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We need to call time on our attitude towards drinking

It’s Wednesday night and we’re around the kitchen table. Unusually for a week night, some friends are over, the craic is good, and the wine is flowing.

There is plenty of tut-tutting, as we talk of “young people” and this new neknomination online drinking craze. “Let me just fill up your glass,” I say intermittently throughout the evening, giving my best Mrs Doyle impression of “g’wan, g’wan, ya will, ya will, don’t insult me now”.

Even though we are amongst good friends there is always that fear of not appearing hospitable enough, or, horror of horrors, being thought of as tight with the alcohol. There are so many “rules” around drinking in Ireland, most that we simply instinctively take on board as we grow up in our alcohol sodden society. For instance the perceived rudeness of refusing a drink in someone’s house — it doesn’t matter if you are driving, or even perhaps pregnant (just a small one, go on) or that you’re on antibiotics, sure everyone knows that’s only an ould wives tale. Drink up!

This week we’re worked up about neknomination. Haven’t bloody Facebook some cheek refusing to take down the pages promoting the game? The deaths of two young people last weekend is indeed a desperate tragedy and you can only feel heartbroken for their families. But our reaction is sadly predictable.

It’s the usual case of let’s discuss everyone else’s drinking, bar your own. Far too many Irish parents will fail to see the irony of warning their kids off things like neknomination, before they themselves proceed down the pub to get wasted on a Friday night with friends. Whether it’s a wedding, christenings or funerals there is a social obligation among the Irish to get “wasted”. The next morning we all feel we must boast about the massiveness of the hangover: “I’m destroyed from the drink. I was up ‘til six, long after the bride and groom, until the resident’s bar finally shut. I so need a cure after this fry up”.

Neknomination is a worldwide phenomenon. It too shall pass into the annals of the world wide web, but what will stay in Ireland is our destructive drinking culture. The tragedy is that while the Taoiseach and other senior politicians have spoken out this week in criticism of this particular social media craze, they never speak the real truth about our societal addiction to alcohol.

The risk is too high. It’s safe territory to condemn what “the youth” are getting up to online, but you risk being seen as a total killjoy, if you were to try and point out how seriously irresponsible a majority of Irish people are about drink.

Things were looking good with the appointment of Labour junior minister Roisin Shortall to the Department of Health in 2011. She rather fearlessly took up the mantle of attempting to tackle the drink issue, but she resigned and was subsequently replaced by Labour party colleague Alex White.

But the new junior minister realised pretty fast that his ministerial colleagues were all for tackling the “alcohol problem” just as long as he didn’t want to interfere with anything in their own particular area. It should be noted that our senior politicians come under (and are open to) sustained and co-ordinated pressure from the drinks industry each time there is a chance that action might be taken on a particular area, such as sponsorship of sport by the drinks sector.

The industry is incredibly well connected, has remarkable access to what is going on behind the scenes at Government level, and does not hesitate to use it’s clout.

The politicians experience it at every level from the sponsorship of their local sports teams by drinks companies, to the number of people employed by the industry in their constituencies. There are similarities here with the hardball tactics employed by the tobacco industry, the difference being that is it socially and politically acceptable to be against smoking, but our relationship with alcohol is far more complicated.

The job of trying to wean us off our national alcohol habit was taken by White in September 2012. White’s a realist, and managed to bring a number of his colleagues around somewhat, concerning the recommendations of the really excellent 2012 report on alcohol abuse produced by the National Substance Misuse Steering Group. That group made a number of recommendations, most contentions among them that the “drinks industry sponsorship of sport and other large public events in Ireland should be phased out through legislation by 2016”. It also said there should be no increase in sponsorship in the intervening time.

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Source: Alison O'Connor, Irish Examiner, 07/02/14

Posted by drugsdotie on 02/07 at 10:11 AM in
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