Observer wrote:
Rigpig wrote:
RobinXe wrote:
Rigpig wrote:
fisherman wrote:
Rigpig wrote:
What if it makes them try to take more care but actually prevents them from successfully achieving this for sustained periods?
Why are you able to put in one line what I failed to express clearly in lots of lines?
I don't know. But I do know a line of reasoning that makes perfect sense and ties in with our common knowledge of alcohol...
Are you
sure it just doesn't tie in with social prejudices regarding alcohol?
As sure as I can be.
As sure as my own experiences validate it, yes.
I don't follow. Are you asserting:
Quote:
it [consuming alcohol] makes them try to take more care but actually prevents them from successfully achieving this for sustained periods?
as a fact or suggesting it's a possibility?
If the former, how much alcohol? One unit? two? four? a sip?
A possibility, supported by anecdotal evidence and experience. I cannot substantiate any of the following and accept the fact that it conveniently demonstrates my suspicion.
In the whole of my working life I can think of only one occurence of a work colleague being involved in a road traffic crash during their normal daily routine, i.e. travelling to or from work.
In that same time I can point to a small handful (5 or 6) of seperate occaisions upon which, having been to a beer call after work and having drunk one or two beers (its usually beers) someone has been involved in an incident during their drive home. Most of these occured overseas (in Germany and Cyprus) where the drink/drive culture was perhaps more deply rooted than back in the UK. One of those was one of my subordinates who was breathalysed, found to be under the limit but was apportioned most of the blame for the incident. There are other incidents where the individual involved swears they were not to blame but were breathalysed and found to be over the limit.
It doesn't
prove anything, but it certainly suggests to me that had those individuals stuck to coke the the chances are some wouldn't have been involved in their incident.
Observer wrote:
I think it is reasonably well known that the perfomance of at least some tasks by at least some people in at least some circumstances is improved by a degree of alcohol consumption. Do you accept that is also true? Or is at least a possibility? In which case, how can that fit with your assertion?
I accept that for some indivduals this may be true but, with respect to driving, don't see how useable this information is in real world where other people will be adversely affected.