In colleges here in the U.S. people get drunk constantly and it's also where all of this woke brainwashing garbage is implanted in the minds of those who were dumb enough to go in the first place. Basically what I'm asking is does this create an effect of just completely numbing the students out and doubling down on how impulsive and suggestible they already are, thus causing them to act even more degenerate now that they're taught that it's acceptable to be more degenerate?
Is copious alcohol use a significant factor in the rise of cultural degeneracy?
Yes, and it is why they legalised the sale of alcohol in supermarkets in NZ.
>Be potential alcoholic
>Go to supermarket for bread and milk
>Come home with beer bread and milk
>Many moons later, going to supermarket for bream and milk returns in beer but no bread and milk.
>Jews win.
I see.
Yes. At its core frequent alcohol consumption is escapism. Escapism is the drive to ignore problems. Same as vidya, being a coomer, etc.
Bumperino because this is one of the few genuine threads on Any Forums right now among a myriad of shill threads.
OP is onto something, alcohol is one of many a weapons used against the European people.
I don't think so. I just think people need to know when they've had enough.
Alcohol, like many things, is a symptom. Europeans have been drinking alcohol since fucking forever. The problem isn't the drink, it's the culture around it.
Thanks fren.
I've been 'legally' literally everyday since 21. I am 35 now. I have trad wife and strong warrior son and live on my own off grid homestead which I own outright. My drunk impulsives led to this glorious life.
P.s. do opposite of what the jew says.
No it has no effect. People drunk far more in the past
I don't know about the US but in Europe alcohol consumption is decreasing everywhere especially among the young.
Zoomer's parents were of the millennial generation who drank their asses off in the 90s and 2000s (when alcohol culture peaked) so I suppose not getting drunk is in part a natural rebellion in the young, but also a response to economic factors and increased health-consciousness.