(First published in The Dominion Post, May 15.)
TVNZ’s Sunday
programme this week included an item about student partying in Dunedin. Residents
unlucky enough to have noisy, drunk, inconsiderate students as neighbours have
had a gutsful, and who can blame them?
The programme included footage taken in a student flat
famous for its parties. An occupant proudly showed the reporter his rubbish-strewn
bedroom, still trashed after the most recent revelry.
To say it wasn’t fit for a dog would be an understatement. No
self-respecting rat would have tolerated the mess and filth.
Other footage included scenes of the annual Hyde St party
that marks the start of the academic year. At this year’s event a St John’s
Ambulance vehicle was attacked, a dozen party-goers were arrested and many more
needed medical attention.
An anthropologist studying the footage might reasonably
conclude that human evolution has peaked and that we’re now on our way back to
being grunting cave-dwellers.
I understand the programme is likely to be the subject of
complaints that it didn’t fairly reflect the behaviour of the whole Dunedin
student population.
That may be so. Certainly, Sunday did little to dispel the view that many students are
pampered, narcissistic slobs. It seems a very long time since student culture
was defined by political passion and cutting satirical wit.
What struck me most, however, was the readiness to place the
blame for the oafishness not on the students, where it belonged, but on booze.
“It’s absolutely the alcohol,” said one of the aggrieved neighbours.
Otago University’s vice-chancellor, Harlene Hayne, also seized
on alcohol as the culprit. If student behaviour was going to be changed, she
said, New Zealand had to get serious about making alcohol harder to obtain.
Professor Hayne appears not to have a very high opinion of
her students. She seems to regard them as powerless to control their behaviour
under the mystical influence of drink.
But of course alcohol makes a convenient scapegoat for the
university’s embarrassment at the bad publicity brought on it by all the unruly
partying.
Don’t blame our students, Hayne seemed to be saying; blame
the wicked liquor barons who force them to drink too much and then behave like
oiks. And blame the politicians who refuse to tighten the liquor laws (no doubt
because they’re in thrall to the booze merchants).
What Hayne and the disgruntled neighbour of the student
revellers appear to overlook is that hundreds of thousands of New Zealanders
drink alcohol regularly (I do it every day) without behaving badly.
Drunken idiocy is not an inevitable consequence of liquor
consumption. People don’t have to trash houses, urinate in the street, vomit in
the neighbour’s garden or start fights. It’s their choice to do so.
The problem, then, is not alcohol; it’s us. This is a point
made persuasively by the British anthropologist Anne Fox in a recent study of
public drunkenness in New Zealand and Australia.
Critics will question the credibility of Fox’s research
because it was commissioned by the liquor conglomerate Lion, but much of what
she says is inarguable.
She says we accept a level of drunkenness that would not be accepted
in many other Western countries. But she also points out that even in societies
where there is high liquor consumption, it’s not associated with anti-social
behaviour as it is here.
Fox argues that we accept drunkenness as an excuse for
behaviour that would not otherwise be tolerated, and that scapegoating alcohol
as the sole cause of bad behaviour merely diverts attention from “maladaptive
cultural norms”. (I think that’s a polite way of saying we’re an immature lot,
and who can disagree?)
Let me be clear: I detest boorish drunken behaviour. But no
one is forced to get drunk, and still less to behave like a moron (or turn
violent, which of course is far worse) if they do.
Dunedin mayor Dave Cull had it right on Sunday, even if the vice-chancellor of Otago University couldn’t
see it. Cull said there had been too much tolerance of bad behaviour.
As long as we exempt people from responsibility for offensive
behaviour when they’re drunk, we’ll make no headway against the drinking
culture that public health experts and sanctimonious academics profess to be so
concerned about.
But of course it's easier to blame the liquor industry. It also panders to popular prejudices (enthusiastically stoked by the same academics, some of them employed by Otago University) that we are all at the mercy of wicked, unscrupulous capitalists.
Well written Mr du Fresne. Prof Hayne and her ilk would have me blame the supermarkets for putting wine on special each week, whereas it is my choice entirely whether or not I buy and consume it. Academics throughout history have seldom managed to get a decent grasp on reality. The NZ ones, leaning so far to the left they almost fall over, seem to consider themselves engineers, as well as guardians, of society. A plague on their sanctimony!
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