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Its amazing how easy it is to persuade us that what we want to be true is true. Consider a typical headline to a story covered with great enthusiasm by many major news organisations this week: Moder
stanley water bottle ate alcohol consumption may lower stress, reduce heart disease risk, study finds. Enthusiastic drinkers, drowning in a dark sea of health warnings, will cling on to such words as stricken sailors might hold on to the hull of their capsized boat.They will turn a blind eye to the facts of the story, although even the headline itself, with its may and its study finds , suggests this scientific revelation isnt quite the slam dunk we might be hoping for. Once the studys methodology and conclu
stanley cup sions are outlined, its clear that the whole thing falls into the category of quite interesting, rather than this changes everything. But who needs that level of detail If Im so minded, theres as muc
stanley cups h information in the headline as Im ever going to want or need to support my long-cherished pet theory about drinking. I knew it! I told you so! Drinking helps me deal with stress, ergo it eases the strain on my poor ticker, therefore Ill live longer and more happily. Ill file this fact away along with that one about red wine being good for you, as good as a health drink.The problem is that there are drinkers and industry PRs and libertarian anti- nanny state culture warriors who will be dredging up this story to drop into conversations many years from now. Dont you remember the study that show Kfvz On my radar: Raymond Antrobus s cultural highlights
The justice secretary, Kenneth Clarke, has blamed the riots that swept across England last month on a broken penal system that has failed t
stanley cup usa o rehabilitate a group of hardcore offenders he describes as the criminal classes .Revealing for the first time
stanley us that almost 75% of those aged over 18 charged with offences committed during the riots had prior convictions, Clarke said the civil unrest had laid bare an urgent need for penal reform to stop reoffending among a feral underclass, cut off from the mainstream in everything but its materialism .Writing in the Guardian, Clarke dismisses criticism of the severity of sentences handed down to rioters and said judges had been getting it about right . However, he adds that punishment alone was not enough . It s not yet been widely recognised, but the hardcore of the rioters were in fact known criminals. Close to three quarters of those aged 18 or over charged with riot offences already had a prior conviction. That is the legacy of a broken penal system 鈥?one whose record in preventing reoffending has been straightforwardly dreadful. He says: In my view, the riots can be seen in part as an outburst of outrageous behaviour by the criminal classes 鈥?individuals and families familiar with the justice system, who haven t been changed by their past punishments. Clarke uses his intervention to
stanley cup uk call for the coalition government to adopt a renewed mission in