Simon Darkshade wrote: ↑Tue Nov 21, 2023 3:14 pm
Johnnie,
Fair that it could go either way afterwards; I would note the quiet perniciousness addictiveness of smoking, making that process a fairly protracted one.
According to the CDC, 23.3% of people, or dang close enough to a quarter, were smokers in 2000 in the USA. I’d say that would spike a bit during WW3, both at home and in the military. You make a good point on the last point about smoking ‘capacity’ in a high intensity war, but the frontline forces in Germany are but a part of a mobilised force. We’re talking 800,000 regulars, 480,000 to 500,000 National Guardsmen, 600,000 USAR and 500,000 recalled retired reserve, plus the eventual conscript additions (would they be Army of the United States, incidentally?) Throw in the Navy, Marines and Air Force and there are going to be a few lads with the opportunity for a sneaky dart.
Class wise, I don’t have the knowledge to comment.
As to the question of which beers I’ve personally drank 30 pints of in a session, from memory when I used to drink that much or really at all, they would be:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_End_Draught
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coopers_Brewery
From that page: Pale Ale, Sparkling Ale, XPA
Southwark Bitter
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victoria_Bitter
https://prancingponybrewery.com.au/shop ... le-carton/
Guinness
At least in the US, smoking indoors and outdoors near air intakes was outlawed on federal property in 1997, and the period of 2004-2008 was where most states and localities were putting smoking bans in place, so that’s the trend. By 2005, CDC reported the smoking rate was down to 20.9% overall. It was higher among those 18-29 (Gallup estimated it was 30% in 2008), but still trending down.
Aye, we have a large mobilized force, but military service is a whole lot less safe and demands a whole lot more vigilance than in past wars, especially in the European theater. We’re also seeing rear-area troops rotated to higher danger roles a lot more quickly than in past wars, and their officers and NCOs know it. It’s also going to make developing bad habits out of complacency harder, at least in the short term, just because troops are being moved more.
We also very well may see stuff like Pact forces smoking when they shouldn’t become a serious liability, and that attitude of smoking on duty = sloppy/bad troops filter down into other units.
So the military and social factors will mitigate against it, at least on duty. We may get a counterbalance of tobacco as a short term stress reducing/coping mechanism, but the overall environment is going to be less permissive of things like smoke breaks or smoking on duty than @WoT, WWII or especially WWI (which is what popularized cigarettes).
30 pints in a day is still a lot of beer, even if it’s around 4%.