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Nina Power's avatar

I - for whatever reason/s - cannot drink in a safe or moderate manner. For some people, it just seems to be like this - alcoholism runs in my family, but I don't think the tendency is reducible merely to genetics. I consequently choose not to drink, but I find the choice itself a very beautiful and important one. Choosing not to drink strengthens my relation to God, and I often feel grateful that this is the test I've been given. I can sit with other who do without resentment (or, let's say, that's getting easier), and I would in no way wish for any crackdown on drinking from above, of the mean-minded kind that we've already seen from this hollow, moralising, hypocritical, prosecutorial government.

I therefore agree with your argument about freedom and about the broader implications of a war against risk/responsibility, and what this means for a sociability that remains outside of that which can be measured or surveilled. In my lifetime, the tide has definitely turned against alcohol. While we were perhaps overly hedonistic in the 90s, since then the steady decline of social drinking and its replacement by fear of saying or doing the wrong thing, or of being recorded has contributed to an age of severe anxiety and the diminution of camaraderie and concomitant values, loyalty in particular. It's a sadder, meaner, more authoritarian world, and I do not think we should be told what to do by people who are more stupid and meaner of spirit than the people they seek to control.

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Jeremy Poynton's avatar

I refer one and all to the late, much lamented, Sir Roger Scruton on this matter

https://thecritic.co.uk/what-wine-meant-to-roger-scruton/

Scruton that rare person on whose death I felt a sense of personal loss. Reading him articulated for me that I was a conservative. His books line my bookshelves.

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