xDragon wrote:ive always found it funny how quickly people run to the "troll" accusation when someone has an opinion that they dont agree with. if you have a problem with my views, thats your fault, not mine, and you need to find a way to deal with it that doesnt resort to name calling.
Well, trolling isn't really name-calling, it refers to a definition (admittedly a recent one, won't be in most dictionaries), someone who attempts to derail an internet conversation by taking and holding an extreme view. Now, it may be that you hold that view. However, that doesn't change the disruptive nature of your comments with regard to the original intention of the thread.
Now, since you seem to want to have this conversation. You are welcome to believe what you like, in this case,
You have stated that your belief is that drinking is fundamentally irresponsible at any level, (that is, with any quantity of intake whatsoever), and that drinking carries a stigma.
a) What do we mean by irresponsible?
I assume (and please correct me if I'm wrong), you mean that a person loses some control of their actions and decision-making ability while under the influence of alcohol. This is certainly not under dispute.
However, the degree to which a person's judgement/actions are changed is dependent on the degree of intake. Furthermore, intake of most substances will change your behavior in some ways: Sugar, caffeine, protein, fish, pork, asparagus. The abstinence argument is very quickly squashed by the death-by-starvation argument. Eating just about anything will impart toxins, and your behavior and attitude will noticeably change depending on your meal.
Alcohol is hardly the only thing your liver has to deal with. Even a non-drinker will quickly die without their liver, killed by the daily traffic through their body.
If the argument is that alcohol is dangerous, then there exists some level of intake which is equivalent to the mind altering effects of other consumables, therefore, any intake is not hazardous (or not any more hazardous than what we must do on a daily basis to survive).
Therefore, your assertion that any intake of alcohol is irresponsible is not borne out by the facts.
It may further be argued that
drinking at a level which does not measurably impact the liver may improve socialization, and thus may serve a societal good by bringing people together and loosening their natural tensions.
Stress and Nervous tension are major health problems as well.
b) "Drinking carries a stigma"
By whom? All forms of drinking may carry a stigma in your community, and being incapable of performing everyday tasks as a result of heavy drinking is a stigma in most all communities. However, we return to the problem of degree.
If it is impossible to judge whether or not a person has been drinking or if they're just in good spirits (Say, after a single beer), then how do we determine how to apply the stigma? Is it because they have a beer in their hand?
Logic 101:
Does "All drunkards must have had alcohol"
Imply "All people who have alcohol must be drunkards"?
The answer is no. Therefore, it is unfair to apply the standard of a person who has had too much alcohol to a person who is merely "relaxed". In this case, you are applying a stigma to a person with a drink, rather than to the action of drinking until one ceases to reason.
All this being said, drinking can be dangerous. I feel it is irresponsible (and not conducive to your aims in reducing alcohol consumption) to ignore the very obvious observable differences between a person who has had a small amount of alcohol and a large amount.
Attempting to "Scare people straight" is a ploy that can easily backfire. People respond better to facts.
EDIT: P.S. I wrote this while sipping on a very nice single malt
Tactics yes, Tact no...