blackcard wrote: » No alcohol, at least legally. How could you go to a wedding, a funeral a wedding? Celebrate a victory? Ireland would go into meltdown. No pub at the weekend. We would have to talk to each other whilst sober. We would be physically healthier. Less missed days at work. Bootlegging would thrive. Would you survive?
wakka12 wrote: » Doesn't work anywhere. The only place it works is in islamic countries because they all agree with the quran and that its a sin to drink it
Tazio wrote: » I'd convert my petrol car to run on ethanol... just for the low tax of course :pac: 55 litres for you baby; 55ml for me....
valoren wrote: » The only 'prohibition' that would be practical would be to make consuming alcohol prohibitively expensive in line with other psychoactive drugs. ... Never going to happen though. We are a nation of boozers and it's too entrenched now to change cultural habits.
Cheap, quick, and no hangover afterwards? No wonder ether was so popular. However, before you head out the door to score some, it's worth mentioning a few of the downsides. These include a truly awful smell and taste, coupled with a strong burning sensation while the foul stuff is going down. Plus, it makes you drool like a Saint Bernard dog on a hot summer day, not to mention stimulating truly monumental burps and farts. These aren't normal emissions-they are laden with highly flammable ether vapors. You can imagine what happened when an ether drinker would light up a pipe and belch or sit down by an open fire and break wind. Severe burns at either end of the alimentary canal were a common hazard.
However, when the committee made its report at the end of April 1891, it stated that naphtha -- which has an offensive smell and taste -- was already being added to the ether. Irish consumers got around this by mixing it with tea and sugar.
donegaLroad wrote: » The population of Northern Ireland would triple.