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Weekly Worker 557 Thursday December 16 2004
Binge-boozing Britain
Blair and his government tell us that we should all be very concerned
about the excessive drinking habits of the British population, particularly
at Christmas. Mark Fischer reckons they are trying to police more than
our alcohol intake
The
Portman Group - a body funded by the drinks industry to promote sensible
drinking - produced a cinema advert in the weeks before Christmas. In
it, a woman is first shown in a business suit at work. Later, we see the
same woman, stinking drunk, throwing up and in the gutter, supported by
one of her friends.
Portman Groups chief executive, Jean Coussins, underlined the cautionary
message in case this crude morality tale had failed: Alcohol affects
your judgement. You might go out as the sensible Ms Jeckyll but quickly
turn into the infamous Ms Hyde after a heavy drinking session. Like the
young woman in our advert, you could end up in the gutter making a show
of yourself and putting yourself, and others, at risk (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4056085.stm).
Of course, for many young people an important reason for alcohol consumption
is precisely to bring out the Jeckyll in them - to be more
confident, self-assured and pushy, particularly with the opposite sex.
True, the vision of a legless pisshead regurgitating a kebab is not very
sexy, but then the vast majority of drinkers do not end their evenings
this way. However, finger-wagging initiatives such as that of the Portman
Group are typical of the way that over the past period the establishment
has identified the alcohol consumption of large sections of the population
- in particular working class youth - as an important social problem that
must be policed, regulated and subject to prescriptive intervention by
the state.
Communists should reject these initiatives. That is not enough, however.
We are hardly indifferent to the moral and cultural level of our class
- as revealed by the way in which tens of thousands of us choose to unwind
in the meagre amount of leisure time allowed us in contemporary capitalist
society. Descriptions in works of fiction such as The ragged-trousered
philanthropists, LAs-samoir or Love on the dole of the squalid degeneration
of working people fuelled by alcohol addiction derive their enduring artistic
power from the sad fact that they depict a real aspect of proletarian
life. Many of us know of working class families thrown into despair by
alcoholism.
Yet the governments nanny-state, soft-focus, authoritarian initiatives
in this field actually negate the very thing that could engender a civilised
attitude to the use of all recreational drugs, alcohol included. That
is, the conscious control of society by the vast majority of people living
in it.
War
The government has been accused of sending out mixed messages on the level
of alcohol consumption. Its promise to effectively abolish licensing hours
has been attacked by some as standing in contradiction to its professed
aim of clamping down on binge Britain. The Civic Trust, for example, ticks
off the government because The alcohol-fuelled, late-night economy
is already causing significant problems for local communities in relation
to crime and disorder, noise and nuisance. At night many town and city
centres have become highly threatening and uncivilised environments, dominated
by throngs of drunk and disorderly people who deter others from seeking
a quiet night out and create problems for long-suffering residents
(http://www.ias.org.uk/licensing/reform_communities.pdf).
In fact, the 2002 queens speech promised that, when it comes, the
legislation to abolish fixed opening hours will be complemented
by the introduction of a range of conditions to reduce anti-social
behaviour. It is important to remember that licensing hours were
actually introduced in the first place as a measure of social control
rather than public health, a means of policing the working class. Seen
in this light, the governments supposed liberalisation is actually
a shift within the repressive interference of the state from the supply
to the demand side of the problem.
Historical context is important here. Prior to the early part of the 20th
century, government legislation in the sphere of alcohol was limited and
mostly associated with attempts to combat public health problems caused
by the provision of cheap spirits. The impulse to deal with this social
problem was brilliantly propagandised in the 1740s by the caricaturist
Hogarth with his famous Gin Lane representations of squalor
and disease, contrasted with the prosperity and ruddy health of Beer
Lane. It was against this background that in 1751 the government
introduced a heavy tax on spirits, along with strict controls on the number
of outlets. This move is credited with causing the historical shift of
the national tipple from gin to beer.
The later growth of state interference in the provision of alcohol, however,
had less to do with concerns over health; more to do with the imperative
to discipline the proletariat, particularly during war.
For instance, the 1869 Wine and Beerhouse Act restored the power of the
local magistrates over the licensing of premises. Given the fact that
many of these middle class reactionaries were enthusiastic supporters
of the temperance movement - an anti-working class campaign of social
control launched in 1835 - the results were predictable. For example,
between 1904 and 1914 1,000 licenses disappeared in Birmingham, a city
where the magistrates were apparently especially zealous against the demon
drink and its effects on the labouring classes.
It is worthwhile here identifying the clear anti-working class nature
of the temperance movement. The organisation of the factory system in
the 19th century created a mass industrial proletariat. There was an urgent
need to impose on this new, raw and volatile class two forms of social
regulation. First, an external policeman through rigid industrial
discipline with an insistence on punctuality and sobriety. Second, an
internal policeman in the form of an ideological model of
the honest working man - deferential, patriotic, god-fearing,
family-orientated and sober.
It was not easy. In Britain, the campaign against lateness, drunkenness
and the various forms of political and moral laxity among
workers was energetically conducted through ideological channels - from
the pulpit and through the various christian temperance organisations.
These patronising bourgeois philanthropic initiatives found their counterpart
in socialistically inclined societies like the Socialist Prohibition Fellowship
- organisations that underlined the continuing influence of methodism
rather than Marxism in the workers movement in Britain. For such
groups, surveying the profound harm caused in working class communities
by alcohol abuse, it seemed a matter of common sense that the first precondition
of a working class embrace of socialism was that it forsake the booze.
Absurd idealism, of course - although some members of these rather odd
groups found themselves at the founding congress of the CPGB in 1920 and
included such notables as Willie Gallagher and Bob Stewart. The central
message of the abstentionist trends was a reactionary one, however.
Responding to their German equivalents in 1891, Karl Kautsky wrote vividly
of the need for the working class to maintain its sphere of collective
life free from surveillance and interference of the state: The sole
bulwark of the proletariats political freedom
is the tavern
the only place where the lower classes can congregate and discuss
their common problems. Without the tavern the German proletariat has not
only no social, but also no political life
Should the temperance
movement succeed
in persuading the mass of German workers to avoid
the tavern, and, outside the workplace, to concentrate on that family
portrayed to them in such glowing terms
the cohesion of the proletariat
would be broken; it would be reduced to a mass of atoms, disconnected
and consequently incapable of resistance (quoted in E Rosenhaft
Beating the fascists? Cambridge 1983, p12).
In Britain, we have the same intertwined history of pubs and radical politics
- a fact that underlines the reactionary nature of socialist temperance
groups, whatever their subjective intentions.
However, ideological temperance campaigns - whether they originated from
above or below - had a limited effect. In fact, it was the massive eruption
of direct state control into all spheres of society associated with the
outbreak of World War I that had the most profound implications for the
way alcohol consumption would henceforth be policed.
Just days after hostilities broke out, Lloyd Georges government
passed the first Defence of the Realm Act. This made it an offence - punishable
by severe fines and up to six months imprisonment - to deal with a sailor
or soldier with intent to make him drunk. A few weeks later
came the Intoxicating Liquor (Temporary Restrictions) Act, which allowed
for the closure of particular pubs thought to be undermining the war effort
in some way. Under the provisions of the last Defence of the Realm Act
(May 19 1915), a central control board was established for the purpose
of imposing liquor licensing in all areas where excessive
drinking could be held to be impeding the war effort.
Publicans were enjoined to ensure that essential workers did not idle
away their time in the pub when they should have been engaged on
war production
and restricted opening and closing times were introduced
to give legislative force to this new attempt to regiment working class
leisure (despite the patriotism engendered by the war, these restrictive
measures were deeply unpopular and saw waves of protests). These measures
had been extended by the end to the war to all the main centres of British
population, covering 38 million people out of a total population of 41
million.
Thus, the origins of Britains licensing hours as they stand today
lie not in the concern for public health, but in the massive attempt of
the bourgeois state to regiment society for imperialist war. As Lloyd
George graphically put it, Drink is doing more damage in the war
than all the German submarines put together ... We are fighting Germany,
Austria and drink, and the greatest of all these deadly foes is drink.
Cafe culture?
Clearly, the contemporary form of establishment control over this aspect
of working class social life is set to change with the governments
plans to abolish the licensing hours and to create what Hazel Blears,
the home office minister, has optimistically dubbed a continental
cafe bar culture.
There are two aspects to the governments strategy. First, the identification
of (often debatable) medical dangers associated with alcohol consumption.
Second, direct policing measures.
From the medical angle, the January 26 conference announced by the Institute
of Alcohol Studies is fairly typical. Alarmingly titled Alcohol-related
harm - a growing crisis, time for action! (cutely timed for the
aftermath of the Christmas and New Year excesses, of course), the advertising
blurb for this worthy event informs us that:
- It is now considered that one in 20 people in the UK are
alcohol-dependent.
- A similar number are at serious risk of alcoholic liver disease.
- The government estimates the costs of alcohol as up to £1.7
billion in health, £7.3 billion in crime and public disorder and
£6.4 billion in the workplace
- Liver deaths in young and middle-aged people have risen sevenfold
since the 1970s.
- Increases in young peoples alcohol consumption suggest that
these trends will continue.
Naturally, the interpretation put on these and similar statistics is
contentious. For instance, according to the institute, the British binge-drink
more than any other European country, with 40% of all drinking sessions
for men consisting of such boozing. Our nearest rival in this respect
is Sweden with a corresponding figure of 33%. But then, it all depends
on what you characterise as a binge, doesnt it? The
UK definition sets it at anything more than six units of alcohol on a
single occasion - to put that in perspective, Jamie Douglass
wryly notes, thats two pints of Stella (www.spiked-online.com).
You dont have to be Dylan Thomas to characterise that as a pretty
quiet night out.
Set against other statistics, the supposed British propensity for binging
is seen in some degree of context. According to a study by the prime ministers
strategy unit, Luxembourg heads the league table for drinkers in the EU,
with Britain pitching up in a very moderate 12th place (www.number10.gov.uk/files/pdf/econ.pdf).
So, the bald, panic-inducing statistics that the government parades in
front of us actually hide more complex cultural patterns. That is, when
and how often people drink during the week rather than simply the volume.
Similarly, we should be very sceptical when establishment figures preface
some dire prediction with the phrase, based on current trends.
Thus, to extrapolate some linear growth from young peoples current
levels of alcohol consumption is nonsense. The youth market for recreational
drugs must be one of the most volatile and is highly susceptible to shifts
in perception and fashion. Even if we accept the governments case
for the alcohol tsunami looming over our society, it is simply not logical
to draw from the patterns we see now the conclusion that in 20 years or
so todays young boozers will look and smell like Barney, the beer-sodden
loser of The Simpsons.
However, as in other areas of social policy concerned with individual
lifestyle and public health, the governments essentially authoritarian
agenda is cloaked in this style of voodoo analysis. During the summer
of 2004, the police served nearly 2,000 on-the-spot fines for disorderly
behaviour associated with drink and another 4,000 people had their alcohol
confiscated. The weekend gatherings of thousands of proletarian youth
in many city centre drinking factories are increasingly identified
as major policing problems, with our poor, beleaguered boys in blue portrayed
as unable to control the situation.
Characteristically, the government proposes to expand the scope of the
repressive powers of the police to deal with this social problem. Amongst
the suggestions from the national alcohol harm-reduction strategy
of the prime ministers strategy unit cited above are measures such
as sting operations against pubs, clubs and other outlets
identified as selling drink to under 18s; the even greater use of exclusion
orders and fixed-penalty fines for what the police identify as alcohol-related
anti-social behaviour; pressure on the police to use more of their community
wardens (narks with a badge, as graffiti in my area accurately
characterises them) to patrol areas like taxi ranks at night; and more
effort to take the cautionary message into schools (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/3510560.stm).
Communists reject the criminalisation of wide swathes of our class, particularly
youth, by these and similar measures. We have a generally permissive attitude
to societys right to access recreational drugs. However, it does
not flow from this that we are indifferent to either the issues of health
or broader cultural/political consequences that can arise from the abuse
of alcohol or any other mass-consumption drug. Clearly, the manner in
which large numbers of working people use such substances speaks of their
profound alienation under todays social conditions, not simply neutral
choices about personal consumption.
Bolsheviks and booze
Some may see a paradox here. Communists demand unrestricted working class
access to alcohol (and all recreational drugs) and fight those restrictive
policing intrusions designed to counter what is dubbed Britains
booze culture. At the same time, we actually want a sober,
clear-headed and politically attentive working class. Before and during
meetings of the Communist Party, for instance, alcohol is banned. From
my own experience in the workers movement, I know the potentially
disorientating and profoundly disorganising effects drink can have on
workers gathered to discuss tactics and strategy during some dispute -
for instance, I recall meetings during the miners Great Strike,
the dockers and printers disputes in the 1980s that collapsed
into bleary chaos and near fisticuffs fuelled by a liberal intake of booze
during the proceedings.
Again, history teaches us some lessons. In the immediate aftermath of
the October revolution, the Bolsheviks faced the problem of large sections
of the proletariat going on the lash in celebration. The forces of counterrevolution
consciously aided these drunken revelries. In Ten days that shook the
world, John Reed reports the wine pogrom at the end of November
1917 that involved mass looting of the wine cellars - beginning
with the plundering of the Winter Palace vaults.
For days, drunken soldiers lurched around the streets and, according to
Reed, In all this was evident the hand of the counter-revolutionists,
who distributed among the regiments plans showing the location of the
stores of liquor.
Given the seriousness of the situation, the Bolsheviks responded energetically:
The Commissars of Smolny began by pleading and arguing, which did
not stop the disorder, followed by pitched battles between soldiers and
Red Guards
Finally the Military Revolutionary Committee sent out
companies of sailors with machine guns, who fired mercilessly upon the
rioters, killing many; and by executive order the wine-cellars were invaded
by committees with hatchets who smashed the bottles - or blew them up
with dynamite.
In a desperate move on December 6, the Petrograd Committee to Fight Pogroms
issued an obligatory ordinance, point five of which prohibited
the distribution, sale or purchase of any kind of alcoholic liquor.
Now the contemporary relevance of all the details of this rather dramatic
historical experience is debatable. However, the essential point is clear.
The counterrevolution fed off the befuddlement and confusion of the victorious
proletariat, fuelling it where possible by generous helpings of booze.
The Bolsheviks fought to ensure that the workers kept themselves alert
to defend their revolution, that our class had a clear-sighted revolutionary
sobriety.
Why? Precisely because the working class will not rule in the future in
some mediated way, through alienated proletarian property forms.
Socialism means the conscious democratic regulation of society by the
workers themselves - the 20th century underlines the brutal truth that
anything else is neither socialism nor a workers state of any sort.
This profoundly democratic process starts in the here and now. The working
class needs to fight for measures of working class control over aspects
of its social life under capitalism that, in the words of Rosa Luxemburg,
press so hard on the outermost borders of the rule of capital that
they appear as transitional forms to a proletarian dictatorship
(quoted in H Draper The dictatorship of the proletariat from Marx to Lenin
p60).
There are two aspects to this in connection with alcohol and the working
class under capitalism. First, we have to fight the encroachments on our
democracy associated with the governments campaign against the so-called
scourge of binge-drinking. This infantilises wide swathes
of society and justifies intrusive state control and interference in the
personal lives and the exercise of choice of masses of working people.
It effectively atomises them and undermines their ability to act as independent
agents on their own behalf.
Second, a successful working class fight for extreme democracy under todays
conditions would have the tendency to reduce the propensity for large
numbers of our class to actually seek a recreational oblivion in booze.
People often use and occasionally abuse alcohol as a chemical escape from
alienating social conditions. The solution is clearly to change those
social conditions under the leadership of the working class.
So, dear reader, still looking forward to a few drinks this Christmas?
Good for you. Millions of us will be enthusiastic members of formation-drinking
squads, composed of family members, friends and work colleagues, over
the seasonal break. The vast majority will use the drug sensibly enough
- all things considered - and are certainly not at the beginning of a
process that will see them living on the streets and sucking Tenants
super through straw come the new year.
But, while we should treat the Blair governments petty authoritarian
meddling with contempt, we should also understand that the programme of
the working class is not just about saying no. We must have
positive answers for this aspect of workers lives as well.
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