a sign of the end?

by peaceloveharmony 6 Replies latest jw friends

  • peaceloveharmony
    peaceloveharmony

    the end is near! i can't believe what i've read today in the news!! check this out:

    Germans drinking less beer

    - - - - - - - - - - - -
    By Burt Herman

    July 30, 2001 | BERLIN (AP) --

    Germans are losing their taste for their national drink, with cloudy skies over the country's beer gardens and a growing concern about beer bellies leading to fewer drinkers.

    Beer consumption dropped 4.3 percent in the first half of the year to 1.4 billion gallons -- 63.4 million gallons less than in the same period last year, according to statistics released Monday by the government.

    Bad weather was partly to blame, with a belated summer keeping drinkers away from outdoor beer gardens. But also cutting consumption were a more health-conscious public and changing work habits, as fewer people do manual labor where beer drinking is a break-time tradition.

    Lothar Ebbertz, head of the brewing association in Bavaria state, Germany's beer capital, blames the weather for this year's beer decline, but also sees a longer-term cause behind the changing tastes.

    "Drinking a beer used to be people's idea of a leisure activity," Ebbertz said from the association's Munich headquarters. "Now people go to the fitness studio and then to an Internet cafe and drink Diet Coke.

    "Some people think it's wrong to sit in front of the TV and drink two beers," he said.

    At Berlin's ultra-hip Cafe am Neuen See, a beer garden that's so cool it doesn't call itself one, Anna Czarnocka isn't sipping a beer, but a "Radler" -- a mixed drink with beer and soda.

    Diluted beer drinks are also part of the reason for the drop in overall consumption: Germans downed 29 million gallons of Radler and similar beer drinks in the first half of this year -- a rise of 6.1 percent.

    "In the heat it's better, there's less alcohol," the 28-year-old Czarnocka said, adding that she's able to read more pages in the dense text in front of her on economic theory for her business studies. "You can get through a bit more."

    German beer drinking has been decreasing for several years.

    "Sales have been declining slightly since the mid-90s," statistics office spokesman Christopher Graeb said.

    Beer consumption per German fell to about 33 gallons -- or 528 pints -- per person per year in 2000 from 37 gallons -- 592 pints -- a person in 1970, according to the German Brewer's Association.

    Rudolf Boehlke, a consultant on the brewing industry for Arthur Andersen, said younger drinkers are shunning beer for different alternative drinks.

    German bars usually sell trendy "long drinks," as cocktails are called here, often Brazilian Caipirinha cocktails or Mojitos, and even once-banned absinthe is making a comeback. Wine is also often chosen to accompany meals at Italian or French restaurants.

    "Beer is something traditional, the drink of fathers and grandpas, not of the sons," he said.

    The statistics don't include malt drinks, alcohol-free beer and beer imported from countries outside the European Union. But while Boehlke said Mexican beers and other imports have also contributed to declining tastes for domestic brews, they are still a small fraction of total consumption.

    Although there's no great hope for a renewed thirst for beer, Graeb of the statistics office said the hot summer weather that arrived after June will likely make for a less steep drop in consumption over the whole year.

    Under Berlin's sunny skies Monday, cashier Denise Hoffmann at the Cafe am Neuen See got no respite from the parade of beer drinkers lining up to pay for their sweet amber Hefeweizen or yellow-crystalline Pilsner brews.

    "They don't seem to be drinking any less to me," she said.

    . http://www.salon.com/people/wire/2001/07/30/beer/index.html

    "If God has spoken, why is the world not convinced?"
    ..........Percy Bysshe Shelley, English poet (1792-1822)

  • Room 215
    Room 215

    And why not? Also ominously, the French are drinking less wine!

  • Celia
    Celia

    Room 215,
    We are drinking less wine ? Are we ?
    Hmmm...

  • Latte
    Latte

    Hope that this is not a 'trend' set to hit England...........Wait til' Englishman hears about this!

    There again....perhaps sipping a cocktail whilst on the internet, would suit him rather well!

    Personally, for me?? O.K...... I'll try the cocktails.

    Thanks PLH

  • BoozeRunner
    BoozeRunner

    hmmmmm.... may I pick up the beer-drinking slack? My metabulism is absolutely resistant to the development of the beer belly!!!

    LoL,
    Boozy

  • Jon672
    Jon672

    I just love this place! You bring "good news", Peace!

    Plenty of imbibements to go around...I think we should have a jw.com kegger to pick up the German slack...at least we will be relaxed when the end hits!

  • Englishman
    Englishman

    PLH, This is all I can find re English beer drinkers:

    A Nation of Beer Drinkers

    Beer remains an Englishman's favourite tipple (and a Scotsman's and Welshman's, for that matter). The traditional view of this as a beer-drinking nation is upheld by the findings of the latest government survey of drinking behaviour.*

    Of all the alcohol consumed by men over in Great Britain in 1998, 70 per cent was beer, lager, or cider. Of this 16 per cent was strong versions of these drinks - that is 6%ABV (alcohol by volume) or more. In the male population, consumption of these strong beer, lagers, and ciders outstrips that of spirits which tie with wine at 14 per cent. Among women, wine constitutes 34 per cent of all alcohol consumed and spirits 25 per cent. Although women drink much less than men over all, the difference is made up largely by beer. They drink the same amount of wine and marginally more fortified wine. Their average weekly consumption of spirits is less than one unit smaller than men's.

    Beer's dominant position is particularly marked among men under 25, where it makes up four fifths of their alcohol intake. For those over 65 this has sunk to just over half. The decline in strong beer and lager consumption is even more marked (45 per cent of the total alcohol drunk for those under 25 to only 12 per cent for the 65s and over). On the other hand consumption of spirits increases sharply with age: from 11 per cent for those aged 16-24 to 27 per cent for those aged 65 and over.

    It is worth noting that alcopops account for a tiny and decreasing section of the market. In 1998 they were only 1 per cent of male consumption and 3 per cent of female (as opposed to 3 and 4 per cent respectively in 1997).

    Respondents of the survey were asked how often they had had an alcoholic drink during the previous twelve months. About three out of ten (29 per cent) said that they had drunk on at least three days a week. Just under 11 per cent said that they had drunk alcohol on almost every day last year (14 per cent of men and 9 per cent of women - unchanged since 1997). Those who had not drunk any alcohol at all during the same twelve months were also 11 per cent (8 per cent men and 13 per cent women), down by 2 per cent on the 1997 figures. There was a small but statistically significant increase in the number of people who said that they had consumed alcohol on at least three days a week during the last year.

    As far as social class is concerned, those in non-manual employment were much more likely to be frequent drinkers than manual workers. 19 per cent of men in socal class I/II said that they drank every day as opposed to 8 per cent in social class IV/V. Among women the equivalent figures were 14 per cent and 6 per cent.

    In the seven days preceding the survey, 77 per cent of men and 61 per cent of women had drunk alcohol. 22 per cent of men had drunk more than 8 units on at least one occasion during that week. The proportion varied considerable according to age from 38 per cent of men aged 16-24 to 4 per cent of those aged 65 and over. Women were much less likely to have drunk heavily. Only 7 per cent of women had drunk more than 6 units on at least one occasion during the preceding week. As with men, the likelihood of having done so was related to age. 20 per cent of 16-24 year old women had drunk more than 6 units but only 0.5 per cent of women over 65 had done so.

    Perhaps it is unsurprising that those whose average weekly alcohol consumption was highest also reported the highest incidence of heavy drinking days. 52 per cent of men who consumed more than 21 units, on average, during the week had drunk 8 units on at least one occasion. The same held true with women: 25 per cent of women who had consumed more than 14 units had drunk 6 units on at least one occasion during the previous week.

    Respondents were asked about their knowledge of units. 75 per cent admitted having heard of measuring alcohol consumption in this way. This was a fall of 4 per cent on 1997. On in five got it wrong when asked what consisted a unit of beer.

    One of the objects of the survey was to establish what proportion and drinkers and types of drinker were likely to buy alcohol from places where unit labelled drinks were available. Unit labelling is being undertaken by a number of the UK's largest drink companies in support of the Governments "sensible drinking" messages. The idea is that drinkers will more readily associate these messages with the actual amount of alcohol they are buying. To begin with the labelling will be used on cans and bottles sold in off-licences and retail outlets.

    Just under 70 per cent had bought alcohol from a licensed bar and a similar proportion had done so from supermarket during the year. 57 per cent had bought alcohol with food in a restaurant and around a third from an off-licence, abroad, or a duty-free. It is interesting to note that only a tiny proportion (1 per cent) said they bought alcohol abroad or in duty-free "once or twice a month". No-one - perhaps not surprisingly given the possible implication - admitted to doing this once a week or more. However, well over a quarter (28 per cent) of the adult population bought alcohol abroad or from duty-free "a few times a year".

    Englishman.

    ..... fanaticism masquerading beneath a cloak of reasoned logic.

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