TommiesTank wrote: » Sums up the typical Irish attitude to alcohol, even if you are joking.
Czarcasm wrote: » I want to go drinking with you DLH because I've been drinking Guinness nigh on 17 years now (started off on bulmers cider, jesus that stuff rots you! I got sick of getting sick after it), and I've definitely noticed the quality of the Guinness where one time they used say there was eating and drinking in it, sure it was an acquired taste, but when you got a good pint with a good thick head on it, ohh I'm salivating as I type this, the taste was delicious... but now? Now, with all their fcuking about with the formula ever since Diageo took over, Guinness has become like just black budweiser, with an equally thin head on top. It's rare you'll find a good pint nowadays with all their extra cold and mid strength nonsense to try and make Guinness appealing to a trendy youth. If they'd left it alone far more young people would be drinking it and we wouldn't need all this Martha's day marketing shìte! Anyway, 2 o clock in the morning OP is not the time to be getting all philosophical about humanity when walking home after the club, you're naturally gonna notice you stick out like a sore thumb, you're sober for christ sake! It's classic "in the land of the blind, the one eyed man is king".
up for anything wrote: » There isn't enough alcohol in Ireland to drink Irish men handsome. (lol)
DEFTLEFTHAND wrote: » An acquired taste as they say. It you give it a chance you will develop a palate for it. It's a real drink imo, the smoothness and texture not piss water in a glass like a lot of the Lagers.
MadsL wrote: » Guinness Foreign Export. No need to thank me.
Seaneh wrote: » Guinness is a pretty mediocre beer in reality. Its one of the most tasteless stouts on the market. A step up from Bud and Heineken but not much more than than. Boring, tasteless, nitrogen delivered, mass produced MEH.
wprathead wrote: » ...you Irish passport has been revoked.. :pac:
Seaneh wrote: » Because I Don't fawn over a British owned product produced by a company founded by a loyalist family who despised the Irish and didn't employ catholics beyond medial jobs until just a few decades ago and only started their "Oirish" marketing when it became "cool" in the UK and US to be Irish? That's a bit silly really.
DEFTLEFTHAND wrote: » There's places still around the country who serve a good old fashioned pint of plain. If you're Dublin based I'd recommend Mulligans on Poolbeg St, McDaids just off Grafton and O'Neills on Suffolk.
wprathead wrote: » come to Galway Czar im very fussy with my Guinness and loads great pints here: Neachtains O'Connells McSwiggans (only 3 euro aswell)
hatrickpatrick wrote: » Nothing I love more than being stone cold sober in a crowd of drunken revellers I've perfected my drunk act over the years so no one ever realises I'm not actually one of them
silverharp wrote: » there are just too many people in this country that embrace bog trotting and skanger "culture"
mutley18 wrote: » Did it once, never again, it is too intimidating, I would much rather just drink the poison and transform into one of them!
ButtersSuki wrote: » And we think we're a nation of drinkers? In volume maybe,but certainly not knowledgable or discerning.
Crooked Jack wrote: » Im sure youre a lovely person but i hate non drinkers on a night out. To be fair, i've tried it myself a few times and i dont know how you can stand it either. there should be a special room in a pub for designated drivers to stay in until its time to go home
Crooked Jack wrote: » Could you define bog trotting and skabger culture because it sounds like youre just condemning everyone who isnt an upper middle class snob. any chance your father works at KPMG
silverharp wrote: » the type of people that if you dropped them in Tokyo theyd go around looking to buy a hang-sandwich. Im sorry but if you travelled a bit you would know there is a difference between a city in say Switzerland and Dublin or Cork. And you only have to follow the stories of how the Irish are a disgrace in Australia to know there is a strong knacker element in Irish society.
cloud493 wrote: » Welcome to the sober side. I get this every single time I go out. Everyones pissed, having the craic, and I'm standing to the side smoking a ciggarette thinking what a load of clowns they are.
cloud493 wrote: » I don't want to drink. I don't have to drink. Therefore, I don't
whiskeyman wrote: » Only in Ireland would a thread started about the negative impact of alcohol on society include recommendations of good pubs...
whirlpool wrote: » Zero judgement, because i've been the drunkest person in the world on many a saturday night. But i've just walked home sober, making my way through the drunk as fu.. crowds and i'm feeling like... well all this drinking is an astronomical waste of everyone's time and it's hindering everyone's improvement and everyone's world and ruining the world around us even more so.
Caonima wrote: » Well, I come from a bog-working background; lived near a bog and my Dad worked for Bord na Mona all his life. But I live in Shanghai but don't run around looking for the hang-sangwiches you mentioned. Climb back in your hole, ya spa. There is always an element from almost every culture (even those as anodyne as the Swiss) that people feel a little ashamed of in their respective country, but it's not nearly as clearly delineated as you think. Many a supposedly D4 hoighty toighty type can be an embarrassment when you meet them (reams of them in London and New York). I'm beginning to think you fall into this category.
silverharp wrote: » Sure but being a waste of space drunk is celebrated in Ireland, there is no shame. If you could analyse all the posts on After Hours for instance relating to booze, at least three quarters would be almost deferential to booze and full of insider/right of passage kinda comments instead of the realisation that its only a couple of steps up from a bunch of winos having a conversation. Anything is better than the mindless herd behaviour which one sees in ireland