Publicly funded wowsers never rest in their attempts to whip
up moral panic over our supposed enslavement by alcohol. Even when statistics point
to declining liquor consumption, which you’d think would be welcomed, these doomsters
remain resolutely po-faced.
RNZ led its 7 o’clock news bulletin this morning with a report
that Australian teenagers are turning away from alcohol. Deakin University researchers
found that only 45 percent of teenagers in 2015 had drunk a full glass of
alcohol compared with 70 percent 15 years earlier.
Nicki Jackson, executive director of New Zealand's Alcohol Healthwatch, said
that was in line with what was happening here. Reason to be positive,
surely? Er, no. According to Jackson, we mustn’t be complacent.
“Yes, there’s been declines [sic] in young people choosing
to take up drinking but we’ve seen no declines whatsoever in the style in which
young people drink. They’re still drinking very heavily, so that culture hasn’t
changed.” Even good news is bad news, then.
Then comes Jackson’s alarmist crunchline: “hazardous binge-drinking”
has been getting worse (she cited no figures, and the official definition of “binge-drinking”
is dodgy anyway) and the government needs to raise the price of alcohol.
Nothing new here: it’s the same tired old refrain. In fact
the only surprising thing about this non-news item was that someone at RNZ
considered it important enough to lead the bulletin.
Alcohol Healthwatch would realise, of course, that Sunday
morning is a quiet time in newsrooms and would have timed its statement to take
advantage of that fact. Obviously, it could also count on the RNZ duty editor giving
the non-story prominence, because RNZ journalists – in fact journalists generally
– tend to be sympathetic toward sanctimonious pressure groups pushing moral
panic buttons.
There was evidence of that in another alcohol-related story on
Stuff three days ago. This one, sourced
from the taxpayer-funded Health Promotion Agency, cited research that purportedly
showed older New Zealanders were drinking to greater excess and more frequently
than adults in eight other countries.
According to the research, New Zealand had the
second-highest proportion of 50-plus drinkers after England. And what were the
other countries? The United States, South Africa, China, Mexico, Ghana, India
and Russia.
Of the nine countries with which we were compared, only two –
England and the US – could be described as culturally and socially similar to New
Zealand, and even the US is very different from us when it comes to social
habits.
It follows that no self-respecting researcher could draw any
useful conclusion from this “research”. It’s a nonsense. Far more meaningful (and
ideologically unbiased) are the per capita alcohol consumption figures compiled
by the OECD, which consistently show New Zealand to be roughly in the middle of
the table and behind comparable countries such as Britain and Australia.
This doesn’t deter academics such as Andy Towers from Massey
University, who was quoted in the Stuff
story, from extracting pessimistic conclusions from the available “research”.
Towers was quoted as saying New Zealanders aged 50-plus had “concerning”
drinking habits.
There was a time when journalists were trained to be
sceptical and to “doubt everything with gusto”, in the words of my late
colleague Frank Haden. Not so these days, when claims by moralistic academics
are accepted unquestioningly and meaningless surveys are cited in an attempt to
convince us, contrary to all our everyday observations and experience, that New
Zealand is awash in alcohol.
2 comments:
Sunday morning 'news' on RNZ has been riddled with items from its or other social engineers for decades. Add the voice tones of the trainee 'reporters' desperately trying to be politically correct, but only sounding pathetically patronising, and NZ listeners are being served up a cold, unpalatable mess of potage. I hasten to exempt RNZ Concert from that criticism, but it is obliged to take its news feed from its sister channel.
Fair points Karl. I suppose I let it all wash over me because it's 'silly season' where there's a sort of Alice in Wonderland 'un-news' clime. If it's got Doug Sellman's prints anywhere near a piece I tune out even more because it's invariably po-faced and the usual refrain of 'the fault is cheap alcohol'. I once asked him where to find this cheap alcohol...for I'd searched to no avail. I also wanted to know how price theory & market forces would enter into the arguement...no reply..because it's just not that simple of course.
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