows that alcohol leads to cancer and other health problems. It seems that drinking even light to moderate amounts can be harmful to one’s health.

Earlier this year, the United Kingdom’s Chief Medical Officer Sally Davies came out and said publicly, “there is no safe level of drinking.”

Ouch.

What makes this worse for the beverage industry is that alcohol is a harmful product to begin with. It costs society a lot of amount of money every year to deal with the negative effects of alcohol, from petty arrests to drunk driving to health impacts from overconsumption to domestic violence and many other awful things that wouldn’t happen as often if people drank less. So when you strip away any potential health benefit, alcohol’s net impact on society may be a very negative one. Cigarette, anyone?

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The Beverage Industry Mobilizes

The alcoholic beverage industry is in danger of losing its “health halo”, according to Sarah Longwell of the American Beverage Institute.

“We can’t let them gain traction,” said Beer Institute President Jim McGreevy at a conference earlier this year.

The Wall Street Journal reported that the United States, Russia, the United Kingdom, Australia, and South Korea have all lowered their maximum recommended standards for drinking or are eyeing greater regulation. In many countries, additional laws are being proposed.

Governments are again spreading the wisdom that increasing taxes lowers consumption. This is true, but that doesn’t make it the best solution. It’s the sort of top-down solution that hasn’t worked that well in practice.

The Daily Caller reported that big alcohol companies are planning their own round of studies. AB InBev, Diageo, Heineken NV and Pernod Ricard SV are ready to spend $55 million to show that alcohol has positive effects on health. This research will last six years and will focus on heart disease, stroke, and diabetes.

It will not cover cancer, which is the main link found by the WHO and other recent studies. How convenient that they left that one out.

Governments and Companies: Let Us Decide

Not everyone is convinced that light to moderate drinking is harmful. Perhaps it has a greater impact on those with certain genetic profiles or health disorders, leaving others with fewer or no harmful effects. For example, 20-40% of the population in East Asia has a genetic “defect” in that those people cannot metabolize acetaldehyde, which is the main product of metabolizing alcohol. If alcohol is more harmful to certain people, then perhaps a study that factors in these quirks might reach a different overall conclusion in regards to the remainder of the population.

Successful social change begins with good data and we’re starting to get that now on the links between alcohol and health. More research is needed. If there is a problem, as there may be, then society must recognize that and discuss how to respond. As always, there will be vocal individuals and organizations set up solely for the purpose of influencing public opinion, but people will make their own decisions.

Over time, peoples’ opinions and practices will adapt to fit a new reality. Given that this issue involves diet and health, people may begin adapting to the new evidence much more quickly than they do on other political and social issues. And for that, we don’t need government or corporations telling us to buy alcohol or stop buying alcohol. What doesn’t make sense is for governments to start banning and taxing things without any consensus from society, just as it doesn’t make sense for corporations to create new studies just to sell their products.

Let us decide for ourselves.

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-Peace, Richard, @steemship

Sources:
Klatsky study: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10890794
Daily Caller Article: http://dailycaller.com/2016/08/23/world-health-agencies-deny-decades-old-science-on-alcohols-benefits/
Alcohol’s Effects on the Body: https://www.niaaa.nih.gov/alcohol-health/alcohols-effects-body
WSJ article: http://www.wsj.com/articles/with-moderate-drinking-under-fire-alcohol-companies-go-on-offensive-1471889160
Spectator: http://health.spectator.co.uk/moderate-drinkers-dont-stop-the-health-benefits-are-clear-the-cancer-risk-is-not/

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#society
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Government: The idea that violence is the solution for everything.

i've long wondered about this and really doubted the claim that moderate amounts of alcohol are healthful, carte blanche. There are just too many factors to consider. upvoted

I have heard it said that if alcohol was discovered today it would be a class A drug. It kills a lot more people than many banned substances. Sure it can help you relax, but really its just poison it harms the body when ingested. Because it takes a long time to create its vibration is very stagnant and low. So when one drinks it it simply lowers ones awareness.

Alcohol sucks. Bad stuff. If you need to escape from reality, or relax from the grind, then smoke or ingest some cannabis. Cannabis is actually healthy in a plethora of ways. Peace.

i love alcohol - drinking some now!

moderation is the key

everything in moderation including moderation

Who's moderating the moderators?

Goderators perhaps?

I had no idea about this but governments need to stop acting like they are our parents and let people make their own life choices.

I will drink to that! Um....wait, what happened to moderation and free choice? People have been drinking for centuries. I think responsibility has gotten away from us, which should be corrected.

I have twenty years of history, smoking and drinking, nearly a year, two packs a day, a pound of white wine, one or two bottles of beer. Unrestrained overdraft of their own, and finally in exchange for a more serious disease. Smoke quit smoking for nearly forty days, thirty days after the drink quit, the control does not live, and began to drink two bottles of beer every day. To find that drinking is not good, determined to stop drinking. Today is the first day of drinking.
My illness, smoking and drinking are all related. But what kind of damage to the body is bigger, I can not say. Smoke on the lungs, the heart of a greater harm. Alcohol may be a greater damage to the liver, kidney and nervous system.
I don't know how to think about smoking and drinking.....

Alcohol relieves my stress, encourages my creativity, and makes me happy.. What study has ever been done to measure the benefits of drinking?

  • People should drink beer instead of heavy alcohol, at least it's less damaging and better substitute
  • Today's society is based around young people and partying, which includes a lot of alcohol, drunk driving, and street violence, maybe it needs a change there
  • Banning is never a solution, ask ourselves, why are people driving drunken in the first place, then find the root cause and fix that.

Withdrawal state

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

Alcohol is incredibly bad for you. I would never support any type of ban on it, but I still think it's good to encourage people not to drink it. I finally gave it up after being addicted to it for about 12 years. I'm close to 10 months sober now. Never again. I'm done with alcohol.

Yep. I was an alcoholic for 27 years, thankfully I usually only drank beer not much hard stuff, but I used to drink a lot of beer. I finally started feeling it hard in my liver and the nightmares were intense, so 10 years ago I just stopped drinking. My life has improved since then, even though I do sometimes miss a good cold beer.

Nanny state is more harmful than any dose of alcohol.

Alcohol is tightly controlled in Canada. In the province of Ontario, only government owned corporations/stores (for the most part) can sell it, so the government makes money on both ends. They tax it a lot, and when they need money it's the among the first things to raise so-called "sin" taxes on.

Whether it's dangerous or not, individuals should be able to decide for themselves. I rarely drink, and I don't smoke but I never force my decisions on others.

Enjoyed your article. :)

Unfortunately, governments are ignoring the fact that banning and taxing things has not worked well.
Well, they have not worked out well for us, but they work out great for governments:
  • They make more money
  • They increase the prison population, which makes them more money (court fees, fines, asset forfeiture, slave labor, and the list goes on)

Complete agreement with your points, I just think that if you look at the why closely, you will find that almost everything that governments do like this is related to lining their pockets (and those of their friends).

taxation is good for the govt budget, but prisons? I doubt it very much, but of course it can vary from country to country. I've heard the US prison system is very beneficial for some few private corporations, but not for the government as such. It's probably also very beneficial for some corrupt politicians ...

For years scientists have tried to figure out what beneficial ingredients are in some "healthy" forms of alcohol like red wine. Turns out the healthy part is the alcohol. Here is a good article on the subject: https://psmag.com/the-truth-we-won-t-admit-drinking-is-healthy-4d3c7b12fa9a#.pv39phly2

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

Correlation does not imply causation. Because some baseball player stopped drinking when he was in his 20's and died 37 years later doesn't mean it was because he stopped drinking. LOL!

"So the more you drink — up to two drinks a day for woman, and four for men — the less likely you are to die." This must be brought to you by Budweiser!

Nice article. It basically ends by saying if you can't or don't drink alcohol you're probably going to die, sorry. Very scientific.

I must be getting trolled here.

It's simple, really: alcohol is terrible for the human body, but it can be regulated and is therefore legal; cannabis and other psychedelics are great for the human body, but some can't be regulated, therefore they're illegal, partly because of the the regulatory nature, but mostly because they pull you out of a materialistic worldview.

MADD has really turned into a neo-prohibitionist movement, the original founder left the organization as they started to get a little too extreme in their views on alcohol. I support their goal of reducing drunk driving but they have gone way too far in their persecution of alcohol in general in my opinion.

I know how to totally eliminate drunkdriving.
Eliminate driving.
Robo-cars.