Tag Archives: uk

Mind control and beliefs: a scientific view of how manipulation effects behaviour within society

Mind control and beliefs: a scientific view of how manipulation effects behaviour within society

Viewpoint Is the alcohol message all wrong

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-15265317

Many people think heavy drinking causes promiscuity, violence and anti-social behaviour. That’s not necessarily true, argues Kate Fox.

I am a social anthropologist, but what I do is not the traditional intrepid sort of anthropology where you go and study strange tribes in places with mud huts and monsoons and malaria.

I really don’t see why anthropologists feel they have to travel to unpronounceable corners of the world in order to study strange tribal cultures with bizarre beliefs and mysterious customs, when in fact the weirdest and most puzzling tribe of all is right here on our doorstep. I am of course talking about my own native culture – the British.

And if you want examples of bizarre beliefs and weird customs, you need look no further than our attitude to drinking and our drinking habits. Pick up any newspaper and you will read that we are a nation of loutish binge-drinkers – that we drink too much, too young, too fast – and that it makes us violent, promiscuous, anti-social and generally obnoxious.

Clearly, we Brits do have a bit of a problem with alcohol, but why?

The problem is that we Brits believe that alcohol has magical powers – that it causes us to shed our inhibitions and become aggressive, promiscuous, disorderly and even violent.

But we are wrong.

Kate Fox
  • Kate Fox is a social anthropologist and director of the Social Issues Research Centre
  • Her episode of Four Thought is on BBC Radio 4 on 12 October 2011 at 20:45 BST

In high doses, alcohol impairs our reaction times, muscle control, co-ordination, short-term memory, perceptual field, cognitive abilities and ability to speak clearly. But it does not cause us selectively to break specific social rules. It does not cause us to say, “Oi, what you lookin’ at?” and start punching each other. Nor does it cause us to say, “Hey babe, fancy a shag?” and start groping each other.

The effects of alcohol on behaviour are determined by cultural rules and norms, not by the chemical actions of ethanol.

There is enormous cross-cultural variation in the way people behave when they drink alcohol. There are some societies (such as the UK, the US, Australia and parts of Scandinavia) that anthropologists call “ambivalent” drinking-cultures, where drinking is associated with disinhibition, aggression, promiscuity, violence and anti-social behaviour.

There are other societies (such as Latin and Mediterranean cultures in particular, but in fact the vast majority of cultures), where drinking is not associated with these undesirable behaviours – cultures where alcohol is just a morally neutral, normal, integral part of ordinary, everyday life – about on a par with, say, coffee or tea. These are known as “integrated” drinking cultures.

This variation cannot be attributed to different levels of consumption – most integrated drinking cultures have significantly higher per-capita alcohol consumption than the ambivalent drinking cultures.

Instead the variation is clearly related to different cultural beliefs about alcohol, different expectations about the effects of alcohol, and different social rules about drunken comportment.

Youth drinking Buckfast tonic wine In the UK, heavy drinking is associated with a range of stereotypes

This basic fact has been proved time and again, not just in qualitative cross-cultural research, but also in carefully controlled scientific experiments – double-blind, placebos and all. To put it very simply, the experiments show that when people think they are drinking alcohol, they behave according to their cultural beliefs about the behavioural effects of alcohol.

The British and other ambivalent drinking cultures believe that alcohol is a disinhibitor, and specifically that it makes people amorous or aggressive, so when in these experiments we are given what we think are alcoholic drinks – but are in fact non-alcoholic “placebos” – we shed our inhibitions.

We become more outspoken, more physically demonstrative, more flirtatious, and, given enough provocation, some (young males in particular) become aggressive. Quite specifically, those who most strongly believe that alcohol causes aggression are the most likely to become aggressive when they think that they have consumed alcohol.

Our beliefs about the effects of alcohol act as self-fulfilling prophecies – if you firmly believe and expect that booze will make you aggressive, then it will do exactly that. In fact, you will be able to get roaring drunk on a non-alcoholic placebo.

And our erroneous beliefs provide the perfect excuse for anti-social behaviour. If alcohol “causes” bad behaviour, then you are not responsible for your bad behaviour. You can blame the booze – “it was the drink talking”, “I was not myself” and so on.

But it is possible to change our drinking culture. Cultural shifts happen all the time, and there is extensive evidence (again from carefully controlled experiments, conducted in natural settings such as bars and nightclubs) to show that it doesn’t take much to effect dramatic changes in how people behave when they drink.

“Start Quote

Alcohol education will have achieved its ultimate goal not when young people in this country are afraid of alcohol and avoid it because it is toxic and dangerous, but when they are frankly just a little bit bored by it”

These experiments show that even when people are very drunk, if they are given an incentive (either financial reward or even just social approval) they are perfectly capable of remaining in complete control of their behaviour – of behaving as though they were totally sober.

To achieve these changes, we need a complete and radical re-think of the aims and messages of all alcohol-education campaigns. So far, these efforts have perpetuated or even exacerbated the problem, because almost all of them simply reinforce our beliefs about the magical disinhibiting powers of alcohol.

The drinkaware website, for example, warns young people that a mere three pints of beer (ie a perfectly normal evening out) “can lead to anti-social, aggressive and violent behaviour”, that “you might start saying things you don’t mean and behaving out of character”, that alcohol is implicated in a high percentage of sexual offences and street crimes, and that the morning after “you may wonder what you did the night before”.

I would like to see a complete change of focus, with all alcohol-education and awareness campaigns designed specifically to challenge these beliefs – to get across the message that a) alcohol does not cause disinhibition (aggressive, sexual or otherwise) and that b) even when you are drunk, you are in control of and have total responsibility for your actions and behaviour.

Alcohol education will have achieved its ultimate goal not when young people in this country are afraid of alcohol and avoid it because it is toxic and dangerous, but when they are frankly just a little bit bored by it, when they don’t need to be told not to binge-drink vodka shots, any more than they now need to be told not to swig down 15 double espressos in quick succession.

Even the silliest teenagers would not dream of doing that. And not because they have been educated about the dangers of a caffeine overdose – although there undoubtedly are such dangers – but because it would just be daft, what would be the point?

What we should be aiming for is a culture where you don’t need alcohol-education programmes, any more than we now need coffee or tea education programmes.

If I were given total power, I could very easily engineer a nation in which coffee would become a huge social problem – a nation in which young people would binge-drink coffee every Friday and Saturday night and then rampage around town centres being anti-social, getting into fights and having unprotected sex in random one-night stands.

Police question a man who has been assaulted There are cultures where drinking is not associated with violence

I would restrict access to coffee, thus immediately giving it highly desirable forbidden-fruit status. Then I would issue lots of dire warnings about the dangerously disinhibiting effects of coffee.

I would make sure everyone knew that even a mere three cups (six “units”) of coffee “can lead to anti-social, aggressive and violent behaviour”, and sexual promiscuity, thus instantly giving young people a powerful motive to binge-drink double espressos, and a perfect excuse to behave very badly after doing so.

I could legitimately base many of my scary coffee-awareness warnings on the known effects of caffeine, and I could easily make these sound like a recipe for disaster, or at least for disinhibition and public disorder.

It would not take long for my dire warnings to create the beliefs and expectations that would make them self-fulfilling prophecies. This may sound like a science fiction story, but it is precisely what our misguided alcohol-education programmes have done.

Over the past few decades the government, the drinks industry and schools have done exactly the opposite of what they should do to tackle our dysfunctional drinking. I remain perhaps stupidly optimistic that eventually they will find the courage to turn things around and start heading in the right direction.

This is an edited version of Kate Fox’s Four Thought broadcast.

Southampton City Council votes against fluoride

Southampton City Council votes against fluoride

5:59pm Wednesday 14th September 2011

Southampton councillors have voted to oppose controversial plans to fluoridate to the city’s water supplies.

By a majority of around 2-1, city councillors backed a motion opposing the addition of fluoride to tap water to fight tooth decay.

And councillors agreed to use any future powers the authority may be given to prevent the implementation of a proposed fluoridation scheme by health chiefs.

Under the Government’s proposed NHS reforms, councils are due to be handed powers over fluoridation schemes when strategic health authorities (SHA) are scrapped in 2013.

Opponents of the proposed Hampshire scheme gathered a 6,000 name petition to force Southampton City Council to debate a motion on withdrawing its backing for fluoridation.

Hampshire Against Fluoridation sent an open letter to all 48 elected officials urging them to vote to oppose adding the chemical to tap water.

South Central SHA is working with Southern Water to determine how fluoride will be added, after defeating a High Court legal challenge.

During public consultation in 2008, the council backed the fluoride plans, to affect nearly 200,000 people in parts of Southampton, Eastleigh, Totton, Netley and Rownhams.

Related links

Stanton St Bernard (2), nr Alton Barnes – Wiltshire – Reported July 11, 2011

Stanton St Bernard (2), nr Alton Barnes – Wiltshire – Reported July 11, 2011

Uploaded to YouTube by  on 12 Jul 2011

“Ariel photos courtesy ‘Crop Circle Connector’
Groundshot by Eva-Marie Brekkestra -
Diagram by Red Collie (Dr. Horace R. Drew); interpretation for diagram is available at http://www.cropcircleconnector.com/2011/StantonStBernard2/comments.html -
Images courtesy ‘Crop Circle Connector’ – cropcircleconnector.com
Music is ‘Warming Up’ by Joel Chassan ~ freeplaymusic”

Crop Circle at Honeystreet (2), Nr Alton Barnes, Wiltshire – Reported July 4, 2011

Crop Circle at Honeystreet (2), Nr Alton Barnes, Wiltshire – Reported July 4, 2011

Uploaded to YouTube by  on 7 Jul 2011

“Photos thanks to Olivier Morel and Steve Alexander – Also, thank you to the diagram artist and the photographers whose names I could not access…Interpretation by Kavash Addollahi – Images courtesy ‘Crop Circle Connector’ – cropcircleconnector.com – Music is “Noreaster’ by Eric Darken – freeplaymusic”

Crop Circle at Honeystreet (3), Nr Alton Barnes, Wiltshire ♥ Reported July 4, 2011

Crop Circle at Honeystreet (3), Nr Alton Barnes, Wiltshire ♥ Reported July 4, 2011

Uploaded to YouTube by  on 6 Jul 2011

“Photos by John Montgomery, Olivier Morel, Lucy Pringle, Steve Alexander, kamal M.Engels, Annemieke Vitteveen, and Matison McWilliamson – Diagrams by Tommy Borms, Jay Goldner, Graham Lamat, Nyaka Nakar, and Animal Alien -
Images courtesy ‘Crop Circle Connector’ – cropcircleconnector.com -
“Peace Within” by Bruce Hathaway and Elizabeth Jean Hanna – freeplaymusic ~”

Crop Circle at Walmsgate, nr Louth, Lincolnshire ☼ Reported July 3, 2011

Crop Circle at Walmsgate, nr Louth, Lincolnshire ☼ Reported July 3, 2011

Uploaded to YouTube by  on 6 Jul 2011

“Photos thanks to David Jones and Steven Fuller – Diagrams thanks to Tommy Borms, Jay Goldner and Graham Lamat – Images courtesy ‘Crop Circle Connector’ – cropcircleconnector.com – Music is ‘Halcyon Sunrises’ by Christian Montalbano, Scott P. Schreer, and John Loeffler ~”

Crop Circle at Barbury Castle (2) Nr Wroughton, Wiltshire – Reported July 2, 2011

Crop Circle at Barbury Castle (2) Nr Wroughton, Wiltshire – Reported July 2, 2011

Uploaded to YouTube by  on 02 Jul 2011

“Photos thanks to John Montgomery, Olivier Morel, and Annemieke -
Diagram thanks to Johan Andersson -
Images courtesy ‘Crop Circle Connector’ – cropcircleconnector.com -
Music is ‘The Mirror’ by Mark Taylor – freeplaymusic”

Crop Circle at Charlbury Hill, nr Hinton Parva, Wiltshire ~ Reported June 29. 2011

Crop Circle at Charlbury Hill, nr Hinton Parva, Wiltshire ~ Reported June 29. 2011

Uploaded to YouTube by  on 2 Jul 2011

“Photos thanks to Steve Alexander and Olivier Morel – Diagrams and Interpretations by CMM Research, Red Collie, Bertold Zugelder and Nyako Nakar -
Music is Tchaikovsky – Nutcracker – Waltz of the Flowers – arranged by Dave Greendale – freeplaymusic”

Crop Circle at Allington (2), nr Devizes, Wiltshire. Reported June 28, 2011

Crop Circle at Allington (2), nr Devizes, Wiltshire. Reported June 28, 2011

Uploaded to YouTube by  on 1 July 2011

“Photos thanks to Olivier Morel – Diagrams and Interpretations thanks to
Red Collie, Johan Andersson, Bertold Zugelder and Emiliano Icardi – Music is ‘Holst Venus’ – arranged by Dave Greendale – freeplaymusic”

Crop Circle at Fonthill Down, Nr Chicklade. Wiltshire. Reported June 27, 2011

Crop Circle at Fonthill Down, Nr Chicklade. Wiltshire. Reported June 27, 2011

Uploaded to YouTube by  on 29 Jun 2011

Photos thanks to Olivier Morel, Lucy Pringle, and Paul Jacobs – Diagrams thanks to Yan Sun, Spaceshuttle and Tommy Borms – Images courtesy ‘The Crop Circle Connector’ – cropcircleconnector.com – Music is Tchaikovsky – ‘Sleeping Beauty Rose Adagio’ arranged by Dave Greendale – freeplaymusic