Sammy G
Ex-Bluelighter
Brilliant choice of HST quote. Summarises my feelings on the matter pretty well.
Not to contest your point for the sake of it, Si (although feel free to accuse me of such - tradition is tradition), but I really don't think that the potential dangers of alcohol are at all 'under-reported', nor does the media attempt to suppress any information about alcohol's potential harms.
Every time I have the misfortune of being forced to pick up the Metro, it seems there's a piece about the dangers of binge drinking. Alcohol price levies have been introduced, and the bottles carry both information on the number of 'units' and a reminder to drink responsibly. If that's not at least a cursory effort at pointing out the potential harms of alcohol, I don't know what is.
And i'd consider HST's musings as another example of positive effects of the drugs/counter-culture - the partial integration of the initial collective trip that's still ongoing.
I'll give you an example to prove my point. A lady I know well, an ex client with whom I am still friends, a very straight, God-fearing average-woman-in-the-street sorta person, found out about this time last year that her 21 year old daughter had become an alcoholic. Up to that point, despite being an intelligent & participating member of polite, upper middle class SW London society (she's a violin teacher) she had no idea whatsoever of the numerous, serious health problems that can come from over-use of alcohol & no idea that it was addictive. She though AA was something other people had to deal with. She's been reading the Telegragh most of her adult life, & she had no idea at all about alcohol & had been dismissing my complaints about alcohol use in comparison to cannabis use for about 10 years!
Clearly, the message that alcohol use is harmful is not getting through, is not LOUD or consistent enough, because you can't pick up a crappy paper without reading about how some dickhead has poisoned himself to death on booze, beaten his mate into ICU or run under a fucking bus pissed.
How so? A lot of the bullshit, dead-end acid culture which he bemoans is still around today, and still as unlikely to steer those who participate in it toward any 'truth' other than a pile of unpaid bills.
i don't think hunter bemoaned all the acid culture - he was part of it after all and spoke pretty fondly of it's birth. He became jaded of the leary-type message (who wouldn't)
Very interesting discussion, & yeah society as a collective.
More than 9 million people in England drink more than the recommended daily limits
In England, in 2012 there were 6,490 alcohol-related deaths, a 19% increase compared to 2001
Alcohol is 10% of the UK burden of disease and death, making alcohol one of the three biggest lifestyle risk factors for disease and death in the UK, after smoking and obesity.
An estimated 7.5 million people are unaware of the damage their drinking could be causing
Alcohol misuse costs England around £21bn per year in healthcare, crime and lost productivity costs
The most effective strategies to reduce alcohol-related harm from a public health perspective include, in rank order, price increases, restrictions on the physical availability of alcohol, drink-driving counter measures, brief interventions with at-risk drinkers, and treatment of drinkers with alcohol dependence
Alcohol is 61% more affordable than it was in 1980
Alcohol and Health
Alcohol is a causal factor in more than 60 medical conditions, including: mouth, throat, stomach, liver and breast cancers; high blood pressure, cirrhosis of the liver; and depression
In the UK in 2012-13, there were 1,008,850 hospital admissions related to alcohol consumption where an alcohol-related disease, injury or condition was the primary reason for hospital admission or a secondary diagnosis
In 2012 there were 8,367 direct related alcohol deaths in the UK
However, if you include deaths where alcohol was a contributing factor (such as various cancers, falls and hypertensive diseases), the figure increases to 13,971 for males and 7,541 for females
Males accounted for approximately 65% of all alcohol-related deaths in the UK in 2012
Alcohol now costs the NHS £3.5bn per year; equal to £120 for every tax payer
The alcohol-related mortality rate of men in the most disadvantaged socio-economic class is 3.5 times higher than for men in the least disadvantaged class, while for women the figure is 5.7 times higher
In England and Wales, 63% of all alcohol-related deaths in 2012 were caused by alcoholic liver disease
Liver disease is the only major cause of mortality and morbidity which is on the increase in England whilst decreasing in other European Countries
Deaths from liver disease have reached record levels, rising by 20% in a decade
The number of older people between the ages of 60 and 74 admitted to hospitals in England with mental and behavioural disorders associated with alcohol use has risen by over 150% in the past ten years, while the figure for 15-59 years old has increased by 94%
Drinking Behaviour
34% of men and 28% of women drank more than recommended (4 units for men, 3 units for women) on at least one day in the last week. Excluding those who didn’t drink at all in the last week, the figure rises to 52% of men and 53% of women
18% of men and 12% of women drank heavily (at least twice the recommended limits) on at least one day in the last week. Excluding those who didn’t drink at all in the last week, the figure rises to 27% for men and 22% for women
9% of men and 6% of women drank very heavily (at least three times the recommended limits) on at least one day in the last week. Excluding those who didn’t drink at all in the last week, the figure rises to 14% for men and 12% for women
Adults living in households in the highest income quintile are twice as likely to drink heavily than adults in the lowest income quintile – 22% compared to 10%
Older people tend to drink more frequently than younger people. The proportion of adults who drank every day increased with each group – just 1% of 16-25 age group had drunk every day during the previous week, 4% in 25-44, 9% in 25-64 and 13 in 65+.
Younger people tend to drink more heavily (exceeding 8 units for men and 6 units for women) on a single occasion than older people. 6% of men aged 65 and over had drunk heavily on at least one day in the previous week, compared with 19% of men aged 45-64, 24% of men aged 24-44 and 22% of men aged 16-24. Among women that corresponding age groups were 2%, 12%, 16% and 18%.
The above statistics on drinking behaviour are all taken from the General Lifestyle Survey, 2011 and relate to Great Britain (England, Wales and Scotland).
There has been a decline in reported alcohol consumption since its peak in 2005. However, this has been from a very high level that had been going up over many years. Chronic health harms from alcohol are a result of drinking over a number of years, so whilst reported consumption has been going down, this hasn’t translated into a reduction of health harms.
Survey measures of drinking behaviour are generally acknowledged to underestimate consumption. Comparisons of the survey data with HM Revenue & Customs data suggest that survey estimates of consumption represent between 55% and 60% of the true figure.
Young People
In 2012, 43 per cent of school pupils (aged 11-15) said that they had drunk alcohol at least once
193 males and 121 females between 15 and 34 years of age died from alcohol-related causes in 2011 in the UK
The number of alcohol-related hospital admissions of 15 to 24 year-old male patients increased by 57%, from 18,265 to 28,747 from 2002 to 2010
The number of hospital admissions of 15 to 24 year-old female patients increased at faster rate [76%], from 15,233 in 2002 to 26,908 in 2010
In a sample of over 2000 15-16-year-olds from the UK, 11% had had sex under the influence of alcohol and regretted it
Almost one in ten boys and around one in eight girls aged 15 to 16 have unsafe sex after drinking alcohol
Every year in the UK, more than 10,000 fines for being drunk and disorderly are issued to young people aged 16 to 19
Almost half of young people excluded from school in the UK are regular drinkers
Just 12% of 11 to 15-year olds said they had drunk alcohol in the previous week in 2011 – down from 26% a decade earlier
Si, what are you trying to prove?
I've never once denied the dangers of alcohol. Quite the opposite. I only challenged your assertion that 'the truth' was somehow being suppressed.
Go back two hundred years and we'd be seeing some real booze problems, à la Gin Lane.
why are you always asking me that? 8(
You posted that we had problems with alcohol in the East End gin rooms days (I think thats what you're referring to), so I illustrated that those problems are now country & society wide. What's the problem?
then I waste my time responding to your posts, as if I didn't already know that.Because I genuinely do wonder what your point is.
Those problems weren't confined to the East End of London. They were nationwide problems too.
All your figures demonstrate is that there's still a problem with excessive consumption of alcohol, which is something I've never contested. I'm just saying that the government, health professionals and the media are now doing more to raise awareness than ever.
Raasy you're a smart guy & I appreciate intelligent discourse, particularly when we disagree.
Yes, I stand by my statement that LSz & Al-Lad have caused & are likely to cause close to zero harm. LSD may well have brought psychological crises, in some extremely, extremely rare cases, permanent crises, but even the non-permanent cases are very, very rare. Both LSz & A-Lad however, strictly in my own experience, appear to produce less of the effects I suspect are likely to cause psychological problems. Basically, tripping on these drugs feels less intense on the mind, suggesting to me that they may cause less psychological problems short & long term.
There is no physical risk whatsoever assocaited with these compounds, but alcohol carries numerous phsyical health risks. Sure, if you're a wonderfully rounded individual who drinks a half glass of wine once a week with dinnner, you're prettty unlikely to suffer any consequences, ever. But if you drink socially, to get drunk, you harm your health every single time, & the harm is accumulative. If you drink regularly, you risk health problems & addiction.
I for one, am not suggesting that alcohol should be banned (I'd like to see its sale more tightly controlled but not banned) but while drugs that do not pose a risk to health are banned, I am suggesting that the law is an ass.
Psychedelics drugs appear much more likely to lift depression & anxiety for me.
I've had some major anxiety & depression problems associated with alcohol use, in the days & weeks following it's use & my phyisical health suffered when I was drinking regularly. The harms associated with alcohol are vastly, vastly under-reported in our society while the panic over RC's grows daiily. I fail to see why the two problems are not more closely related by the media, if we do indeed have a free media. Which we don't.
Sammy_g said:Sorry, but that's just as bad as raas,
As for LSD accidents, I only speak from real incidents of moderate use putting people in mental wards, and permanent neurological damage accumulated from moderate use - this just doesn't happen with alcohol
As for LSD accidents, I only speak from real incidents of moderate use putting people in mental wards, and permanent neurological damage accumulated from moderate use - this just doesn't happen with alcohol, because it's far less dangerous and easier to control.