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Letter: Stop with the alcohol shaming

Al Hartmann | The Salt Lake Tribune Customer at Red Rock Brewing in downtown Salt Lake City has a glass of wine at the long bar. The beer taps are behind the bar and customers can watch as their beer is poured and drinks prepared by the bartender.

In response to “Alcohol even larger menace than opioids,” published Nov. 10.

Let’s stop with the alcohol shaming, Dean Zimmerman. If your concern is truly to cure the deadliest preventable menace in our society, your efforts are best focused in a different direction. For example, obesity. According to the CDC, obesity is responsible for 2.5 times more preventable deaths per year than alcohol and opioids combined.

Like your comments on alcohol, food is portrayed in the media as a cause of “happiness and sociability.” It “does not require a doctor’s written prescription. It can be obtained and consumed in any quantity desired.”

For many alcohol consumers in this community, alcohol is indeed associated with happiness and sociability, with moderate consumption, it does not lead to the “inevitable hangover” or “temporary happiness” that Zimmerman speaks of. The responsible drinkers of this community who incorporate alcohol into their healthy lifestyles are fatigued by lecturing individuals whose naïve opinions insinuate that all alcohol consumers become mean, depressed, hurtful, murderous, suicidal, car-crashing, fire-starting pyromaniacs.

I therefore must question the true origin of Zimmerman’s outspoken and discriminatory views toward alcohol.

Mike Rasmussen, Park City