ALCOHOL AND SOCIETY TODAY
There has been a lot of discussion in the last few years about the
continuing problem of alcohol and the effect it has on society. Should
we treat alcohol as if it were an illicit drug?
Some of the promoters of harsh restrictions on the sale and marketing
of certain alcoholic beverages (restrictions such as advertising bans
and higher taxes) have justified their proposals with the erroneous
assertion that alcohol is no different than illegal drugs. There have
even been stories in some of the media attempting to equate alcohol
with the use and/or abuse of illegal substances such as marijuana,
crack, cocaine and heroin.
We will first mention as a matter of information that alcoholic
beverages have been a part of western civilization for more than 25
centuries. Now we know there will always be people among us who drink.
America has already tried prohibition and learned conclusively that
it does not work. The simple fact is that many Americans like to drink
and the vast majority of those who do, drink responsibly, thus, the
public policy challenge we face today is not to stigmatize all drinking
as bad but to maximize the probability that those who choose to drink
will do so in a responsible manner.
It's a fact that excessive drinking can seriously damage one's health.
Those who claim that "alcohol is a drug" want that word to carry a
particular, threatening connotation. In reality, however, "drug" is
an ethically, legally and physiologically neutral term that encompasses
a wide spectrum of substances.
According to a well-known medical textbook of pharmacology, a drug
is any chemical agency that affects living processes. A drug can be
as menacing as cocaine, as benign as sucrose or as helpful as vitamin
C. In a societal sense, some drugs relieve pain and assist in the
healing process. Others are safely and legally enjoyed by millions
of people very day, even though overuse can result in undesirable side
effects. And Some drugs are so terribly addictive that simply experimenting
with them carries substantial risk.
Recent studies show that excess alcohol consumption can lead to
a number of serious health problems, and of course there is the problem
of addiction which must be taken into consideration. Who among us
hasn't been exposed to a friend or relative with a severe drinking
problem. Many of societies' problems today such as spouse abuse, child
abuse and dysfunctional family relationships can be traced to drinking
problems.
Alcohol may lead to liver problems, a variety of cancers as well
as forms of osteoporosis and depression, and studies are showing, too,
that women are more susceptible to the ill effects of alcohol than
are men. From this information, it is safe to conclude that anything
which has this type of effect on one's general health, is going to
affect the entire system. And research has shown that alcohol depletes
the body of it's necessary vitamins and minerals.
"Social drinking" seems to be an accepted practice these days and
the arguments both pro and con will always be with us. It is our hope
that as you read and consider this information you will become more
aware of the effect that alcohol has on society today.