I respectfully disagree, in part, with author Hung Minh's proposal to
ban alcohol in Vietnam.
I feel a ban is too severe at this time. Trying a less severe
solution first might perhaps be a better plan. In my opinion an outright ban
may have unwanted repercussions.
Among the problems may be: Black
market beer and wine of which the criminal element would profit, creating yet
another form of crime that is expensive to monitor and enforce. Illegal sales of homemade rice liquor already
kill many each year in Vietnam.
Perhaps
an increased use of illegal drugs among young adults who may replace alcohol
with illegal drugs.
Tourism may suffer lower numbers as many come to relax which may
include having a few drinks.
I would consider a ban on public intoxication. Create special
police unit to do random yet regular checks at restaurants and bars that serve
alcohol and jail or fine anyone visibly drunk. Breath test individuals if need
be. Tourists should be held to the same standard as citizens on this matter.
A first time offender for driving drunk, impound their car or
motorbike and a heavy fine. Any repeated offense, the police take the car or
motorbike and sell it at public auction and use money to fund the alcohol
enforcement unit.
Regulate establishments that serve alcohol. Make it a penalty to
serve alcohol to anyone visibly intoxicated. Should an intoxicated person be
served or served too much, then cause injury or accident, hold the
establishment partially responsible for the action of the person they allowed
to drink after being visibly intoxicated. Ban sales of alcohol at any
establishment that repeatedly serves someone who has clearly had too much to
drink.
For many years I visit Vietnam and stay for one month each
time. I stay in Ho Chi Minh City and visit many
cities in Vietnam
and have witnessed too many times the over-consumption of alcohol. I do not
stay in the tourist areas and get to see a more common part of the culture.
Walking on the streets late at night I am cautious as I know many
of the drivers on the road are drunk after a night of heavy drinking with their
friends.
I occasionally drink two or three beers with a meal at a
restaurant when dining with my friends. Afterwards my friends and I meet at a
local coffee shop and chat and drink coffee before we all go home for the
evening.
Vietnam should not be known for the highest
alcohol consumption in all of Asia.
Vietnam should be known for its thousands of
wonderful coffee shops, big and small, and the world's best coffee that is
served in each one.
If a softer approach to the abuse of alcohol does not solve the
problem, then perhaps an outright ban of alcohol is needed as suggested by
author Hung Minh.
I believe many ideas and much discussion is a good way to find
solutions to serious issues that affect so many lives. These are only my
opinions and I'm not an expert on laws or social issues.
I plan to make Vietnam
my home in the future. A country rich in culture, beautiful sights and
wonderful people is what makes Vietnam
a world treasure.
Tôi yêu Việt Nam!
I love Vietnam.
* The writer lives in Oregon,
US, but is counting his days for a return to Vietnam. The opinions are his own.
All comments [ 4 ]
the proposal of banning alcohol is suitable because there are many alcohol-related deaths everyday
alcohol causes negative consequences that is not only traffic accidence, but also family violence and social evils
that's right, I totally support that proposal
shoud strictly punish who are in high alcohol concentration when taking part in traffic
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