Does prohibition work? It does, to some extent. During the 13 years of alcohol prohibition in the United States (1920-1933) alcohol consumption was reduced significantly. — BC
the best thing would be to reason with him — NOS4A2
What we collectively need to do is recognize alcoholism as a disease — BC
The term alcoholic isn't commonly used any more. — Tom Storm
I tend to find people may recover if they have meaningful alternatives to get involved in and can reimagine themselves as non-drinkers. — Tom Storm
...the hollow horn
Plays wasted words, proves to warn
That he not busy being born is busy dying
What if he does not want help? — NOS4A2
a). The alcoholic is trying to quit the addiction and b). That the family wishes they would quit also. — Benj96
If we all looked at ethics in the "big picture" view, many? Most of us? would be compromised to some extent. — BC
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The increased price may prevent some young people from starting the vice, but it does also encourage illegal trade that circumvents the tax. This kind of legislation is relatively easy to pass in elected bodies, because no party wants to be seen as pro-addiction, and a segment of the voters always wants to see the sinners punished.
7d — Vera Mont
I think upping the price only adds to the financial stress of an addict and the paradoxic irony is that this stress can compound their coping mechanism — Benj96
I think the best approach is not to see addiction as something that needs to be fiscally penalised but rather use the revenue generated by the vice to support recovery. — Benj96
In that sense all taxes from smoking and alcohol could be appropriated to rehabilitation and public health campaigns. — Benj96
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