Modern Drunkard: Drinking
is good for you: Did you know?
Dick Rosamorte: Nonsense.
MD: Oh? I have in my briefcase a number
of scientific reports from all over the world that state
otherwise. Surely as a doctor you must respect the scientific
validity of the findings.
DR: Those irresponsible reports will
bring misery to millions.
MD: So, it’s not the results
you object to, but the fact that they brought the truth
to light. Because you think the public cannot handle the
truth, isn’t that true, doctor?
DR: Most people can’t handle
the truth. Who did you say you were with?
MD: The, uh, Modern League To Aid Alcoholics.
DR: Never heard of it.
MD: Odd. Since you’re the Reformed Anti
Saloon League you’re acronym is RASL. So one may pronounce
it, I assume, as rassle, as hill folk pronounce wrestle.
DR: Yes?
MD: Well, I just thought it a vast improvement
of just ASL, which could be pronounced as a personal insult.
I mean, back in the Prohibition days, I’m pretty sure
the drinkers would see your ilk marching down the street
and say, “Hey, here come the, uh—
DR: Assholes?
MD: Precisely.
DR: I wouldn’t put it past them.
MD: Right. When was the original Anti-Saloon
League founded?
DR: In 1884. The founder—
MD: So you chaps have been trying to
put the squeeze on fun for well over a 120 years.
DR: Fun! I don’t call drinking
something that makes you vomit fun.
MD: Oh, I don’t know. Vomiting
out good liquor can be quite instructive at times. I’d
go as far as to say it has a rather invigorating cathartic
effect.
DR: And I suppose you think cancer is
a great weight loss technique?
MD: Most sufferers do seem
rather trim, don’t they? Also, I—
DR: What’s that?
MD: This? It’s altitude medicine.
I’m from London originally, you understand, and—
DR: It smells like gin.
MD: Of course it smells like gin. It’s
altitude medicine. There, much better! So, how old are you?
DR: Seventy-two. The last fifty of those
alcohol-free.
MD: My God, man! You look not a day
under eighty!
DR: What?
MD: Just making a casual observation.
The British Health Board advises teetotalers like yourself
to have a few, you know. For your own good.
DR: Bribed by the spirits industry,
no doubt.
MD: Huh! According to Bartending
Magazine, lawyers finally surpassed doctors as the
worst tippers. Congratulations!
DR: I’ve never given a bartender
a cent.
MD: No wonder you can’t get a
drink. What you skinflints don’t understand is it
is not only the duty of every gentleman to tip well, it
is sound economic advice.
DR: Having more altitude medicine?
MD: My condition is rather advanced.
I understand members of your organization used to stand
outside pubs, singing hymns at all the drunks inside.
DR: We sure did.
MD: Any intention of reintroducing this
behavior?
DR: Maybe. Why do you ask?
MD: I think it would be perfectly hilarious.
Getting legless on one’s barstool while heckling a
gang of off-key teetotalers sounds like a smashing good
time. Do you ever miss the good old days?
DR: Which days would those be?
MD: When you used to drink.
DR: Those were the worst days of my
life. Miserable, evil, awful.
MD: Oh, come now. You must of had a
couple wild times. Dancing on the bonnet of your Model A,
or perhaps charging around on your horse, hooting savagely
and bullwhipping innocent bystanders.
DR: Ridiculous! I never did any such
thing.
MD: Huh! What was your favorite drink
back then?
DR: I don’t see any point in discussing
it.
MD: It was a boilermaker, wasn’t
it? Five or six snorts of that and you’d be out on
your horse with your infamous bullwhip—
DR: Look, if you can’t conduct
a civil interview, I’ll ask you to leave.
MD: But surely you’ll admit the
greatest writers of your or my generation were also great
drunkards. Fitzgerald, Kerouac, Miller, Hemingway—
DR: Hemingway! I met that drunken tough.
He tried to sock me in the jaw.
MD: Isn’t that peculiar! Good
ol’ Hem!
DR: He was a bully and a rumdum.
MD: Now see here, my good man. Your
behavior borders on outrageous. Any more of these insults
and I’ll notify the consulate and have you barred
from ever setting foot on English soil. I’ve very
powerful friends in the Department of—
DR: England! A nation of drunken pigs!
MD: Well! This is an outrage, isn’t
it! An actual outrage!
DR: What’s outrageous is the hundreds
of people who die in drunk-driving accidents each year.
MD: So you’re saying we should
ban automobiles.
DR: No. I’m saying—
MD: That we should ban alcohol, which
is healthy, and keep those infernal pollution machines?
Not prepared to surrender your BMW, eh, doctor?
DR: Hold on a minute. In what way does
your organization help alcoholics?
MD: Why, we’re going to help them
to a drink! Pardon me for a moment.
DR: More medicine, eh!
MD: It’s a terrible burden,
I assure you.
DR: You don’t seem to mind.
MD: Oh, I manage. I have to say, ten
years ago I would have laughed at your organization. But
nowadays, with MADD and other groups swiftly moving into
the Prohibitionist camp, you’re not so laughable.
DR: It was only a matter of time before
the Mothers saw the light.
MD: Yes. Did you know the new president
of MADD is a man?
DR: Yeah, so?
MD: Doesn’t that seem a little
odd? That a supposedly grassroots organization for grieving
mothers is now helmed by a man? It’s been known the
male-dominated board of directors has controlled the organization
for years, but now they’ve just come right out and
appointed a man.
DR: It doesn’t matter who’s
in charge, just so long as they—
MD: Work to get rid of the booze.
DR: Right.
MD: May I inquire as to how many people
belong to your organization?
DR: That’s . . . we’re still
organizing.
MD: Twenty?
DR: We just started up two months ago.
MD: Ten?
DR: We’re just starting to get
some press, we—
MD: For God’s sake, man, please
tell me you at least have five members.
DR: Ask me in six months. Ask me then
how many we have.
MD: I will. I’ll come to one of
your meetings. And it better not just be me and you, staring
at each other.
DR: I don’t care how many people
show up, just so long as the word gets out.
MD: We’ll sing hymns against the
booze at the meeting. I’ll bring a bottle along, so
we can sing against it directly.
DR: You better not.
MD: It’ll inspire us. Especially
once we tuck into it, just for scientific purposes, you
understand.
DR: Fat chance.