Shelflife wrote: » Alcohol Ireland (should really be called anti alcohol Ireland) are also promoting the minimum pricing of alcohol and structural separation of alcohol in shops. The reason behind this is to help those who have drinking problems, creating a blacked out section (shop within a shop) will have no impact whatsoever on a problem drinker. they will happily open that door and walk straight in, upping the price wont make any difference to the problem drinker either, they will simply eat less,run up bills or turn off the heat , but they wont stop drinking less because of the price. All that will happen is that the moderate drinkers will now have to pay more for their drink and the cost of selling alcohol will go up for the retailers. What we need is proper education in how to drink properly and perhaps better help for those that have alcohol related proplems.
Yourself isit wrote: » One of the reports said that drinkers in ireland drank ~ 500 pints a week. That's a lot. 10 a week.
Joeytheparrot wrote: » There seems to be a denial in Ireland though that we have serious acohol abuse problems
Joeytheparrot wrote: » There seems to be a denial in Ireland though that we have serious alcohol abuse problems
Persephone kindness wrote: » I think people start drinking too early and there is social pressure to over do it. And not enough to moderate yourself and the way you act. You should not see sick on the streets of Temple bar. Also to be moderate when drinking alone or at home. (which is fine once you are ok) Everyone seems to be saying once you hurt no one ...drinking until you pass out is ok. It's not it's still alcoholism and they are out of control ...I am talking true alcoholism. Just because you don't bother anyone doesn't mean you are in control.
Patww79 wrote: » This post has been deleted.
hatrickpatrick wrote: » Being out of control is a personal choice that you should be free to make, though - provided you don't bother anyone. At the end of the day, you own your own body, nobody else does.
Persephone kindness wrote: » http://alcoholireland.ie/facts/how-much-do-we-drink/
doolox wrote: » What should be done is to licence individual drinkers much like we licence drivers in most countries. If you abuse your privilege to drive you can have your licence withdrawn by the government. Similarly for problem drinkers , they should be banned from buying and consuming alcohol if found to have caused a problem with their drinking, fighting, assault, violence etc. I have seen reports in the press where people have been put on probation with attached conditions of abstaining from drink, attending certain pubs etc. I personally knew people who were banned from all the pubs of a certain village because of their behavior while drinking. Such measures will be hard to implement and it is often easier and more profitable for governments to opt for blanket bans on entire populations, restricted opening hours, inflated pricing and obscure rules designed to catch people out and make like miserable for the mainstream moderate drinker. Maybe it could be a condition for obtaining a licence to drink that the applicant attend alcohol awareness courses and coping skills courses on how to handle drink and fellow drinkers....how to avoid confrontational situations and be self aware of moods while under the influence. There is at the moment no formal knowledge imparted on citizens about the hazards and pitfalls of drinking and what to do to avoid them. Often we only hear one side of the story from the victims of drinking and nothing about the enjoyment that socially moderate drinking does for society.
hatrickpatrick wrote: » It's similar to how a lot of guys feel when the media / radical SJW types say "*Men* do [insert bad behaviour here], men do this, men do that" without a "some" qualifier. Entirely reasonably, when somebody's demographic is attacked without a specification that the attack only applies to a subset, people have a legitimate reason to feel like they're being harangued for something they aren't involved in.
begbysback wrote: » Control: the power to influence or direct ones behaviour Out of control: lack of power to influence or direct ones behaviour