Anti-alcohol obsessive Professor Doug Sellman doesn’t want
for chutzpah.
In this morning’s Dominion Post, he tut-tuts about the terms
“moderate drinking” and “responsible drinking”, calling them “Humpty Dumpty
terms”.
A Humpty Dumpty term, presumably, is one that means whatever
the user chooses it to mean, as in Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking-Glass. Effectively, Sellman is saying such terms should
be taken with a grain of salt.
Funny, then, that the same man doesn’t hesitate to make grotesquely
alarmist statements about “heavy” drinking. In 2009, Sellman made the absurd
claim that 700,000 New Zealanders – the equivalent of the combined populations
of Wellington and Christchurch (pre-quake) – were “heavy drinkers”.
I think he’s guilty of Humpty
Dumptyism himself. He asserts the right to use the arbitrary term “heavy
drinker” while simultaneously pooh-poohing the notion that anyone might be
capable of “moderate” or “responsible” consumption. He can’t have it both ways.
In my book, anyone who consumes
alcohol without suffering adverse health consequences, breaking the law or
suffering relationship problems can accurately be described as a moderate,
responsible drinker.
That describes the vast majority
of New Zealanders. But Sellman and others of his
ilk are so fixated on the conspicuous minority who abuse alcohol that they are blind to its
social benefits.
Perhaps I should add health and
economic benefits too, because as Canterbury University economist Eric Crampton
pointed out in the same newspaper story, drinkers on average earn more than
non-drinkers, light drinkers have a lower mortality rate than non-drinkers and light-to-moderate
drinking produces better ageing outcomes.
Crampton is possibly the only
person on the public payroll prepared to counter the incessant barrage of hysterical
anti-alcohol propaganda emanating from academia and the health bureaucracy. Thank
God there are still one or two independent thinkers in the universities.
2 comments:
Thanks!
Judging by the comments section on that Press piece, I'll be facing a hostile crowd on Wednesday night. Should make it more fun.
Yesterday's Dominion Post reported that police in the Invercargill area had pulled up 5000 drivers in a four-day drink-driving blitz. Only one was over the limit. Say no more.
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