Ride-Hailing Apps Have Allowed More Binging and Increased Demand For Bartenders (economist.com) 110
A study published last week analyzed ridesharing's effects on binge drinking and found that it increased heavy drinking by around 20% and increased employment at bars and restaurants by an average of 2%. The Economist reports: A new study by three economists -- Jacob Burgdorf and Conor Lennon of the University of Louisville, and Keith Teltser of Georgia State University -- finds that the widespread availability of ride-sharing apps has indeed made it easier for the late-night crowd to binge. By matching data on Uber's availability with health surveys from America's Centers for Disease Control, the authors find that on average alcohol consumption rose by 3%, binge drinking -- where a person downs four or five drinks in two hours -- increased by 8%, and heavy drinking -- defined as three or more instances of binge drinking in a month -- surged by 9% within a couple of years of the ride-hailing company coming to town. Increases were even higher in cities without public transport, where the presence of Uber led average drinking to rise by 5% and instances of binge drinking to go up by around 20%. (Heavy drinking still rose by 9%.) Remarkably, excessive drinking was actually declining before Uber's appearance, giving further evidence that the firm's arrival affected behavior.
If people are likelier to drink a lot, but less likely to drive drunk, it is hard to say what the overall public-health impact of ride-hailing firms has been. That said, there is one group of individuals who clearly benefit from the presence of Uber, Lyft and others: bartenders. Messrs Burgdorf, Lennon and Teltser find that employment at bars and restaurants increases by an average of 2% whenever Uber enters the market.
If people are likelier to drink a lot, but less likely to drive drunk, it is hard to say what the overall public-health impact of ride-hailing firms has been. That said, there is one group of individuals who clearly benefit from the presence of Uber, Lyft and others: bartenders. Messrs Burgdorf, Lennon and Teltser find that employment at bars and restaurants increases by an average of 2% whenever Uber enters the market.
Re:largely due to the mismanagement of taxis (Score:5, Insightful)
...Many of these people were skilled professional drivers who took pride in being a cabbie. Now the pay is so low that no self-respecting person would ever consider driving cab, or a sedan, as a career. we've devalued the worth of entire lines of employment simply in order to make the rich and powerful feel even richer and more powerful.
And I wonder how we felt about chauffeurs when they went out of style. Did the microwave come along in order to make the rich and powerful feel even richer and more powerful by replacing a cook?
Not every measure of progress is attributed to greed. Let's not overlook the fact that the "professional" job you're referring to will likely be replaced by an autonomous system within the next decade or two. Is removing the distracted addict or drugged/drunk driver off the road and working to eliminate 40,000 American deaths every year a "devaluing" effort towards every human driving profession, or is it simply the same progress that has eliminated human professions before?
Don't like the current system? Start your own. But let's face it; even if you were able to start a service and we all paid each other directly and eliminated damn near every other expense, someone would STILL be bitching about the fact that some greedy fuck at the top is shaving 3% off every electronic transaction, even though that greedy fuck is providing the very service that allows you to transact in your business. You're sure as hell not going to get everyone to start paying in cash again. Who's rich enough to have cash on them? People are so "poor" they're hailing Ubers and binge drinking at bars every night (where it's cheap to drink of course).
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Re: largely due to the mismanagement of taxis (Score:5, Insightful)
. Once all of these legally operating cab companies fold Uber will increase prices because, what company will be in existance?
A market of competing rideshare companies. Eventually, a market of robot Johnny Cabs.
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Sure, if you want to ride one right now you would have to visit Chandler, AZ. The areas served will gradually increase with time and experience.
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Re: largely due to the mismanagement of taxis (Score:4, Insightful)
...People are going to drink alcohole, the most destructive drug in the world, it's just legal to buy.
To clarify, we have established laws that make it legal for grown ass adults to buy and consume alcohol. Also known as those humans we trust with drivers licenses, cigarettes, guns, drugs, children, and even our lives because we assume they are responsible enough.
Establishments such as this golf course need to be held accountable to a higher standard for allowing their clientele to drive away if they had any knowledge that alcohol was consumed...
OK, let's make a deal. I'll agree to this asinine hand-holding idea of yours, as soon as those same grown ass adults give up their voting rights. I don't need to hear from the fucking children who can't adult anymore, and I'm tired of this worn-out excuse that businesses should be held accountable for the actions of adults instead of teaching responsibility, because the end result is increased costs for everyone to account for the irresponsible.
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I'm 58, back then my parents never had DWI accidents coming back from a night of drinking at the Elks Lodge, they just had 'accidents'. I'm talking in the 1960's. A golf course is a place where the wealthy go to drink while hitting a little white ball as far away from themselves as they can (some call this activity an actual 'sport', (eye-roll)) These wealthy people pay high fees in order to play this rich, white mans 'sport' as an excuse to do business while consuming large amounts of drugs (alcohol in this case, a drug is a drug is a drug, no excuses should be permitted here.) The owners of these golf courses know very well that alcohol is being consumed while the users are playing. No one should be allowed to drive away without at least passing a breathalyzer test, fauly though they may be.
I'm glad we're at least using the word fault here. Now let's add the words grown ass adult when referring to the one you want to treat like a damn child, while putting all of the legal and financial burden on a business to babysit them. How much do the innocent have to pay for a round of golf now? There's apparently a lot of liability in running a golf course under your laws, and the business owner sure as hell isn't gonna eat that. Once again, everyone gets punished for the crimes of the perpetually st
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The rich can afford to hire a driver...
Most of those rich old men who play golf and get drunk will be driven home afterwards, the golf club parking lots around here are full of luxury cars with sleeping drivers.
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Once all of these legally operating cab companies fold Uber will increase prices
Then everyone will switch to Lyft.
When Uber and Lyft temporarily pulled out of Austin, other ridesharing companies were operating within a week.
Predatory pricing [wikipedia.org] only works when there are barriers to entry.
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I have the darkest tint available on my car. Very much not okay. I also drive a hybrid and go 60-65 in the slower lanes of traffic at all times. Neither deputy no highway patrol in California has ever bothered to pull me over.
Of course, tinted windows isn't a moving violation so it doesn't cause points and at worse gets marked down as a non-fixable violation. That's worse case scenario. Best case if you get pulled over is they give you a fix it ticket and you just fix it and find an officer to sign off on i
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Uber is purposely driving cab companies around the globe out of business by their unsustainable pricing
It's not unsustainable pricing. I would gladly pay 50% more to take an Uber over a taxi, for many reasons, among others I can actually get an Uber reliably, and also because so far no Uber driver has ever tried to rip me off.
Taxi drivers? Screw them because they try to screw me.
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Re: largely due to the mismanagement of taxis (Score:2)
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Re: largely due to the mismanagement of taxis (Score:2)
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Uber only requires that a driver has a drivers license and a late model vehicle.
This depends on where you live. In Quebec for instance, Uber drivers must have a special license and an extra inspection
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Regulated taxi companies require that drivers acquire a yearly 'hack license' that must be approved by the local town/police department that shows that the driver has no felonies to his/her arrest record, else they are not allowed to 'hack' public places or pick up 'hails' from some random person flagging a cab from the roadside. Uber circumvents all these details by calling themselves a 'ride sharing app'.
Uber has this as well in some Jurisdictions. When I was visiting Massachusetts last month, all of the Uber drivers had a notice in the app stating that they had passed the criminal record check required to drive for a ride share app.
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So once all the taxi companies have gone out of business and Uber-type companies are the only way to get a ride and charge exorbitant rates, nobody will ever ever start up a taxi company. Really?
People keep bring up these scenarios as though they were something that might actually happen.
Reality says otherwise.
And so does theory.
http://daviddfriedman.com/The_Machinery_of_Freedom_.pdf#%B1%E5%CFG%17%B6%B0%23%CF%BC%E4X3%959%12chapter_6
Re: largely due to the mismanagement of taxis (Score:2)
And I wonder how we felt about chauffeurs when they went out of style.
"Out of style?" Just because something's too upscale to appear on your radar hardly means it's gone out of style.
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And I wonder how we felt about chauffeurs when they went out of style.
"Out of style?" Just because something's too upscale to appear on your radar hardly means it's gone out of style.
People who can afford chauffeurs don't call them chauffeurs. They call them "drivers".
A big reason to use a driver is liability. If you are worth $100M and cause an accident, you can be sued for far more than your insurance cap.
But if you have a private driver, operating a vehicle owned by an LLC, you are protected.
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Uber isn't progress though. Uber is just a taxi service with a shitter business model. It's a regression.
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Even in American, those who know only use the microwave sparingly or on very specific things. Like maybe heating up a cup of water or reheating some leftovers that can be properly reheated. Some leftovers you got to reheat on the stove top for best results.
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So what, its their body and its called freedom! (Score:5, Insightful)
If people want to binge drink more because they know they can safely get home, why should that be a reason for the rest of us to stop them. This explicitly is talking about when people are not driving drunk. Can't we just let people live their lives. If they want to do things we disapprove with their bodies, why can't we respect their autonomy.
This is why the war on drugs is so awful. Why do we need to micromanage other people's lives. If they want to drink more alcohol, then let them. And why should the rest if us somehow have less access to ridesharing because other people binge drink more.
What about all the people who use the service to go out who otherwise could not? Maybe they are disabled or maybe they live in an unsafe area and don't have a car. Maybe they are running late to work and it will get them to work on time. Why should the rest of us have to have our freedom constricted because of the decisions by some to drink more alcohol.
If you must deal with alcohol, deal with it directly by raising taxes on it and then spending the money on the externalities like mental health. But don't hurt the rest of us and stop us getting around.
Re: So what, its their body and its called freedom (Score:2)
Well, it's true that free people will do what they want, and so they should.
However, it's worth noting that there is a lot of historical evidence to show that, as a civilisation, we are all harmed when we allow self destructive behaviour to become normalised and widespread.
No, I don't know how to balance those things, I just think it's worth acknowledging that it is a bit more complex than just declaring absolute freedom from regulation in the personal space as some inviolable principle.
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There is no end to talking about how we can be harmed by other people's behavior in indirect ways. We are harmed when people are irresponsible with managing their money and take on too much debt. We are harmed when people go to bed too late. We are ha
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It also seems strange that the great harms like homelessness, inequality, and unemployment are in many respects ignored
A major factor in a lot of homelessness is excessive drinking.
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Re: So what, its their body and its called freedo (Score:2)
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Well, if you're homeless...you gotta have something to do for entertainment, I mean, not a lot of quality TV or internet surfing to be enjoyed living out of that shopping cart.
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They steal the fucking alcohol. I see it every day in my job. In cali, we made theft under $1k just a misdemeanor as well. Use to be $500. So we are encouraging thieves by being lax on the laws.
We have decided we don't actually care about them at all. It's pathetic. We live in the richest state and yet have the biggest homeless problem. It's infuriating. Makes me really want to leave the state but not willing to divorce to leave.
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Throwing them in jail is an expensive solution and doesn't actually solve any of the problems. The homeless are congregating in California thanks to the fact that they can live outside all year around without worrying about dying of heat in the summer or freezing to death in the winter.
A proper fix would be to treat it like the mental health problem that it is. In some cases that means treatment for whatever mental illness they are struggling with and in other cases, the military needs to step up and start
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I imagine the climate has a lot to do with the levels of homelessness too... If you're going to live rough, best to do it somewhere where it doesn't get down to freezing temperatures.
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if we tolerated other people more and regulated things only when absolutely necessary. Yes that means strong anti monopoly laws and making sure the water has almost no lead. Yes it means not tolerating companies forcing complex EULAs down people's necks. But lets just try to minimize it. Otherwise by trying to regulate too much, we fail at the most important things.
In other words the government should stop people from doing things I don't like but let me do whatever I want. How very hypocritical of you.
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No, I don't know how to balance those things, I just think it's worth acknowledging that it is a bit more complex than just declaring absolute freedom from regulation in the personal space as some inviolable principle.
The US has come a long way since the days of the Prohibitionist movement. The movement itself was a sign of the times, however. The social ills of an unregulated alcohol market were felt across the country. But Prohibition had its own social ills tied to it. The US then proceeded to adopt more or less sensible regulation of the industry and quietly adopted social norms around alcohol that have changed little in the past fifty. The change was as much cultural as it was legislative. I don't see increases in
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People seem to forget that prohibition was NOT exactly a total failure. It was not until 1960 that per capita drinking returned to per-prohibition levels. As you say sensible regulation and other action in the proceeding years helped address a lot of the ills more effectively than an outright ban on alcohol consumption did but at the time Temperance movement people were right about some things.
One of the things that gets left out in a lot of prohibition discussions is the incidence of domestic violence de
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People seem to forget that prohibition was NOT exactly a total failure.
True. Organized Crime found it a wonderful time, and was enabled to become firmly entrenched in the USA. A true American success story.
It was not until 1960 that per capita drinking returned to per-prohibition levels. As you say sensible regulation and other action in the proceeding years helped address a lot of the ills more effectively than an outright ban on alcohol consumption did but at the time Temperance movement people were right about some things.
One of the things that gets left out in a lot of prohibition discussions is the incidence of domestic violence decreased by 50% (considering how likely that was undreported in the era as compared to now the effect might have been bigger than that!). Prohibition probably save the lives of a lot women and children!
So your thesis that alcohol leads to to men beating and killing women and children tells us that men would return to beating and killing women and children by 1960.
Did it?
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So your thesis that alcohol leads to to men beating and killing women and children tells us that men would return to beating and killing women and children by 1960.
To the first part:
Yes excessive alcohol use does correlate highly with men abusing women and children.
To the second part:
No as stated "other actions in the proceeding years". Expansion of women's shelters, CPS where children are taken out of abusive homes, counseling and anti-addiction programs etc.. These things work at least to some degree.
Prohibition worked kinda like how amputating an infected limb treated the patient, we have use antibiotics today mostly; except in extreme cases. Like removing a limb
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So your thesis that alcohol leads to to men beating and killing women and children tells us that men would return to beating and killing women and children by 1960.
To the first part: Yes excessive alcohol use does correlate highly with men abusing women and children.
And yet, many men drink alcohol, yet do not. Explain how this is alcohol that make me - a man (apprently women are immune to alcohol's effects ?), beat my wife?
Sorry, but just like courts do not accept the excuse that "alcohol made me do it", as a substanmce that lowers inhibition, you have to have a violent core to do such things.
No as stated "other actions in the proceeding years". Expansion of women's shelters, CPS where children are taken out of abusive homes, counseling and anti-addiction programs etc.. These things work at least to some degree.
Don't forget women's suffrage. Your examples probably had a much bigger impact than criminalizing alcohol consumption.
Don't forget, criminalizing alcohol consumption in
Re: So what, its their body and its called freedo (Score:2)
People seem to forget that prohibition was NOT exactly a total failure.
Not for everyone; among other things, it led to the creation of La Cosa Nostra as we know it.
Re: So what, its their body and its called freedo (Score:2)
Prohibition probably save the lives of a lot women and children!
You haven't actually learned anything about Prohibition, I see.
Re: So what, its their body and its called freedo (Score:2)
The social ills of an unregulated alcohol market were felt across the country.
And they paled compared to the social ills of "regulated"one. Do you have a point??
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it's worth noting that there is a lot of historical evidence to show that, as a civilisation, we are all harmed when we allow self destructive behaviour to become normalised and widespread.
There are all kinds of self-destructive behavior out there, some of which threaten civilization. Psychotic religious belief is an example, but competing with monopoly taxi companies, not so much.
Re: So what, its their body and its called freedo (Score:1)
Actually, militant economically motivated ideologies have liked more people than religion.
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No, they *can* be addictive, and some are formulated specifically to increase addiction...
But this is not necessarily always the case. I had a couple of beers at a social gathering several weeks ago, i've not had any since. I don't want more or higher doses and probably won't have any more until there's another social gathering of the right kind.
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So if you don't binge drink but do like to drink, you're screwed now, because of the binge drinkers that cause the increased taxation. I live in Scotland. Drinking in parks in some cities at least is forbidden because people like to get wasted and make a fuss in the few sunny days of the year. If I want to have a drink at the park on a nice day, by law I'm prohibited to do so (even as I drink moderately), because of the fuckheads t
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Well instead of blanket heavy taxation and controls, make alcohol consumption a privilege that is taken away if abused. Have stricter ID checks on all alcohol purchases, and deny sales to anyone who's recently been convicted of an alcohol related offense, where supplying alcohol to someone who's banned is also an offense.
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Micomanaging becomes more of a problem with universal healthcare. Now your taxes are paying for a nation of people with failing livers and other complications. But I suppose the same argument can be made for private insurance.
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Not really, otherwise other countries would be full of alcoholics if it was a problem.
The truth is, most people are adults and they'll be responsible. Some will binge every now and again, but that happens regardless. Same with people who drink to constant excess and harm their livers -
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If they want to do things we disapprove with their bodies, why can't we respect their autonomy.
Their autonomy should end when they start influencing others. I don't mind people who drink and leave others alone. Unfortunately there is a positive correlation between number of binge drinkers and number of drunken brawls, number of idiots stumbling onto the road drunk j-walking, number of angry idiots who abuse their family while drunk.
Sure that is not going to be stopped by doing anything with Uber, but my comment is more general. Uber good because drink driving lower, but drinking overall still bad.
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"If you must deal with alcohol"
-1, off topic
The article does not propose any response, let alone imply an obligation to carry out a response. You are trying to rebut a position nobody took.
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Why should the rest of us have to have our freedom constricted because of the decisions by some to drink more alcohol....If you must deal with alcohol, deal with it directly by raising taxes on it...
And how exactly is raising taxes on all alcohol somehow not punishing everyone in order to deal with those who abuse it?
Part of my freedoms is paying a reasonable price for products and services, not paying a 30% surcharge on it because of idiots who can't act sensibly.
Unfortunately, your suggestion is the lesser of two evils, because today my tax dollars are paying for prisoners instead.
four or 5? (Score:3)
What? surely more than 5 counts as well.
also that's not a proper binge. thats under a six pack? one of the problems with alcohol stats and alcohol information is that the amounts normally put on as mega drinkers are so low that everyone is a mega drinker, so nobody pays any attention to it. binge drinking? four drinks? two hours? - what ? like, people don't even want to read the rest of any study like that since they're actually consuming 12+ units on a weekend night on regular basis and 24 units if it's a party.. 32 if it's midsummer.
(been a non alcohol drinker for some 10 years myself, acute pancreatitis at under 30y.. )
Re:four or 5? (Score:4, Interesting)
Alcohol consumption numbers are so muddled by the units of measure.
Except in the summer, I only drink liquor and IMHO, 4 liquor drinks served the way they make them around here in 2 hours and I'm kind of drunk. I'd wager this is around 8 ounces of liquor based on the comparative effects when I'm mixing and measuring myself.
The people I've known who drink 6+ beers are often drinking American light beer, which is pretty low in alcohol content.
FWIW, I do use Uber when dining out anymore partly because of the alcohol consumption, but really it's like 1 extra drink, maybe 3 tops. It's also due to the fucking parking being so awful as well.
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You are why we had prohibition. Or your attitude. Why don't we also add prescription drugs to your list of shit people can't do and leave the house. At the rate your going, we will have nearly everyone forced to stay home.
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At the rate your going, we will have nearly everyone forced to stay home.
Or use a fucking Uber!
Idiot.
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My understanding is that Europe generally is much bigger on drink servings being standardized relative to alcohol content, or "units" so that you get the same units of alcohol across any beverage type.
It mostly doesn't work that way here where I am in the US. There's a lot of variance on liquor pours between establishments. Most places seem to run around 1-2 ounces, but it's not automated. I've seen bartenders just pour out of the bottle into the serving glass, I've seen them use measures pretty exactly
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I don't drink them, I drink whisky or tequila on the rocks.
A lot of it is pour dependent. There are places that definitely pour bigger, and I've found that many places pour way more tequila than whisky or other liquor.
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Yeah, bartenders are way too heavy handed. My drink of preference is a Cuba Libre. Made *in the right proportions* it is a delightful and tasty drink. Half a glass of rum with a float of soda on top is not pleasant to drink.
It's so bad I need to order it as "Cuba Libre - one AND ONLY ONE shot of rum, fill with CokaCola, wedge of lime". And even then half the time I need to send it back.
I want a nice drink with dinner, not to get hammered.
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I usually have the opposite experience, any drink that's mixed, especially with soda, is mostly mixer.
I quit ordering Old Fashioneds (except where I know they make them right) because I got sick of getting small drinks bulked out with club soda.
I actually had an argument with the bartender at one restaurant because he insisted the glass was to be topped with soda, which dilutes the drink beyond comprehension, especially as the ice melts faster because of all the excess warm soda.
More Binging? (Score:3)
Microsoft's investment in Uber has finally worked out for them!
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Did they Control for Politics? (Score:1)
My one question is: did they control for the dipshit in the white house that makes everyone want to drink heavily?
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Socialize responsibly? (Score:3)
Utah went to a BAC level of .05 which is lower than the .08 mandated by the U.S., and I would not be surprised if this became a trend. That's two drinks for most people and one for smaller women. Good luck trying to decide if you're "legally impaired" at a .05 BAC, and say "goodbye" to splitting a bottle of wine. I think that alcohol consumption was going down because people are afraid of the stigma of a DWI arrest, and with that no longer being a fear, people are free to be themselves.
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Most European countries have much stricter alcohol limits while driving than the U.S. From link below: The most common standard for legal blood alcohol limit while driving in Western Europe is 0.5 . In most countries of Eastern Europe ranges from 0.0 to 0.3 .
You can get a DWI with a BAC of 0.0? That's pretty strict.
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Good luck trying to decide if you're "legally impaired" at a .05 BAC, and say "goodbye" to splitting a bottle of wine.
You went driving after half a bottle of wine? Asshole.
So there are posters unhappy there are more jobs & (Score:2)
There has always been complaints about cab's. Rude drivers, dirty vehicles, never knowing when they would show up. These are all things that could have been known and easily correctable by the companies themselves. To complain that they have lost business without recognizing why seems to
Re:So there are posters unhappy there are more job (Score:2)
"So there are posters unhappy there are more jobs & fewer drivers on the road impaired. "
Literally no one is making this complaint.
"And fewer people being killed or hurt due to having other means of getting places when they do drink is also bad?"
Fewer people being killed or hurt due to one method does not mean fewer people killed or hurt overall. The anecdotal effect is that the sober driver also helped restrain the drinkers when not in the car, so now with a lower ratio of sober people there is more co
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Ever talked to a lyft/uber driver? Asked them if it was a full time job?
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"So there are posters unhappy there are more jobs & fewer drivers on the road impaired. "
Literally no one is making this complaint.
Maybe you posted too soon. The WCTU never went away. And we've picked up MADD.
There are plenty of people that are pissed off that one of their biggest tools in prohibition has been sidestepped.
A sort of similar situation to conservative christians claiming that the HPV vaccines somehow encourge children to have premarital sex.
Prohibitionists want to make alcohol illegal, and conservative christians..... well, they are just weird.
education (Score:1)
Career (Score:1)
Binging? Like... Googling? (Score:3)
What is Binging? Is it the verb related to the search engine Bing, like Googling is to Google?
Or do you mean bingeing, i.e. relating to the verb 'to binge'?
Sure, go ahead, send me a link to a dictionary that says "actually, both are acceptable. Nope, you're wrong and so is the damn dictionary!
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What is Binging? Is it the verb related to the search engine Bing, like Googling is to Google?
Or do you mean bingeing, i.e. relating to the verb 'to binge'?
Sure, go ahead, send me a link to a dictionary that says "actually, both are acceptable. Nope, you're wrong and so is the damn dictionary!
Binging is using Microsoft's search engine, you insensitive clod!
Blazing Flash of the Obvious (Score:1)
As far as the issues with drinking, higher domestic violence and the other non-self destructive consequences of drinking, i agree with Raisey-raison's comments posted earlier. Deal with things like "...on the externalities like mental health"
Bing-ing? (Score:2)
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which is enough to lead them to drink . . . :)
hawk
Binging (Score:2)
The health impact is more system-wide (Score:2)
"If people are likelier to drink a lot, but less likely to drive drunk, it is hard to say what the overall public-health impact of ride-hailing firms has been."
The major public health concern isn't the DWI crashes or the falling-down sleeping-in-the-alley alcoholics...it's things that encourage an already high level of drinking to go higher. The UK has a reputation for high levels of "functional" binge drinking. It's not so much that people are disabled or unable to work -- people just drink more overall th
ride-sharing has allowed it, but... (Score:2)
Remember, use Bing to hail your ride! (Score:2)
And never ever binge alcohol or vape stuff, it's bad.
This message brought to you by the Speling is Gud and Stuff Counsel
A clear win (Score:2)
If people are likelier to drink a lot, but less likely to drive drunk, it is hard to say what the overall public-health impact of ride-hailing firms has been.
Converting the infliction of harm on unwilling third parties (other road users) into merely voluntarily undertaken health risks to self, is *clearly* a win.
If you’re so caught up in authoritarian health paternalism that you can’t see that, there’s clearly something wrong with your moral compass.
A clear win - not so sure (Score:1)
The tendency is that when heavy drinking goes down so does (domestic) violence. When drinking goes up...
Not here by saying that one thing leads to the other, I lean towards the idea that both are symptoms of something else.
I've been pretty drunk in my time . . . (Score:2)
Improvement? (Score:1)
I can remember the 1970s. People would go to parties and get stewed. I mean fricking drunk to the point they could barely walk to the car and then they'd drive away like that. They usually made it home.
I don't see that any more. Maybe it's happening, just not at the parties I'm at.