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Booze plans enough to drive you to drink



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Published Date: 20 June 2008
IF ever there was an example of why the SNP would make Scotland a confused, sad, mad and bad place to live, it must be its toxic brew of seemingly-attractive authoritarian ideas to change the drinking habits of Scotland's youth.
How's this for incoherence and self contradiction – the SNP wants to give the vote to sixteen and seventeen year-olds, saying they are mature enough, but believes that their older brothers and sisters of 18, 19 and 20, who are already able to vote an
d die for their country, are too immature to buy alcohol to drink in their home even though they can drink alcohol in a pub.

How's this for sadness – the vast majority of Scotland's young people grow up like we all did, by finding out the hard way what their tolerance for alcohol is without breaking the law. They don't deserve to be categorised and stereotyped as a problem. In fact, it is older people that are legally entitled to buy drink in pubs or at the offy that tend to get blootered, causing various degrees of trouble that have them put in a police cell.

The minister should know this – as a new MSP he once enjoyed the hospitality of the Metropolitan Police when legless.

How's this for madness – supermarkets are to have a checkout for alcohol sales – but when's a Tesco Express, a Spar, a Co-op, or a seven-eleven a store and not a supermarket? Are we really expected to go through two checkouts at Asda? Do Kenny MacAskill and Nicola Sturgeon, the ministers responsible for this puritanical pipedream, ever shop for themselves? Have they ever shopped at Christmas and New Year when the checkouts are like check-in at Edinburgh Airport on Trades holiday?

And how's this for badness – licensed premises will be expected to pay a social responsibility tax to go towards council social services – that's on top of the business rates that take no account of profitability, the large increase in the licence fee they are about to pay, the new Business District tax they are about to endure and the costs for putting seats out on the streets to try and win back the large number of customers they have lost (at great cost) because of the smoking ban.

How's his for daftness – instead of applying the existing laws available to prevent under-age purchase, minimum prices for alcoholic units are to be introduced to try and price cheap drink out of the hands of youngsters – forcing us ALL to pay more. Look for Scots booze cruises to Berwick, Hexham and Carlisle – is that what the SNP seriously wants?

We can't change our hard-drinking bevvy culture by applying more laws to our lifestyles – especially when we don't use the ones that exist. With policies like these, Kenny MacAskill and Nicola Sturgeon are enough to drive one to drink.

Eating out of pocket
PRICE inflation is yet again becoming everybody's chief concern, and if the growing cost of living isn't troubling you yet then remember that the cost of driving it back down is usually unemployment that hits as all one way or another.

Whether it's petrol, gas, rice or fish and chips, the direction is up and the prognosis for food costs is especially alarming – more so in the poorest countries where food will literally be priced out of peoples' stomachs.

Surely then it is high time for Alex Salmond to recognise that his alarmist fear of GM crops that will slash food prices is nothing other than junk science that perpetuates the starvation of the poor? Britain, and Scotland in particular, has a great deal of expertise on biosciences that is unexploited – if we are serious about filling people's bellies, should we not let people choose between expensive low-yield organics and low-cost high-yield new strains of wheat, rice and soya?

It's good to talk
TWO cheers for the latest plan to deliver a new Meadowbank Stadium on the same site.

I only give two cheers, and not three, as it is unclear how the cash-strapped council will fund the enterprise.

After all, it has just discovered that the costs of the unnecessary Usher Hall extension have climbed beyond the already revised estimate of £20 million and that it is going to have to compensate the orchestras that were promised they could use it to a tune of £1.25m. Then there's the black hole of £3.5m in the Commonwealth pool – a sum that has appeared all because some councillors scaled back a housing development that was going to help pay for the pool's refit.

The new Meadowbank – set to cost £25m – generates only £17m from the sale of land for housing. Who is going to make up that difference and what if some councillors decide to scale back housing at Meadowbank too? Maybe our councillors should start talking to each other?





The full article contains 829 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

20/06/2008 15:48:41
I've read the SNP document on their drink proposals - all 84 tedious pages of it.

One thing that immediately strikes the reader is that the word "intervention" appears every third line. This is a word much-favoured by temperance movements and prohibitionists and indeed much of the document indicates that these are the folks who've had most input to it.

I can only conclude that Kenny MacAskill has been on some sort of abstinence programme and has fallen in with a bad crowd. As a result, he clearly plans to put the whole of Scotland on a Twelve Step programme.

Of course he may succeed in getting some of this nonsense passed, but soon afterwards, Scotland will have a One Step programme to rid itself of its SNP habit.

Woe betide those who try to come between a man and a quiet pint...
2

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

20/06/2008 15:55:26
Indeed, the bunnyhuggers luddism regarding GM fod has borne its evil fruit: children in parts of the world are now starving to death.

There can be no surprise that Salmond should join them in their illogic. His dream of a "green Scotland" free of GM foods will be paid for through the nightmare of graveyards in Africa and elsewhere.

The SNP should make their motto "Let them eat oatcakes!"
3

tomias,

Edinburgh 20/06/2008 15:56:45
I will not be moved- I will not change my drinking habits- nobody with a public funded expese fraudulent account will diktat to me.
84 pages; 84 visits to defecation- sounds like lyrics to a song.
4

Alan B,

20/06/2008 16:22:39
Do think the move to stop selling alcohol to under 21 from off licences is probably a good move.

They do have to make sure it is policed as we see many under 18 with carry outs.

As a quid pro quo would like the age to get into pubs reduced to 17.

Ensuring alcohol is drunk in supervised premises ie pubs is probably the way to go.

Off course part of the problem is some people ruin things for the rest of the people.

I would also like to hours offlicences can sell alcohol to be relaxed. 10pm is far too early. Why can someone not come home for working late and then get a couple of cans or a bottle of wine.
5

Eve,

Scotland 20/06/2008 16:51:44
Hey Brain, it's a mad world! It's possbily the only sensible and ture thing you can say about the morden world.

The consumption of Alcohol has to be put in a more social context way of drinking and NOT an every day thing or a compation to see who can drink the most.

We live in a sosity which consumes too much alcohol. In Scotland we have one of the biggist cases of soures of the liver than any other developed country.

Something needs to be done to prevent people drinking too much.

In Pubs & Night Clubs the bar Staff can refuse to serve someone whos had to much to drink at home noone stops you from drinking when you've had to much. I admit I've done that in the past (between the ages 18-20)and ended up with a 2day hang over. Please note I'm NOT saying that older adult don't drink to obess. Just that I didn't cause I didn't like the 2day hang overs.


It's also important to remeber that Alcohol appears to a main nutrent in some people diet (i.e they are getting a large percentage of the energy from alchol) So exesive consumption of alcohol is also contrbuting to the Obsity epedemic.

Restritcions should be put the purchasing of alcohol in supermarkets and oflicences.
6

,

20/06/2008 17:43:00
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
7

Jimmy the Pie,

20/06/2008 19:30:23
Can't see many people motoring down south to buy booze. It would be financial madness the way fuel prices have gone!

Quite a stupid thing to say really.
8

JT,

20/06/2008 20:07:27
Once again its the average joe that going to get hit hardest. Stop picking on the person who works hard all week, wants a carry out and a couple of beers or bottle of wine on the weekend.
9

Kenny A,

21/06/2008 09:07:19
“The more corrupt the state, the more numerous the laws.” - Cornelius Tacitus
10

Mark Fae Partick,

Glasgow 21/06/2008 17:31:00
Personally I'm off down the park to play on the swings the morra after I hang ma washin oot and will be whistlin all the way there and back - before that's all banned too of course! Welcome to the 1930's Western Isles folks.

 

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Today's Vote

What more can be done to stop drunks congregating in the city’s streets?
The police should step up patrols and move them on
More use should be made of public drinking bans
Nothing, such people will always be with us

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