Alcoholism is directly linked to a decline of a culture. Alcoholism spreads when a culture is dying, Its spread amongst women currently in Ireland, is a sure sign that a culture has lost its health giving cohesion. Modern individualism and the loss of the traditional Irish community supports the disease of alcoholism. European money and technology have become in Ireland dominant models for security and liveliness feeding individualism with a false sense of human and higher power. The booze is now talking in bailout Ireland with moods of anxiety, guilt and fear. Drunken women on Irish streets are the current artifacts of a dying Gaelic civilization.
Recent research in Ireland has revealed, that over a quarter of Irish people believe their environment is ruined by drunken Irish women fighting, vomiting, defecating and urinating in full view of the Irish streets, while at the same time threatening and terrorizing passers by.
Women in Ireland are the worst binge drinkers in the world, a study has revealed. Over 57 per cent of Irish women under the age of 30 are now classed as problem drinkers, getting plastered drunk on at least one orgy session every fortnight if not every night.
The latest study, which looked into the drinking habits of over 17,000 men and women in countries worldwide, is the largest ever undertaken, evaluating worldwide drinking habits. Alcohol is having a devastating effect on women in Irish society. The study found that more a third of Irish women could be classed as drunks or binge drinkers.
The culture of Irish women drunks, follows a growing concern about the spread of the West Brit 'ladette' culture in Ireland, where young women are outdoing their male counterparts in drinking and riding, with Irish women being the predators.
The rate of Irish women who are drunks is 11 times higher than that of other European countries, such as France, Germany or Italy, with record numbers of Irish women who have liver damage and other problems which include psychological issues.
Irish women regularly beat up their husbands and boyfriends in some instances knocking them unconscious or killing them, directly after massive verbal onslaughts. Recent research shows that more than half of all violence in Ireland is fuelled by women binge drinking, with one in eight Irish people battered as a result of been involved in some sort of violence in the past few years with drunken Irish women.
Ireland are also the top of the male drinking league table, with a figure of 49% which is not however, as bad as Irish women. The number of Irish women getting hospital treatment after drinking has doubled in the last 5 years, with some being being so drunk that they are in comas. Irish doctors say young Irish women are drinking so much that they are developing serious liver diseases 20 years ahead of what medical professionals would normally expect.Binge-drinking Irish women are dying more than seven times faster than normal, with heart disease along with increased instances of breast cancer.
Women usually fight with Irish men but when alcohol is added to the equation, Irish women are far more likely to be violent than Irish men. Dr Min Yang a researcher at the British university's Queen Mary College, said if drinking stopped, violent behaviour would immediately be cut by half.
Fortunately not all Irish women are drunks yet, there are still a few, a very few, who like Marian Price for example are trying to rescue their country from the ravages of British colonialism and the alcoholism, that is usually associated with all dying civilizations like the ancient Gaelic one in Ireland currently under Britsh Occupation in the north and neo-colonialism in the south in both of the islands scum states. Unfortunately the British have politically interned Marian without trial in solitary confinement and there are a few, just a very few of her sober Irish sisters left who have shown solidarity for their tortured sister. They can be found at the Free Marian Price Cause on Facebook @ http://www.causes.com/MarianPrice
Or add related content to this report
News Stories | Blogs | Images | Videos | Comments