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xhevahir 3 hours ago

What's especially American about this remark isn't the experience of consuming alcohol in public. What is characteristically American, I think, is the assumption that we can pronounce a thing good or bad merely on the basis of its effect on the individual, with no regard for one's relationships with other people. Drinking in a pub is a social activity, and the alcohol is a lubricant for that activity. Yes, doing too much of it can cause great harm; doing any amount of it could cause some harm; it does not follow that the thing is a net detriment to society, and that it should be banned.

DiabloD3 3 hours ago | parent [-]

Maybe it is that way for people in the UK, or maybe people of a certain age group.

However, I am, as I said, an American, but also a Millennial. For many Millennials, drinking isn't a social activity, it is a form of quiet shame. We saw our parents and aunts and uncles and grandparents destroy their lives because of alcoholism, we lost friends and family because of being victims of drunk drivers, we saw people die of complications of a lifetime of drinking.

A lot of us simply chose not to repeat those mistakes as those mistakes effect the people around us in grave ways.

If anything, drinking is an anti-social activity, even if you do it entirely socially.

I just don't see the point in keeping it around.