I love this comment. This is why I defend drinking. I enjoy it.Carsus Tyrell said:Because I like to drink and I'm tired of the faux-intellectual, over-sensitive, nosy types sneering at folks like me that AREN'T puritanical hermits.
I love this comment. This is why I defend drinking. I enjoy it.Carsus Tyrell said:Because I like to drink and I'm tired of the faux-intellectual, over-sensitive, nosy types sneering at folks like me that AREN'T puritanical hermits.
The difference between alcohol and other drugs is that alcohol can be consumed without being effected by it and still be enjoyed, not a whole lot other drugs have it that way.CrashTest said:Well I guess the simple response is that you've taken the time to write two medium length posts in defense of drinking, so your time is hardly limited, and when you choose to use it in this context, you sided with drinking.
More generally, there are plenty of anti-drug campaigns. Drugs aren't allowed to be sold, bought etc., there are advertising limits on tobacco way beyond alcohol. I don't know about the US, but we certainly don't have the same kind of health warnings on alcohol that we do on cigarettes here.
Society DOES take time to discourage other drugs. In the case of the rape poster, and people on this thread, people will actually take time to defend alcohol. This is not a case of 'it isn't my problem', its a case of people actively defending, or at least actively ignoring, the problems associated with alcohol.
That's a greyish area in terms of blame as its contextual. Generally speaking, tricking someone into drinking is bad. Like, very bad. However, I've had the water shots trick done on me a couple of times by friends because they know I'm the sort of person who would be amused by it, or simply that I wanted to get drunk more than they did.erefe said:Purely out of curiosity: if a guy talks a girl into doing shots, but then he ends up doing "shots" of water instead of vodka, is what he did wrong or was that entirely my fault for believing "it's just one shot"?
He says nothing happened, i'm just wondering if i should blame myself or him for the hangover the next morning.
First, you mistake how I choose to spend my leisure time with how I will spend my time in a social setting. Second, I'm not siding with drinking. That's apathy I'm siding with. What some stranger does with booze rarely interferes with my own plans and, as such, I rarely feel the need to offer an opinion on the subject.CrashTest said:Well I guess the simple response is that you've taken the time to write two medium length posts in defense of drinking, so your time is hardly limited, and when you choose to use it in this context, you sided with drinking.
Yes, there are problems associated with drinking and yet people seem to ignore it. It might be an interesting thing to study if the reason were not so obvious. Booze has been with humanity since we started writing things down so we could remember them later. The weight of millenia of history is a lot to overcome especially when most people manage to enjoy the use of alcohol responsibly.CrashTest said:Society DOES take time to discourage other drugs. In the case of the rape poster, and people on this thread, people will actually take time to defend alcohol. This is not a case of 'it isn't my problem', its a case of people actively defending, or at least actively ignoring, the problems associated with alcohol.
I'm not sure its natural to differentiate between leisure and social time by default, but if that was your intent then fair enough. I would argue that whilst you might be arguing for apathy about whether someone screws themself over with alcohol, to take the time to argue that point would require at least a little motivation. In which case you seem to care more about convincing people not to care about people getting screwed over, than about people getting screwed over.Eclectic Dreck said:First, you mistake how I choose to spend my leisure time with how I will spend my time in a social setting. Second, I'm not siding with drinking. That's apathy I'm siding with. What some stranger does with booze rarely interferes with my own plans and, as such, I rarely feel the need to offer an opinion on the subject.
I was sort of hoping that people on these forums might be capable of independent thought, and to question a societal norm. Whilst I did phrase the title as 'why do people', to make it a more inclusive topic, I guess a more pertinent question would be 'why do you'. We don't live in a society where people blindly follow norms, nor do we live in a society where going to the pub/ a bar is the only legitimate option for adults to spend there recreational time.Eclectic Dreck said:Yes, there are problems associated with drinking and yet people seem to ignore it. It might be an interesting thing to study if the reason were not so obvious. Booze has been with humanity since we started writing things down so we could remember them later. The weight of millenia of history is a lot to overcome especially when most people manage to enjoy the use of alcohol responsibly.
Why do you shave?CrashTest said:I was sort of hoping that people on these forums might be capable of independent thought, and to question a societal norm. Whilst I did phrase the title as 'why do people', to make it a more inclusive topic, I guess a more pertinent question would be 'why do you'. We don't live in a society where people blindly follow norms
Well why shouldn't alcohol be defended?CrashTest said:In the case of the rape poster, and people on this thread, people will actually take time to defend alcohol.
Batou667 said:Why do you shave?CrashTest said:I was sort of hoping that people on these forums might be capable of independent thought, and to question a societal norm. Whilst I did phrase the title as 'why do people', to make it a more inclusive topic, I guess a more pertinent question would be 'why do you'. We don't live in a society where people blindly follow norms
Beard gets itchy and hot after a while
Why do you wear matching socks?
It's convenient, and they'd feel weird if they were different material/shape
Why do you wear trousers instead of a skirt?
Skirts have never appealed to me, and I'd receive unwanted social interactions in a skirt
Why do you type according to accepted spelling and grammar?
That's not even a social norm any more.
Why do you drive on the right-hand side of the road? (Assuming you're not British, in which case, why the left?)
It'd be stupidly dangerous to drive on the wrong side of the road
Why do you hold your fork in your left hand and your knife in the right hand?
I find the cutting motion easier with my right. If I'm not using a knife, I switch hands with the fork.
Why don't you eat ice cream for breakfast and cornflakes for dinner?
Ice scream would be sickly after waking up, cornflakes would be unsatisfying for dinner
Why do you ask somebody "Hi, how are you doing?" when actually the last think you want to hear is a rundown of their day?
If its someone I genuinely don't want to talk to, I wouldn't. Or to avoid hurting their feelings
My point is, you say we don't blindly follow norms, I say oh yes we bloody well do. Every last one of us who wants to have some part in society follows a whole truckload of culture-specific norms every day, most of them completely unconsciously. And, yes, in our culture we have designated buildings where you can go to mildly intoxicate yourself with overpriced ethanol solution in a variety of flavours. From the viewpoint of a Vulcan, that would be illogical. But, culture-free thinking be damned, even the most special snowflake among us is a product of culture and society.
I assume you didn't bother to read even the first post of this thread then?anthony87 said:Well why shouldn't alcohol be defended?
Do you really believe that there is "nothing" bad or malicious about alcohol? Or do you mean that to be a relative description?Adeptus Aspartem said:Because alcohol is just the next blacksheep-fad. It's nothing bad and malicious.
It's up to each person who consumes alcohol to know what they're doing. I expect that from grown up adults.
If you make a mess while being drunk, it's fully your fault, because it was your choice to drink to much.
Also if both a drunk don't draw the "rapist" card. That's not nice my ladies. Because women that really get raped are often scared to talk about it because of those false accusations bein' made by foolish girls who need an excuse