originally posted by Yule Kim:
Do I believe alcohol has any health benefits? No.
for teh individualz, or for teh species?
fb. (channeling darwin, and teh memory of teh youth)
originally posted by Yule Kim:
Do I believe alcohol has any health benefits? No.
originally posted by robert ames:
originally posted by Yule Kim:
Do I believe alcohol has any health benefits? No.
Do I believe alcohol is increasing my risk of cancer and heart disease? Yes.
Will I continue drinking wine? Abso-fucking-lutely!
do i believe that alcohol has any social benefits? yep. any questions, watch babette's feast.
originally posted by fatboy:
originally posted by Yule Kim:
Do I believe alcohol has any health benefits? No.
for teh individualz, or for teh species?
fb. (channeling darwin, and teh memory of teh youth)
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by fatboy:
originally posted by Yule Kim:
Do I believe alcohol has any health benefits? No.
for teh individualz, or for teh species?
fb. (channeling darwin, and teh memory of teh youth)
Since drinking alcohol was hardly common before agriculture, which began to be practiced widely only 10-20,000 years ago, and homo sapiens have existed about 300,000 years (a pretty good run by the way, better than the average life of species, though certainly not the longest so far) with roughly their current genome, how do you calculate that alcohol could have affected the species?
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by fatboy:
originally posted by Yule Kim:
Do I believe alcohol has any health benefits? No.
for teh individualz, or for teh species?
fb. (channeling darwin, and teh memory of teh youth)
Since drinking alcohol was hardly common before agriculture, which began to be practiced widely only 10-20,000 years ago, and homo sapiens have existed about 300,000 years (a pretty good run by the way, better than the average life of species, though certainly not the longest so far) with roughly their current genome, how do you calculate that alcohol could have affected the species?
And if you hypothetically obtained the data, there'd be massive confounding factors of shift in diet, activity, population concentrations, etc. Is 300k years a good run for a mammalian species? I've never even thought about it.
To add to the conversation, here's the URL for an interesting rebuttal to Stockwell. It's too sweeping and polemical IMHO, but has some good citations.
Loading…
snowdon.substack.com
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
I just googled this and it turns out that my memory is off by ten. The average lifespan of a species is a million years. Mammals in general are 1 to 2 million. Trees and ants, though, can for for ten million.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Really, fabular fiction isn't a great basis for empirical conclusions. Art doesn't work that way. I'm with Yule on this issue.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by fatboy:
for teh individualz, or for teh species?
Since drinking alcohol was hardly common before agriculture, which began to be practiced widely only 10-20,000 years ago, and homo sapiens have existed about 300,000 years (a pretty good run by the way, better than the average life of species, though certainly not the longest so far) with roughly their current genome, how do you calculate that alcohol could have affected the species?
originally posted by fatboy:
at least in my corner of teh species, teh booze seems to play in important facilitatory role in reproduction.
fb.
originally posted by fatboy:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by fatboy:
for teh individualz, or for teh species?
Since drinking alcohol was hardly common before agriculture, which began to be practiced widely only 10-20,000 years ago, and homo sapiens have existed about 300,000 years (a pretty good run by the way, better than the average life of species, though certainly not the longest so far) with roughly their current genome, how do you calculate that alcohol could have affected the species?
i was thinking about the future rather than the past. at least in my corner of teh species, teh booze seems to play in important facilitatory role in reproduction.
fb.
Causes of the crisis
Wine consumption in France has been slowly but steadily declining for many years, but the latest crisis is more marked, and is caused by a number of factors.
France is now the world's largest wine producer, according to International Organisation of Vine and Wine (OIV) figures released in 2023, with an estimated production figure 3% above its last five-year average. This was despite some regions recording negative variations compared to 2022; Bordeaux and the South West were hit by downy mildew, and Languedoc-Roussillon suffered heatwaves and drought, for example.
A combination of high inflation rates and reduced spending power, post-pandemic lifestyle changes, global unrest, and a lack of consumer confidence has led to a decrease in demand for wine. The resulting surplus has caused prices to fall, putting growers in a precarious economic position and sparking angry protests.
Lots of bon mots in that article, though my favorite has to be "crisis distillation".originally posted by Peter Creasey:
Troubled Times for French Wine
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Well, they didn't exactly conduct the war against Germany in WWII. It was more conducted by the Germans. WWI is a closer question. But part of what makes it closer is whether it can be said that any of the participants can be described as sufficiently aware of what they were doing to be said to conduct anything.
originally posted by robert ames:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Well, they didn't exactly conduct the war against Germany in WWII. It was more conducted by the Germans. WWI is a closer question. But part of what makes it closer is whether it can be said that any of the participants can be described as sufficiently aware of what they were doing to be said to conduct anything.
the germans took WWI to france, via belgium, which they laid waste to for having the impunity of being in the bleedin' way. all spelled out in barbara tuchman's 'the guns of august'. which covers the first five months of WWI.