The Daily Illini
URL: http://www.dailyillini.com/index.php/article/2010/11/ban_of_lsquoblackout_in_a_canrsquo_essential_for_safety_health
Current Date: Tue, 22 May 2012 01:01:48 -0500
Ban of ‘blackout in a can’ essential for safety, health
Here’s the scene: You’re at a normal college party.
For lack of other preference, Justin Bieber is blasting on the speakers. For lack of personal rhythm, students are dancing like they do on “Jersey Shore.” Finally, for lack of inhibition, alcohol is being consumed in a binge-like fashion. If this isn’t what your idea of a college party is... don’t judge me.
Skip two or so hours ahead. You’re still at the party, but things are no longer normal. Out of the 50 attendees, nine have been hospitalized and many more are getting sick. Police show up and are confused. They expect that some sort of mystery drug has been slipped into the students’ drinks — but have never seen anything like the situation in front of them.
This happened last month at Central Washington University. Yet, a mystery drug didn’t cause it. It was caused by Four Loko, the new trendy drink of the year for college-age kids.
If you’ve never heard of Four Loko, you are either someone who refrains from social media, or you live in Urbana. Either way, give yourself a pat on the back.
Four Loko is often bluntly referred to as a “blackout in a can” and has lived up to this expectation. One can of the drink, which is 23.5 ounces, includes the alcohol content of six cans of light beer and the caffeine of two cups of coffee, according to Washington Liquor Control Board spokesman Brian Smith. Even consumed separately, this is a lot of either substance. But combined, this is as dangerous as Springfield Avenue in the dark.
When caffeine brings your body up, and alcohol brings your body down, the two don’t cancel each other’s effects out — they exacerbate them. The caffeine will hide the depressant effects of alcohol and make you feel more stimulated. This will prohibit your body from putting itself to sleep when it wants to protect you from drinking more. With this, danger has arrived. The drunk (yet awake) version of you isn’t going to tell you to stop drinking, and this how so many college-aged kids recently have been hospitalized.
Because of these risks, Four Loko should be banned in Illinois as it recently was in Michigan. All alcohol can be dangerous, but Four Loko is far too loco for my liking.
It’s easy to explain the risks of Four Loko, so what could possibly be its benefits?
It’s cheap. Four Loko is only $2.69 a can at Hometown Pantry on Green Street. In the college binge-drinking culture, many students drink just to get drunk. Considering what it contains, Four Loko is definitely one of the most economical ways to get drunk. In these hard economic times, buying a Four Loko as opposed to buying a six-pack is the only sensible thing to do — smart college students recognize this.
It’s fast. College students have become exceedingly impatient. We are impatient with our information, so we take advantage of Facebook and Twitter to the sacrifice of privacy. We are too impatient to have a full verbal conversation, so we take advantage of texting to the sacrifice of human interaction. Four Loko gets us browned-out/blacked-out/to the point where its not cold out — and it does this FAST. Of course we’ll take advantage of this!
It’s wild! For some reason in the United States, a lot of people have an accepted mind set that while in college, students are permitted to behave in a way that is not accepted anywhere else. After four years of partying, students are then forced into the real world... because apparently this world is fake.
The joke has been made that it’s only alcoholism if you’re older than 23. There are many students who embrace this exceptionalism, and what better drink to define this mind set than one that all but guarantees “blacking out?”
Four Loko is 23.5 ounces of college student in a can, plain and simple. Its “benefits” would make our parents raise an eyebrow.
The drink is trendy, and will most likely sink into oblivion with the likes of Ed Hardy and upside-down visors. If not, its risks will ultimately lead to its rightful demise.
Four-get about Four Loko. If you really seek destination blackout, there are other roads. Take the one less traveled by [college students], that will make all the difference.
Tim is a junior in LAS.
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Reader Comments
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Should be ban everything that is bad. Alcohol is banned (by the law) for people under 21. How's that working out? Marijuana's illegal, how's that working out? Should we ban pudding with fat content in it? Personal liberty is at stake here as much as someone's health and welfare, but as long as the University, Champaign, and Urbana allow underage drinking to be rampant, these kinds of drinks will spread. Why can't we ban greasy fries, I think they're unhealthy? Where does it stop?
Also, Tim, you write this from the comfort of your DI column, but would you be comfortable next your best friend saying "Hey man, don't drinking the Four Loko."?
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Why is it so important for you to preach morality and play the mom and dad role for 21 year olds? The people that are purchasing these beverages are (in theory) 21 years old. So lets be honest, who at the age of 21 or even at 18 would think that this beverage is healthy? Clearly there are health ramifications for drinking these beverages. If anything is needed, I feel perhaps a better label that states the harmful effects is in order. Don't preach banning a drink just because some people can't drink in moderation. Its time for people to grow up and take responsibility for how much and in what way they drink.
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I would like to point out that there are health ramifications for over utilization of any product. We live in America where it is up to individuals and businesses to meet the needs and wants of the public in order to make a profit. People are allowed to abstain from usage at any time. I assume that vodka-red bull drinks will be removed from the bars following the "rightful demise" of Four Loko? They seem to do the same thing. I have used a Four Loko and have not been hospitalized or had any other major consequences. I think that it takes a foolish person to mismanage their own body in such a manner. It does make sense though that we over drink. We live in an incredibly obese society that just does not know when to put the sandwich(or Loko) down. I put the Loko down when it is empty and I am able to walk away, sometimes stumble. In closing I would say that it is absolutely ridiculous to suggest the discontinuation of the Four Loko without citing any health effects through concrete statistics and lambasting the drinkers of this beverage.
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They aren't just banning Four Loko because it is a dangerous substance. They are banning it because the combination of alcohol and caffeine is something foreign to most drinkers and they don't know how to handle the effects they are experiencing.
You mention banning greasy fries. How does that make any sense in this discussion? When was the last time someone ended up getting poisoned by eating a few too many fries? The line between "drunk" and alcohol poisoning when drinking Four Loko is really thin. You can end up in the hospital by just drinking three of these. It would take years for weed, pudding, or greasy fries to even begin to harm you.
As for your question you asked Tim, I'll answer for him: I would definitely tell my best friend to be extremely careful drinking this stuff. I've seen a couple of my friends with alcohol poisoning and it's not pretty and this stuff has alcohol-poisoning written all over it.
I don't want to say your post was stupid, but it definitely isn't well thought out.
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