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#21
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"Big John" wrote in message
... Also in the past few years the AMA has stated that red wine is good for the heart (based on some studies of people in Italy). Recently they have changed their recommendations to a couple of Oz's of alcohol a day to get the benefits and reduce heart attacks. So alcohol is not the evil portrayed in this thread. If does have some socially redeeming values. No one here doubted that, but it doesn't bear on the question of drinking and flying. Sleep is good for you too, but that doesn't mean you should do it while piloting a plane. --Gary |
#22
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Big John wrote:
Dean (and Dr James) If you read close I said one Oz not a fifth. Guess you speed read and jumped over that? If you read my response closely, you would see that I mentioned that even a BAL of 0.02 can be clearly seen in simulations to adversely affect your ability to do a task. That is just one ounce of alcohol. I'm not going to argue one way or the other about whether one drink does or does not help you, but there is no question that any more than one drink has a decidedly negative effect on people's ability. Also in the past few years the AMA has stated that red wine is good for the heart (based on some studies of people in Italy). Recently they have changed their recommendations to a couple of Oz's of alcohol a day to get the benefits and reduce heart attacks. Yes, and medical journals regularly print contradicting articles about the benefits and risks of drinking coffee or eating chocolate. It is no different with alcohol. People who like those things only remember the articles that proclaim the health benefits. Beyond that, whether or not red wine or alcohol prolong life, they have absolutely no place in an aircraft, or at least in the PIC of that aircraft. So alcohol is not the evil portrayed in this thread. If does have some socially redeeming values. Again, that has nothing to do with flying airplanes. Your initial post suggested that the pilot might have been unfairly charged, as there might have been extenuating circumstances. You even suggested that an alcohol abuser might not be affected by the amount of alcohol he had consumed, and that should be taken into consideration. I work in a transportation company, and believe me there can be absolutely no other policy regarding the use of alcohol or any other "mind altering" drug than that of zero tolerance. No extenuating circumstances can be considered. Period. On the subject of reaction time and drinking. I have always been able to catch eating utensils before they hit the floor if I knocked them off the table. I am still able to do that even after my evening libations and I use it as a measure of how much (if any) I have slowed down with old age (somewhere over 80) That's nice. I had a great uncle who was a complete teetotaler throughout the first part of his life. He only started drinking after he retired, but purely for medicinal purposes. He justified his drinking based on its supposedly social and medical value, but for the rest of us it was not very pleasant watching him go through DTs in his 70s. I may be overly sensitive about the subject at the moment, since I just buried a high school friend. His obit stated that he was 48, and that he died of massive organ failure. His friends would more accurately describe it as acute alcohol abuse. This was a university-educated person with a comfortable income. He would justify his drinking with just the sort of rationale that I see in your posts: The AMA says that it will extend your life; It sharpens my mind when I need to do something; It enhances my social life; and so on. He totally misjudged every one of those. I'm not being evangelical about this, since I enjoy a drink with meals and on social occasions, and I am thankful that I don't seem to be inclined to overindulge, unlike some friends and relatives. Alcohol is to be enjoyed, but at the same time it is to be feared. When one is considering taking control of an aircraft, or machinery of any kind, for that matter, alcohol is to be completely avoided. There is no justification for any other course of action. Enough ranting. Need a night cap to calm down to get a good nights sleep. That's what my great uncle used to say, you know, the one who died of alcohol abuse. |
#23
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One oz. of liquor definitely affects my motor skills... I never fly if I've
had a drink, but as a ham radio operator who does morse code with a mechanical key - which is spinal cord reflexes all the way - I can tell you from experience that my keying deteriorates after one drink, even followed immediately by a big meal, and I go to the radio room an hour later... Now, the guy on the other end may not notice the change from one drink, but I DO... denny "James Robinson" wrote in |
#24
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The other comment I failed to add, is that one oz. of liquor affects my
motor skills but not my judgement, and I notice the degraded motor skills... 3 or 4 oz. will affect the judgement to where you loudly proclaim your motor skills are perfect, whilst you are falling all over the room... As an old emergency room doc, I absolutely loath stupid, ****y faced, drunks - which is probably why I refuse to become like them and limit myself to one social drink, period! denny "James Robinson" wrote in message ... Big John wrote: Dean (and Dr James) |
#25
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![]() "Big John" wrote in message ... Dean (and Dr James) Your last in this part of the thread so will get the reply attached to your post. If you read close I said one Oz not a fifth. Guess you speed read and jumped over that? Also in the past few years the AMA has stated that red wine is good for the heart (based on some studies of people in Italy). Recently they have changed their recommendations to a couple of Oz's of alcohol a day to get the benefits and reduce heart attacks. So alcohol is not the evil portrayed in this thread. If does have some socially redeeming values. The hatred alcohol draws is mostly from Christians reading Jewish water purification rituals, in the Old Testiment, and then going about cursing the Holy Spirit. (lying about God) |
#26
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![]() "Gary Drescher" wrote in message news:FwORb.175069$na.285264@attbi_s04... "Big John" wrote in message ... Also in the past few years the AMA has stated that red wine is good for the heart (based on some studies of people in Italy). Recently they have changed their recommendations to a couple of Oz's of alcohol a day to get the benefits and reduce heart attacks. So alcohol is not the evil portrayed in this thread. If does have some socially redeeming values. No one here doubted that, but it doesn't bear on the question of drinking and flying. Sleep is good for you too, but that doesn't mean you should do it while piloting a plane. Actully, there are some that recomend a nap, on a long haul. |
#27
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Tarver Engineering wrote:
The hatred alcohol draws is mostly from Christians reading Jewish water purification rituals, in the Old Testiment, and then going about cursing the Holy Spirit. (lying about God) The bible makes out Christians to be cannibals: Drinking the blood and eating the flesh of Christ. The hatred of alcohol comes from watching people who are in denial die from overindulgence. |
#28
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![]() "James Robinson" wrote in message ... Tarver Engineering wrote: The hatred alcohol draws is mostly from Christians reading Jewish water purification rituals, in the Old Testiment, and then going about cursing the Holy Spirit. (lying about God) The bible makes out Christians to be cannibals: Drinking the blood and eating the flesh of Christ. That is what Christ came for. The hatred of alcohol comes from watching people who are in denial die from overindulgence. Is the pilot going to fight and win back his ticket? |
#29
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The hatred alcohol draws is mostly from Christians reading Jewish
water purification rituals, in the Old Testiment, and then going about cursing the Holy Spirit. (lying about God) What color is the aptmosphere in your world? |
#30
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![]() "John Harlow" wrote in message ... The hatred alcohol draws is mostly from Christians reading Jewish water purification rituals, in the Old Testiment, and then going about cursing the Holy Spirit. (lying about God) What color is the aptmosphere in your world? The religious have a lot to do with prohibition, Harlow. Orthadox Jews are of two minds about Christians even reading the five books of Moses, one group says Christians have such a lack of understanding of Jewish culture that they should never read the Old Testiment and another group that say it is OK, as long as Christians stay away from Jewish water purification rituals. In those rituals many churches have found validation of their own fears and curse the Holy Spirit every Sunday. |
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