Scientist develops 'hangover-free' alcohol

Soldato
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/video_and_audio/headlines/37476416

A scientist has developed a new type of alcohol which he claims will not damage the liver or leave you with a hangover.

As someone who used to be able to get up the next day but now suffers from week long hangovers this comes as very good news :o

However I was thinking afterwards that if there are no negative consequences to drinking (no painful hangover and no damage to your health) then would this drive more people to alcoholism?

From the small clip above it sounds as if you still get the same drunken effects but you would wake up feeling fine, possibly still drunk (might increase drink driving incidents).

What do you think, is the pain needed to remind us not to drink so much? I guess the embarrasing incidents will still be a painful reminder to behave in future. :p
 
Now all they need to do is make it so that it is out of your system completely the next morning, and doesn't cause weight gain.

Then I'd go full alcoholic. :p
 
Hangovers are all part of the fun. Nothing better than waking up feeling like a rotting corpse and grabbing a cold one.

You can keep your pansy alcohol.
 
never going to happen - this is just a benzodiazapine, it has nothing to do with alcohol.

the chances of it being allowed is approximately zero.
 
I think trying to get up on time the next day and desperately attempting to not throw up on the train is part of the appeal of midweek drinking. It feels like you earned it.
 
GHB has been around for about 60 years already...

This pagoclone type stuff is essentially just a benzo like valium, pretty naff tbh.
 
It will be banned sharpish because it won't fall under alcohol duty.

The government would much rather we pay them while killing ourselves than there be a safer alternative that isn't being taxed.
 
never going to happen - this is just a benzodiazapine, it has nothing to do with alcohol.

the chances of it being allowed is approximately zero.

That was my thought (not the specific name...). I'm sure it's already "banned" under the legal highs legislation unfortunately.
 
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