It appears that covidmania is a bandwagon on which an anti-drink cultural, "temperance" movement has jumped with both feet.
There is so little logic or medical justification for so much that is associated with covidmania - masks being a terrific example - that the stigma against alcohol is another part of it.
Now, pubs cannot serve take-away drinks. You can go to a supermarket and buy as much liquor as you like, but not from a pub. It is almost as if a movement is set up that is taking advantage of the hysteria to try and destroy the drinks culture as much as possible.
Given an option between a drink and the vaccine, I will have no hesitation in making a swift and happy choice.
Depends what you mean by alcohol.
Mass produced stuff or that lacto-fermented liquid that went along with our age-old bodies.
Perhaps we should consider an average person - mayhap in their mature years - eating rubbish and full of five types of pills, not all of which are checked as to how they work with anything, let alone a new vaccine.
In other words, science is roulette.
Without precision and data, each life takes its chance. God forbid.
What was the base line of perfect health the doctors considered?
And when did that happen?
Can't remember where I read it, but someone was suggesting using the pubs as vaccine centres and offering a free pint if you have the jab. That will improve take up
More importantly, if there *is* a serious suggestion to use pubs as temporary vaccine centres - with pub owners quite rightly being paid for the use of their premises, which they have been forced to shut against their will - and the suggestion is rejected (I pause, as no doubt "the science" will find a reason) then perhaps we ought to very seriously assume that there is a barely concealed political-health agenda against pubs and the "drinking culture" in the UK.
It would fit, as the entire virus policy is predicated on the basis of taking risk and choice away from individuals,. Similarly, individuals should make a health assessment for themselves as to the risk of drinking based on guidance and their own circumstances.
But I can see where this is heading.






