Con­text: This is a let­ter I wrote to my moth­er and father about my cur­rent approach to the Word of Wis­dom. I recent­ly resigned from the Church, and I have oth­er sib­lings who have left and who I sus­pect will leave, so I want­ed to estab­lish some com­mon ground and explain my cur­rent think­ing as a way to build bridges of under­stand­ing. I’ve added a few head­ers, sim­pli­fied some of the word­ing, changed some for­mat­ting to make it more read­able, and added a few thoughts that weren’t in the original.


Dear Mom and Dad,

First off, I’m excit­ed that you two are about done with your mis­sion. We’re all proud of you and glad you were will­ing and able to give of your­selves and serve oth­ers so dili­gent­ly. I’m con­fi­dent that you have blessed many people’s lives. And maybe most of all, I’m glad that serv­ing has enriched your life and your mar­riage. I am also grate­ful for every­thing I learned, the good I was able to do, and how I grew as a per­son on my mission.

Introduction

I was glad we were able to talk about alco­hol and the Word of Wis­dom some about a month back. Some­times those con­ver­sa­tions are tough to have. For me, it’s hard when I hear that you dis­ap­prove of me, my actions, or my way of think­ing. For you, I know that it’s hard to hear when your chil­dren think or act in ways that run against the grain of your strong­ly held beliefs and you feel may result in your kid’s (or your Grandkid’s) short or long term harm (which is com­plete­ly under­stand­able). In the end, even though they can be hard con­ver­sa­tions to have, I pre­fer to have them because I think talk­ing through and under­stand­ing why a per­son feels and thinks the way they do is the only way for rela­tion­ships to grow. If our rela­tion­ships are to just stag­nate, what good is that for any­one? I think vibrant, grow­ing rela­tion­ships are worth the effort. And, I think it is healthy to view dif­fer­ences as a poten­tial strength to our fam­i­ly, and not nec­es­sar­i­ly a weakness.

So, in that spir­it of com­mu­ni­ca­tion and under­stand­ing, I want­ed to advance our dis­cus­sion about alco­hol, tea, and cof­fee a bit. I have observed that dif­fer­ences in ideas about the Word of Wis­dom are often a stick­ing point between active and post-Mor­mon fam­i­ly mem­bers. I’ve thought about this a lot, and I think there is enough com­mon ground that we should all be able to under­stand and respect one another’s positions.

Your Position

Maybe I’ll start by reit­er­at­ing what I think is your posi­tion (feel free to cor­rect me if I have not ful­ly cap­tured it):

For our day and age, any alco­hol con­sump­tion is unac­cept­able. Out­side of the fact that alco­hol is pro­hib­it­ed by the mod­ern Church, this is based most­ly on a cost/benefit analy­sis where you rec­og­nize no ben­e­fit to alco­hol con­sump­tion and at the same time rec­og­nize all the ills that are facil­i­tat­ed direct­ly or indi­rect­ly by alcohol—primarily impair­ment of deci­sion mak­ing abil­i­ty (e.g., embar­rass­ing oth­ers), dam­age to health (can­cers, etc), facil­i­tat­ing or con­tribut­ing to sub­stance abuse addic­tions, and DUI relat­ed deaths and injuries. You also men­tioned the sto­ry of your father drink­ing and mak­ing promis­es that he didn’t fol­low up on and how painful that was to you. So, inso­far as it con­tributes to bro­ken promis­es, you are also against it. 

For the sake of dis­cus­sion, I’m also assum­ing that you dis­ap­prove of peo­ple drink­ing tea or cof­fee. This is based at least part­ly on the fact that these drinks are for­bid­den in the Word of Wis­dom, and also on the idea that these sub­stances may cre­ate a phys­i­cal depen­den­cy in peo­ple and may con­tain oth­er harm­ful sub­stances (e.g., tannins). 

Again, if I’ve mis­char­ac­ter­ized your thoughts, please feel free to clarify.

Inso­far as I under­stand this posi­tion. I respect this posi­tion. I also respect the idea that if the church is true, then this is coun­sel from God and hence should be giv­en strong consideration.

Common Ground

Out­side of that, I also believe that all of us (fam­i­ly mem­bers in the Church and out of the Church) share a com­mon core of belief on these mat­ters. I think we believe the fol­low­ing with sim­i­lar, if not iden­ti­cal, conviction:

  1. Our agency is pre­cious, hence it is wise to avoid becom­ing addict­ed to any sub­stance. A state of addic­tion is self-defeat­ing and, in pro­por­tion to the lev­el of addic­tion, leads to mis­ery and loss of agency.
  2. Giv­en that we live in our bod­ies and we desire that they serve us well we ought to treat our bod­ies with great care and respect. Our bod­ies are not mere objects to be used sole­ly for our own plea­sure but vehi­cles for our soul/consciousness to expe­ri­ence life and to help and bless others.
  3. One death by DUI is too many. Peo­ple should nev­er dri­ve (or oper­ate heavy machin­ery) under the influ­ence of alcohol.
  4. One addic­tion (or death due to addic­tion) is one too many.
  5. Chil­dren and young adults should wait at least until the legal drink­ing age until con­sum­ing alcohol.
  6. Unless there is a rea­son that jus­ti­fies it, peo­ple should keep their promis­es. Unless there is some good rea­son for it, peo­ple should not do things that would embar­rass them or any­one else.
  7. Enjoy­ing the good things of the earth is healthy and part of liv­ing a ful­fill­ing life.

The phi­los­o­phy behind the last point is also cap­tured in D&C 59:18–20:

…all things which come of the earth, in the sea­son there­of, are made for the ben­e­fit and the use of man, both to please the eye and to glad­den the heart; Yea, for food… for taste and for smell, to strength­en the body and to enliv­en the soul. And it pleaseth God that he hath giv­en all these things unto man; for unto this end were they made to be used, with judg­ment, not to excess, nei­ther by extortion. 

In my mind, I see that we share an enor­mous amount of com­mon ground with one anoth­er, and I think that com­mon ground extends gen­er­al­ly to most peo­ple inside and out­side of the Church (how much this extends to peo­ple out­side of the Church is maybe a dis­cus­sion for anoth­er day).

Health Consequences

One point where we prob­a­bly do not see eye-to-eye yet is on the health con­se­quences of alco­hol, tea, and cof­fee. The Church typ­i­cal­ly focus­es on all the neg­a­tive aspects of tea, cof­fee, and alco­hol. After my faith tran­si­tion I decid­ed that I should research the health effects (since I knew next to noth­ing about all of these). I was strong­ly biased against all of them. But, after spend­ing many hours research­ing the health effects of these sub­stances, I came to the real­iza­tion that I was mis­in­formed and my fear of them was large­ly unfounded.

I encour­age you to spend some time becom­ing acquaint­ed with the sci­en­tif­ic con­sen­sus on the health effects of these drinks. Below I’ve made links that will pull up the lat­est review arti­cles with each of these in the title and “health” in any oth­er field. That way you can read the sci­ence (or at least the abstracts—that’s what I do for the arti­cles behind a pay­wall) for yourself.

Below are some basic sum­maries of what you will find above, from the gen­er­al media:

I used to think that the ben­e­fits of alco­hol, tea, and cof­fee con­sump­tion were just pushed (and inflat­ed) by peo­ple who want­ed to jus­ti­fy a habit. How­ev­er, cer­tain aspects of the sci­ence is fair­ly well estab­lished at this point (i.e., the over­all health effects). These sub­stances are like­ly some­what good for you (par­tic­u­lar­ly in mod­er­a­tion), but at worst prob­a­bly just neu­tral for health. How­ev­er, viewed in com­par­i­son to soft drinks (or high sug­ar snacks), they are con­sid­er­ably more healthy. I believe that vir­tu­al­ly every med­ical doc­tor who has tak­en the time to famil­iar­ize them­selves with the data would agree with me.

Of course, I’m aware that some of the health ben­e­fits (and few­er unde­sir­able side-effects) may be derived by con­sum­ing oth­er sub­stances (e.g., grape juice), but that does not negate the pos­i­tive effects of tea, cof­fee, and alco­hol con­sump­tion (espe­cial­ly when com­pared with high-sug­ar bev­er­ages, which is what many Lat­ter-day Saints reg­u­lar­ly con­sume as an alter­na­tive to tea, cof­fee, and alcohol).

Addiction and Dependency

It is cer­tain­ly true that con­sum­ing too much alco­hol reg­u­lar­ly can lead to addic­tion and reg­u­lar­ly con­sum­ing too much caf­feine can lead to a mild phys­i­cal depen­den­cy. Inter­est­ing­ly, I’ve recent­ly learned that there is a dif­fer­ence between an “addic­tion”, as it is for­mal­ly defined by psy­chol­o­gists, and a phys­i­cal depen­den­cy. While alco­hol can be addic­tive, caf­feine is not: “Caf­feine addic­tion, or a patho­log­i­cal and com­pul­sive form of use, has not been doc­u­ment­ed in humans” source. Hence, while caf­feine depen­den­cies may be incon­ve­nient and unde­sir­able (and should be avoid­ed), they are not dan­ger­ous in the same way that an alco­hol addic­tion may be—alcohol addiction/dependency is a seri­ous issue.

The Church has set­tled upon an approach of com­plete­ly avoid­ing these sub­stances as a way to deal with these risks. Such an approach has some clear advan­tages. For instance, those in reli­gions that pro­hib­it alco­hol have much low­er rates of alco­hol depen­dence than the gen­er­al pub­lic. But cre­at­ing a taboo against alco­hol can also gen­er­ate high­er lev­els of guilt/shame, and high­er guilt/shame is inverse­ly asso­ci­at­ed with addic­tion recov­ery rates. In addi­tion, peo­ple with high­ly com­pul­sive or anx­ious per­son­al­i­ties may just end up mere­ly choos­ing a dif­fer­ent addic­tion or pre­oc­cu­pa­tion (e.g., eat­ing, a hyper­sex­u­al dis­or­der, or a reli­gious addic­tion) with­out ever deal­ing with the root mental/emotional caus­es behind their behavior.

The alter­na­tive mod­el for deal­ing with addic­tion risks is mod­er­a­tion, edu­ca­tion, aware­ness, and open­ness. In this mod­el, fam­i­ly mem­bers are taught the risks, mod­er­a­tion is encour­age, and fam­i­ly mem­bers are open about their use (i.e., there is no taboo). Prob­lems may be dealt with by work­ing towards mod­er­a­tion rather than alco­hol absti­nence. This kind of approach can­not guar­an­tee a fam­i­ly mem­ber will nev­er become addict­ed at some point, but it does fos­ter an envi­ron­ment where addic­tion is not like­ly to occur because it removes pri­ma­ry dri­vers of addic­tion (taboo and secre­cy) and if it does occur it is like­ly to be dealt with before the behav­ior has spi­raled out of con­trol. As an exam­ple, Euro­peans drink more alco­hol than Amer­i­cans, and alco­hol use is inte­gral to their cul­ture (e.g., teenagers can legal­ly drink at home at the age of 16), but Euro­peans engage in binge drink­ing far less fre­quent­ly than Amer­i­cans (the world’s lead­ers in binge drink­ing) (source). Sim­i­lar­ly, nations that have decrim­i­nal­ized drug use gen­er­al­ly report low­er drug use (source).

I see mer­its to both approach­es, and I am fine to use aspects of both approach­es (for instance, I expect and demand alco­hol absti­nence of chil­dren in my care, and I strong­ly advo­cate the absti­nence approach with high­ly addic­tive sub­stances like hero­in or meth). The Church also uses both approach­es to deal with var­i­ous issues. An absti­nence only approach may work great when it works, but when it fails the results may be cat­a­stroph­ic. A moderation/openness approach may have a high­er rate of fail­ure (i.e., some­one becomes addict­ed to some lev­el), but fail­ures may be less cat­a­stroph­ic. Both approach­es have sig­nif­i­cant merit.

My Position

Once they famil­iar­ize them­selves with the data, most of your fam­i­ly who has left (or may leave) will like­ly adopt some­thing sim­liar to this pol­i­cy regard­ing alco­hol, tea, and coffee:

There is no prob­lem drink­ing alco­hol, tea, or cof­fee in mod­er­a­tion. It is much bet­ter for a per­son than drinking/eating high-sug­ar snacks. 

Of course, dif­fer­ent fam­i­ly mem­bers will vary in how much they inte­grate these into their lives (if at all), but on prin­ci­ple, I don’t think any of them will reject them out­right. Respon­si­bly drink­ing an occa­sion­al glass of alco­hol, tea, or cof­fee eas­i­ly fits with­in the fun­da­men­tal prin­ci­ples I’ve out­lined above and is con­so­nant with liv­ing a healthy, pro­duc­tive, respon­si­ble, and hap­py life.

I am ask­ing that you respect me and all of your fam­i­ly mem­bers who hold this posi­tion (or who may hold this posi­tion in the future). And I am ask­ing that you respect this posi­tion. I believe that you should respect us as much as you respect any of our sib­lings who choose to abstain in some or all of these drinks for reli­gious or health rea­sons. I am ask­ing you to respect us as much as we respect you in your choice of abstaining.

Reflections

I also want to offer up some data and thoughts for reflec­tion. I’m fol­low­ing each of these data points with some thought ques­tions. I hope you don’t find them too annoy­ing. Some of them are lead­ing ques­tions (sor­ry). I obvi­ous­ly have thoughts about these things, and they have shaped my ques­tions. I’m just hop­ing that in think­ing about some of these ques­tions you can gain some addi­tion­al insight into why/how I think the way I do about this topic.

Okay, here goes:

  1. At a wed­ding cel­e­bra­tion, Joseph Smith taught that drink­ing wine on such occa­sions was an “insti­tu­tion of heav­en” and a “pat­tern set us by the Sav­iour himself.”

    We then took some refresh­ment and our hearts were made glad with the fruit of the vine. This is accord­ing to the pat­tern set us by the our Sav­iour him self when he graced the mar­riage in Cana of Gallilee and turned the water into wine that they might make them­selves joy­ful, and we feel dis­posed to patron­ize all the insti­tu­tions of heav­en. joseph­smith­pa­pers

    Was Joseph Smith wrong when he talked about the pro­pri­ety of drink­ing wine on such occas­sions? If the amount con­sumed and the atti­tude of con­sump­tion are the same, is it any less after the pat­tern the Sav­ior set if non-mem­bers drink at such spe­cial occas­sions? Were those drink­ing alco­hol at this wed­ding cel­e­bra­tion licen­tious? Were they weak of character?

  2. Joseph Smith record­ed that he “drank a glass of beer” at a bar two weeks before his mar­tyr­dom (see The Mil­len­ni­al Star [3rd para­graph from the bot­tom of the page on the right col­umn]). Was Joseph Smith weak in char­ac­ter for doing this? Was he being irresponsible?

  3. We also have record of Joseph Smith drink­ing wine in every­day life when offered it. For example:

    Called at the office and drank a glass of wine with Sis­ter Jenet­ta Richards, made by her moth­er in Eng­land, and reviewed a por­tion of the con­fer­ence min­utes. (His­to­ry of the Church)

    Should he have declined drink­ing wine with this woman? Did drink­ing togeth­er enhance or dimin­ish from the expe­ri­ence? Was he able to ade­quate­ly per­form his spir­i­tu­al duties fol­low­ing his drink? Did this action mean Joseph was weak in character?

  4. The Word of Wis­dom explic­it­ly pre­scribes drink­ing beer (read D&C 89:17 very care­ful­ly). This is con­firmed from the behav­ior of the ear­ly Saints (I’ve read through all the ear­ly doc­u­ments on this). Brigham Young said this about beer in 1875:

    [beer] is a mild drink, and is very pleas­ant and agree­able to a great many … (source)

    Can the drink­ing of beer be viewed as keep­ing the orig­i­nal intent of the Word of Wisdom?

  5. Drink­ing wine for “sacra­ments” (D&C 89:5) was clear­ly inter­pret­ed by Joseph Smith to mean drink­ing wine was fine for spe­cial occa­sions. Can drink­ing wine on spe­cial occa­sions be con­sid­ered keep­ing the orig­i­nal intent of the Word of Wisdom?

  6. In the ear­ly church, drink­ing alco­hol because a per­son was feel­ing down was con­sid­ered com­plete­ly with­in the bounds of the Word of Wis­dom. For instance, John Tay­lor said this about his expe­ri­ence in Carthage Jail:

    Some­time after din­ner we sent for some wine. It has been report­ed by some that this was tak­en as a sacra­ment. It was no such thing; our spir­its were gen­er­al­ly dull and heavy, and it was sent for to revive us. I think it was Cap­tain Jones who went after it, but they would not suf­fer him to return. I believe we all drank of the wine, and gave some to one or two of the prison guards. (His­to­ry of the Church)

    Were Willard Richards, Hyrum Smith, John Tay­lor and Joseph Smith weak in char­ac­ter because they drank alco­hol when their “spir­its were gen­er­al­ly dull and heavy”? Did they lose the spir­it as a result of this action?

  7. The First Pres­i­den­cy and Quo­rum of the Twelve drank wine every week at their Tem­ple sacra­ment meet­ing until 1906.

    On 5 July 1906, the First Pres­i­den­cy and Coun­cil of the Twelve began using water instead of wine for their sacra­ment meet­ings. Fair­Mor­mon

    Did a glass of wine each week inhib­it their spir­i­tu­al sen­si­tiv­i­ty over the course of the +50 years while this was being prac­tised? Did this action make them of weak char­ac­ter? Did any of them become addicted?

  8. Mus­lims for­bid eat­ing pork and Hin­dus do not kill cows, both for reli­gious reasons.
    How­ev­er, most Lat­ter-day Saints feel that eat­ing beef and pork in mod­er­a­tion is just fine (for instance, all Church owned restau­rants of which I am aware serve meat as the main course at almost every meal). How would you feel if a Mus­lim or Hin­du friend looked down on you because you eat meat spar­ing­ly? Would they be jus­ti­fied in look­ing down on you? Are you weak of char­ac­ter because you eat meat spar­ing­ly? Are the brethren weak of char­ac­ter because they eat meat sparingly?

  9. In 2004 and 2005 Utah led the nation in pre­scrip­tion drug abuse. In 2002, it was found that anti-depres­sants are pre­scribed in Utah more than any oth­er state, and at twice the nation­al aver­age.
    Utahns rely on mind-alter­ing sub­stances with high fre­quen­cy (both legit­i­mate­ly and ille­git­i­mate­ly). Which are more like­ly to be addic­tive: pre­scrip­tion drugs or alco­hol? What is the dif­fer­ence between a per­son who “self-med­icates” by drink­ing a glass or two of alco­hol when their spir­it is “dull and heavy” and the brethren in Carthage doing it? Which is a bet­ter soci­ety, where peo­ple take pre­scrip­tion med­ica­tions to help deal with depres­sion, or where they drink alco­hol (in mod­er­a­tion) to help deal with depres­sion? Is their any real dif­fer­ence between the two?

  10. It has been shown that both mod­er­ate and heavy drinkers of alco­hol live longer than those who do not drink alco­hol (even after con­trol­ling for all oth­er pos­si­ble vari­ables) (source).
    If a per­son drinks alco­hol because they want to low­er their risk of heart dis­ease, is that irre­spon­si­ble? Does that mean they are weak of character?

  11. You talked about not want­i­ng to hear about if I ever drank alco­hol. How am I sup­posed to feel about myself if I choose to respon­si­bly drink alco­hol when you treat it like this (i.e., shun­ning it)? Does this behav­ior need to be shunned? What good does this kind of shun­ning accom­plish? What do you gain emo­tion­al­ly by set­ting up the sit­u­a­tion in this man­ner (i.e., enact­ing a wall of silence, sep­a­ra­tion, and shame)? Does it help you? Does it help me? Does such a wall of silence help to con­tribute to addic­tive behav­ior in gen­er­al (i.e., could it con­tribute to peo­ple keep­ing prob­lems hidden)?

  12. If respon­si­ble drink­ing becomes an enrich­ing part of my life (like it was for Joseph Smith), why would you not want to share in that joy and jour­ney? The ear­ly brethren felt like it was impor­tant enough to note on many occas­sions. Should they have kept their enjoy­ment of alco­hol hid­den? Does the fam­i­ly share pic­tures with you when they go out shoot­ing? At this time I don’t choose to own a gun or to shoot guns as a hob­by. Should I try to shame or shun those who shoot guns? Should I assume they ful­ly under­stand the risks, or should I wor­ry about them and their gun habit? Is shoot­ing guns togeth­er real­ly more pro­duc­tive than drink­ing alco­hol (respon­si­bly) together?

  13. Per­haps the most press­ing health cri­sis in the U.S. is direct­ly relat­ed to exces­sive con­sump­tion of refined sug­ar. Sug­ar is addic­tive, may dam­age rela­tion­ships (e.g., dimin­ish­es sex dri­ve), and is respon­si­ble for a num­ber of health problems:

    Why is it that one-third of adults [world­wide] have high blood pres­sure, when in 1900 only 5 per­cent had high blood pres­sure?” he asked. “Why did 153 mil­lion peo­ple have dia­betes in 1980, and now we’re up to 347 mil­lion? Why are more and more Amer­i­cans obese? Sug­ar, we believe, is one of the cul­prits, if not the major cul­prit.” source

    It can eas­i­ly be argued that sug­ar dwarfs alco­hol use in terms of total dam­ages, loss of life, and impact on qual­i­ty of life. Yet the Church offers high-sug­ar treats at vir­tu­al­ly every func­tion (e.g., ice-cream sand­wich­es, cook­ies, etc.). As a fam­i­ly, many of our fond­est tra­di­tions and gath­er­ings revolve around con­sum­ing treats high in sugar.
    Tea, cof­fee, and alco­hol all have been shown to con­tribute to longer life-spans and gen­er­al­ly to greater health while exces­sive sug­ar con­sump­tion is linked to short­er life-spans and gen­er­al­ly poor­er health.
    Why is it okay to look with favor upon those who embrace sug­ar as a sub­stance inte­gral to cel­e­bra­tions and family/social gath­er­ings but then to shun those who see tea, cof­fee, and alco­hol as sub­stances inte­gral to cel­e­bra­tions and sociality?

  14. I rarely if ever con­sume a nor­mal soft drink (and if I do I usu­al­ly only drink about half of one) because I am aware of the harm­ful effects of fruc­tose on metab­o­lism and health. If I were to drink a glass of beer, tea, or cof­fee on occa­sion, I think that may be more healthy than many of my LDS col­leagues who reg­u­lar­ly drink sev­er­al soft drinks every day (some fair­ly caf­feinat­ed). If I am exer­cis­ing sim­i­lar care and mod­er­a­tion in my con­sump­tion choic­es, and my choic­es are like­ly to be as healthy for me as are their choic­es, why would you respect my choic­es less than theirs?

Conclusion

On a final note, Elder Ren­lund recent­ly said this:

We may on occa­sion find our­selves in uncom­fort­able sit­u­a­tions where we dif­fer in doc­trine with … fam­i­ly mem­bers. But the doc­trine can nev­er be used to jus­ti­fy treat­ing oth­ers with any­thing less than respect and dignity. 

I hope that I have not offend­ed you in talk­ing open­ly and freely on this top­ic. If I have, please feel free to explain how and why and I will try to under­stand. Also, if you feel like you have new or dif­fer­ent infor­ma­tion to add to the dis­cus­sion, I wel­come it. I also want to make clear that in relay­ing these thoughts and ideas I am not try­ing to con­vince you that you should change your opin­ion on how you choose to live or what you con­sume. Like I said, I have deep respect for the Word of Wis­dom and gen­er­al­ly think it is a sound code to live by. I am mere­ly ask­ing that you respect your chil­dren who choose to fol­low a slight­ly dif­fer­ent health code—especially since that code is gen­er­al­ly con­so­nant with the same fun­da­men­tal prin­ci­ples that we all believe.

Love,

<bwv549>


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2 responses to “Letter to parents: Thoughts on the Word of Wisdom”

  1. Dave Mack
    Dave Mack

    When the word of wis­dom was first giv­en it was giv­en by admo­ni­tion not by com­mand­ment. It was not until 1920 dur­ing pro­hi­bi­tion that con­sum­ing of alco­hol became a com­mand­ment. In my opin­ion the word of wis­dom was inspired when it was first giv­en in 1833 and then giv­en as a com­mand­ment in the 1920.

    What­ev­er good can come from drink­ing alco­hol pales incom­par­i­son to the tens of mil­lions of lives and fam­i­lies that alco­hol has destroyed ruined or caused peo­ple to leave this life to ear­ly. These sta­tis­tics include drug abuse and does not always ver­i­fy if the mind alter­ing sub­stance is alco­hol drugs or both.

    https://​ncadd​.org/​a​b​o​u​t​-​a​d​d​i​c​t​i​o​n​/​a​l​c​o​h​o​l​-​d​r​u​g​s​-​a​n​d​-crime

    The Impact of Alcohol

    Because alco­hol use is legal and per­va­sive, it plays a par­tic­u­lar­ly strong role in the rela­tion­ship to crime and oth­er social prob­lems. Alco­hol is a fac­tor in 40% of all vio­lent crimes today, and accord­ing to the Depart­ment of Jus­tice, 37% of almost 2 mil­lion con­vict­ed offend­ers cur­rent­ly in jail, report that they were drink­ing at the time of their arrest.

    Alco­hol, more than any ille­gal drug, was found to be close­ly asso­ci­at­ed with vio­lent crimes, includ­ing mur­der, rape, assault, child and spousal abuse. About 3 mil­lion vio­lent crimes occur each year in which vic­tims per­ceive the offend­er to have been drink­ing and sta­tis­tics relat­ed to alco­hol use by vio­lent offend­ers gen­er­al­ly show that about half of all homi­cides and assaults are com­mit­ted when the offend­er, vic­tim, or both have been drink­ing. Among vio­lent crimes, with the excep­tion of rob­beries, the offend­er is far more like­ly to have been drink­ing than under the influ­ence of oth­er drugs.

    Alco­hol is often a fac­tor in vio­lence where the attack­er and the vic­tim know each oth­er. Two-thirds of vic­tims who were attacked by an inti­mate (includ­ing a cur­rent or for­mer spouse, boyfriend or girl­friend) report­ed that alco­hol had been involved, and only 31% of vic­tim­iza­tions by strangers are alco­hol-relat­ed. Near­ly 500,000 inci­dents between inti­mates involve offend­ers who have been drink­ing; in addi­tion, 118,000 inci­dents of fam­i­ly vio­lence (exclud­ing spous­es) involve alco­hol, as do 744,000 inci­dents among acquaintances.

    Dri­ving While Intox­i­cat­ed (DWI)

    More than one mil­lion peo­ple are arrest­ed annu­al­ly for dri­ving while intox­i­cat­ed, which is the third most com­mon­ly report­ed crime in the Unit­ed States. Drink­ing and drugged dri­ving is the num­ber one cause of death, injury and dis­abil­i­ty of young peo­ple under the age of 21, and near­ly 40% of all traf­fic fatal­i­ties are alco­hol relat­ed. Every day 36 peo­ple die and approx­i­mate­ly 700 are injured in motor vehi­cle crash­es that involve an alco­hol-impaired dri­ver. Drugs oth­er than alco­hol (e.g., mar­i­jua­na and cocaine) are involved in about 18% of motor vehi­cle dri­ver deaths, often in com­bi­na­tion with alcohol.

    In 2007, accord­ing to the Nation­al High­way Traf­fic Safe­ty Admin­is­tra­tion, approx­i­mate­ly one in eight week­end, night­time dri­vers test­ed pos­i­tive for illic­it drugs. More­over, approx­i­mate­ly one in eight high school seniors respond­ing to a 2010 study report­ed dri­ving after smok­ing mar­i­jua­na with­in two weeks pri­or to the sur­vey interview.

    1.9 mil­lion of 2.4 mil­lion juve­nile arrests had sub­stance abuse and addic­tion involve­ment, while only 68,600 juve­niles received sub­stance abuse treatment.

    Alco­hol and Vio­lence in College

    Each year, more than 600,000 students between the ages of 18 and 24 are assaulted by another student who has been drinking.
    95% of all violent crime on college campuses involves the use of alcohol by the assailant, victim or both.
    90% of acquaintance rape and sexual assault on college campuses involves the use of alcohol by the assailant, victim or both.

    Alco­hol, Drugs and Domes­tic Violence

    Accord­ing to the Bureau of Jus­tice Sta­tis­tics, two-thirds of vic­tims suf­fer­ing vio­lence by a cur­rent or for­mer spouse or part­ner report that the per­pe­tra­tor had been drink­ing, com­pared to less than one-third of stranger vic­tim­iza­tions. Among spouse vic­tims, three out of four inci­dents report­ed­ly involved an offend­er who had been drinking.

    Accord­ing to a 1999 study, women assault­ed by inti­mate part­ners dur­ing the past 12 months report­ed sig­nif­i­cant­ly high­er sub­stance abuse as well as oth­er health- relat­ed prob­lems. Of those women expe­ri­enc­ing phys­i­cal vio­lence, 33 per­cent report­ed drug and alco­hol prob­lems, com­pared to 16 per­cent of those who did not expe­ri­ence violence.

    Domes­tic vio­lence also has an effect on oth­er fam­i­ly mem­bers. A study in Mass­a­chu­setts found that chil­dren who wit­nessed abuse of their mater­nal care­giv­er were 50 % more like­ly to abuse drugs and/or alcohol.

    Among vic­tims of domes­tic vio­lence, alco­hol played a role in 55% of the cas­es, while drugs played a role in only 9% of the cas­es; for spousal vio­lence, alco­hol was a fac­tor in 65% of the cas­es, ver­sus only 5% for drugs.
    Alco­hol, Drugs and Child Abuse

    Though there is no “cause” of abuse and no spe­cif­ic pro­file of abusers, many fac­tors con­tribute and make abuse more like­ly to occur. Pres­sures on the fam­i­ly, alco­hol and drug abuse, and social iso­la­tion can all lead to parental stress and increase the chances that a par­ent will strike out at their child.

    Nearly 4 in 10 child victimizers reported that they had been drinking at the time of the crime. Among drinkers, about half reported that they had been drinking for 6 hours or more preceding the offense.
    A 1999 study by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse found that children of substance-abusing parents were almost three times likelier to be abused and more than four times likelier to be neglected than children of parents who are not substance abusers.

    Our nation’s prison pop­u­la­tion has explod­ed beyond capac­i­ty and most inmates are in prison, in large part, because of sub­stance abuse:

    80% of offenders abuse drugs or alcohol.
    Nearly 50% of jail and prison inmates are clinically addicted.

    1. bwv549 Avatar
      bwv549

      Thank you for this thought­ful and well-researched reply. In my orig­i­nal post, I tried to cap­ture the sig­nif­i­cant neg­a­tive impact of alco­hol with sev­er­al links (includ­ing facil­i­tat­ing or con­tribut­ing to sub­stance abuse addic­tions and DUI relat­ed deaths and injuries). I am ful­ly aware of this impact, not the least because it has direct­ly impact­ed (or tak­en) the lives of many of my very close relatives.

      I embrace the real­i­ty of the sta­tis­tics you post­ed, and I feel like I already empha­sized my posi­tion that “one death by DUI is too many” and that “one addic­tion (or death due to addic­tion) is too many”. I did not state it explic­it­ly, but I implied that a sin­gle case of abuse due to intox­i­ca­tion is one too many. We fun­da­men­tal­ly agree on these things.

      What­ev­er good can come from drink­ing alco­hol pales incom­par­i­son to the tens of mil­lions of lives and fam­i­lies that alco­hol has destroyed ruined or caused peo­ple to leave this life to early.

      The same could eas­i­ly be said of sug­ar con­sump­tion. Mor­bid­i­ty and mor­tal­i­ty rates direct­ly or indi­rect­ly due to sug­ar con­sump­tion dwarf those direct­ly or indi­rect­ly due to alco­hol con­sump­tion. Has that prompt­ed you to abstain from all refined-sug­ar con­sump­tion? Has that prompt­ed the Church to pro­hib­it sug­ar-based refreshments?

      My point is this: it does not nec­es­sar­i­ly fol­low that just because the harms are exten­sive that the opti­mal or most desir­able approach to deal­ing with the prob­lem is through absti­nence only. Maybe you want to com­plete­ly stop eat­ing refined sug­ars? I’m okay with that, but I hope you will not judge me because I am okay with keep­ing refined sug­ar in my home and using it in moderation.

      So, the fun­da­men­tal ques­tion, which you have not addressed, is why pro­hi­bi­tion is the only accept­able approach to deal­ing with the harms.

      As I already indi­cat­ed, believ­ing LDS typ­i­cal­ly min­i­mize the good that comes from drink­ing alco­hol (most would con­sid­er the good to be neg­li­gi­ble). How­ev­er, over 70% of US adults report­ed drink­ing alco­hol with­in the last year, and alco­hol is con­sid­ered an inte­gral part of (non-LDS) cel­e­bra­tions and social gath­er­ings. The ear­ly brethren gen­er­al­ly con­sid­ered mod­er­ate alco­hol con­sump­tion a healthy and sanc­tioned part of their lives (i.e., after the pat­tern of the Sav­ior), hence it is dif­fi­cult to argue that mod­er­ate­ly drink­ing aco­hol is moral­ly wrong or is incon­sis­tent with spir­i­tu­al liv­ing. And, I already men­tioned the sta­tis­tics about increased life-span for those who con­sume alco­hol. The good that comes from drink­ing alco­hol is not neg­li­gi­ble, even if you choose not to acknowl­edge it.

      Thank you again for your com­ment. Every­one should be aware of the sig­nif­i­cant dam­ages due to immod­er­ate and irre­spon­si­ble con­sump­tion of alco­hol. We should work togeth­er (per­haps each in our own way) to achieve our com­mon goal of see­ing these kinds of prob­lems com­plete­ly eradicated.

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