Evan!
Well-Known Member
I honestly wasn't aware that these were actually beer products. I figured they were just alcopops with caffeine. But I was just reading this piece on their "controversial" status...and their success despite that manufactured controversy:
For anyone who isn't aware, I feel that this is a perfect time to note that any time you hear about "Center for Science in the Public Interest", it's obligatory to roll your eyes and yell "pshaw!". They are, quite simply, food Nazi's. See here. These are the idiots who want us all to eat alfalfa sprouts and carrots. Perhaps we should hear it from the horse's mouth:
...but I digress. This is a good read nonetheless. As much as I would never drink any of this crap, it really grinds my gears any time some puritan neoprohibitionists (especially a crooked group like CSPI) use appeals to "won't somebody please think of the children" to infringe on a company's right to sell to cognizant adults. Of course, CSPI can't prove that a disproportionate amount of underagers actually drink this stuff...but why should we let facts get in the way of emotion-driven nannyism?
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Thats one of the things that put energy beers on the hit list of antialcohol groups like the Center for Science in the Public Interest, which recently announced its intent to sue A.B. and Miller over the drinks, charging that they are aimed at underage drinkers and contain more alcohol than standard beers. Similar organizations have agitated for taxing the drinks at the higher liquor rate and for banning any use of caffeine in alcohol beverages. Last year 29 state attorneys general sent a letter to A.B. that sharply criticized the companys energy beers, including a 12 percent alcohol product called Spykespackaged in 2-ounce bottlesthat has since been withdrawn.
Even though caffeine-overdose deaths are very rare, assertions are being made that alcohol energy drinks suppress the effects of intoxication, leading young people to drink more than they would otherwise. These new drinks are deemed different and dangerous, because, they note, theyre marketed to underage drinkers.
For anyone who isn't aware, I feel that this is a perfect time to note that any time you hear about "Center for Science in the Public Interest", it's obligatory to roll your eyes and yell "pshaw!". They are, quite simply, food Nazi's. See here. These are the idiots who want us all to eat alfalfa sprouts and carrots. Perhaps we should hear it from the horse's mouth:
-Michael Jacobsen, founder of CSPI."CSPI is proud of finding something wrong with practically everything."
...but I digress. This is a good read nonetheless. As much as I would never drink any of this crap, it really grinds my gears any time some puritan neoprohibitionists (especially a crooked group like CSPI) use appeals to "won't somebody please think of the children" to infringe on a company's right to sell to cognizant adults. Of course, CSPI can't prove that a disproportionate amount of underagers actually drink this stuff...but why should we let facts get in the way of emotion-driven nannyism?
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