Native American reservations and alcoholism in 20th century - history of their response?

My pleasure. Of course, you’re welcome to engage the poster in the Pit, just not in GQ. However, since that post was blatantly trolling in addition to being jerkish, I think this would be counterproductive.

Colibri
General Questions Moderator

I don’t know about other areas, but don’t try to bring alcohol onto the Navajo Nation. You can’t buy it and can be charged with possession.

Do you have any alcoholic relatives? What have you done personally to shame that person out of using alcohol? And how did that work out for you?

You did.

“Bash” normally means a form of violence, such as in the phrase “gay-bashing”. If you didn’t mean it in that sense, what sense did you mean? :confused:

Not necessarily. “Bash” is also very commonly used in a figurative sense; e.g. media bashing, celebrity bashing. It would appear code_grey was just using it in the sense of “to punish.”

I feel bad for the Native Americans. Their genetics and alcohol don’t mix. They are very susceptible to alcoholism and diabetes.

You can lead a horse to water but you can’t make them drink. Law enforcement can’t cure alcoholism and a genetic predisposition to it.

Geezers need excitement
If their lives don’t provide them this they incite violence
Common sense, simple common sense

– The Streets

Again, there is no proof of a genetic predisposition to alcoholism as an addiction. While the addiction potentially does exist in all societies, it is alcoholism that create the larger block of social problems…it is binge drinking and the high risk behavior associated with it.

You are correct, however, in citing our widely shared genetic proclivity to diabetes. I have seen research that indicates that the same mechanisms that interrupt our processing of sugars, and maintenance of our own glucose levels interferes with the processing of some alcohols as well, leading to problematic behavior.

It might be useful to remember, however, that alcohol production and use did not begin with European contact. The consumption prior to contact was more stringently controlled by ritual and ceremony and was not handled as casually as would later be the case.