According to Chinese legend, alcohol was invented by a fellow called Yi Di about 4,000 years ago. Yi Di presented his discovery to Yu, the very first Chinese Emperor. Yu drank it, loved it, and immediately banned it, for he foresaw that it would cause great and terrible calamities if the common people ever got their grubby little mitts on it. Yi Di was exiled for life.
This story isn’t true — most early Chinese history is unencumbered by truth — but it is illustrative of the way that rulers have (almost) always looked at booze. It’s always alcohol and those who provide it who get it in the neck.
Thus Scotland at the time of writing, and, for all I know and dread, most of England soon. All licensed premises in the Central Belt have been closed. Unlicensed premises — cafés, tea-shops, juice bars — are left open, because… well, here the becausery becomes a little indistinct. But it’s something about the behaviour of those in pubs. It’s the kind of people who go to pubs, and it’s the kind of things they do there. Hugging strangers all the time and kissing vague acquaintances.
I have been to pubs in Glasgow. The hugging of strangers is not a major problem there, even after 10pm. The only hugging of strangers I have ever seen in a pub is at the moment of a significant international football victory. This is a reasonably rare beast in both England and Scotland, yet we have this vague feeling that when Other People drink they behave abominably. When we drink, we’re simply lovely.
This was, in essence, the cause of Prohibition in the United States. Very few Americans were against alcohol per se. They were against saloons, and what they were sure people did there. The general idea was that saloons served men, almost exclusively (this was true) and that those men spent all their pay there and then went home drunk and angry and took out their frustrations on their family. Whether this actually happened much is debatable. But it is certain that Prohibition was the first great feminist movement in American politics, which is why it was enacted at the same time that women got the vote.
The cause was helped along, though, by a large section of the American population called the “Drinking Dries”. Where the “Wets” were proud drinkers, and the “Dries” were ferocious teetotallers; the “Drinking Dries” were those who liked a drink themselves, but were very, very concerned about the way that other people drank, especially those in saloons. It is a less ridiculous position than it sounds. If you want to stop football hooliganism once and for all, ban football; this wouldn’t mean a kickabout in your own garden, but the football that happens over there. So the idea was to stop the saloon louts drinking and thus save them from themselves.
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SubscribePubs are banned serving alcohol outdoors, as well as indoors, in Edinburgh
Lockdown is pointless and even the WHO have said so – The Epidemic is so feeble that total deaths are average and most need to be tested to know they have it – But our Masters insist on FEAR maybe to keep up their destruction of the economy until the virus has faded away, as they all do, so they can claim it was them that ended it – Nice bonkers bonus is that the average age of death from Covid is 82 and the average age of death without Covid is 81 – And for the under 60’s the increase in suicides exceeds the Covid deaths.
An informative and interesting article, which also has the benefit of being reasonably short. Can we have more of this please?
An interesting juxtapose, with some quality insights. Perhaps a broader perspective on The Prohibition may be useful for readers? Prohibition – Did it Fail? https://www.dalgarnoinstitu… and Drug Policy – A History https://youtu.be/7UScdK82aA…