Alcohol prohibited

(no ifs and buts)

Researched by: A.Muhammad

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It has been claimed by many writers that intoxicants in general (Khamr) has not been comnpletely prohibited in the Quran, but only discouraged.  Others, mainly the followers of hadith, have claimed that drinking has been prohibited on stages!

This article aims at presenting evidence that the Quran categorically prohibits drinking (and all intoxicants) and that God's Law is given decisively, and not given on stages.  

The article also aims at presenting the reader with all the medical facts related to the damage caused to the human body through alcohol consumption.

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The Prohibition

The prohibition of intoxicants in the Quran is given through what is called 'syllogism'. Syllogism is a form of reasoning in which from two given propositions called the premisses, a third is deduced and called the conclusion.

Example:

1-  All men are mortal

2-  Caesar is a man

therefore:

3-  Caesar is mortal  

With regrads to the prohibition of intoxicants in the Quran we read the following two premisses:

1-   God prohibited all 'ithm' (sin) 7:33

2-   In intoxicants there is great 'Ithm' 2:219

therefore:

3-   Intoxicants are prohibited by God.

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Those who claim that drinking was prohibited on stages, or that it was permitted up till the revelation of the Quran, show their ignorance with God's eternal law that is unchangeable (33:62).

It is well known that drinking was prohibited in the previous scripture as well, and not only with the advent of the Quran.  In the Bible we read:

"Wine is a mocker, strong drink a brawler; and whoever is led astray by it is not wise" (Proverbs 20:1).

"Do not look at wine when it is red, when it sparkles in the cup and goes down smoothly. At the last it bites like a serpent, and stings like an adder" (Proverbs 23:30,31)

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The following is a presentation of the main ill effects of alcohol on the human body:

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1-   Alcohol and Liver Problems

Over the long term, even a drink or two a day can result in abnormal liver function, over the years this can result in permenant liver damage, and consequently total liver failure.   Liver failure leads to death.

Unfortunately, stopping drinking cannot reverse the damage, liver problems may show up a number of years after stopping drinking. Alcohol may cause cirrhosis (liver failure), which may not show symptoms for years.

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2-   Alcohol boosts Esophageal Cancer Risk

Drinking when combined with smoking can increase risks for esophageal cancer by more than 100-fold, an international team of researchers report. The team estimates that "up to 90% of esophageal cancers in men could be prevented if these habits could be abated," (Report in the August issue of the International Journal of Cancer).

Esophageal cancer remains one of the leading digestive-tract cancers, killing close to 9,000 Americans every year. Experts have long linked smoking and drinking with the development of this lethal cancer.

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3-   Alcohol and breast cancer

Studies indicate that women who drink even one or two drinks per day have an increased risk of breast cancer.

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4-   Alcohol boosts toxic levels

Consistent high intake of alcohol causes toxicity to many of the organ systems, especially the liver and the pancreas.  

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5-   Drinking and heart problems

Those who drink have a higher risk of heart attack and stroke.  Moreover, excessive alcohol consumption can damage the muscle of the heart, impairing its ability to pump blood, leading to a chronic condition called an alcoholic cardiomyopathy. This, in turn, may cause chronic congestive heart failure.

Several medical studies in recent years have been given widespread publicity because they seemed to substantiate the idea that moderate consumption of alcohol reduced the risk of heart attacks and strokes.

However, antioxidants, the beneficial ingredient in alcohol, can be gotten without the risks of alcohol by eating deeply-colored fruits and vegetables (red or purple grapes, tomatoes, etc.). 

The polyphenols present in grapes are indeed protective against heart disease and many forms of cancer, yet it is not necessary to ferment the grapes to get this benefit.

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6-   Alcohol and Weight Gain

Alcohol is a major cause of obesity, in several reasons. Carbohydrates have 4 calories per gram, fat has 9 calories per gram, and alcohol has 7.   Thus drinking consumes significantly more calories than carbohydrate foods or non-alcoholic soft drinks. Drinking two drinks a day of beer or wine and just one or two of hard liquor will easily add 15 pounds within six months.

Moreover, our bodies absorb the alcohol quickly, it gets rapidly converted to sugar, and this causes the pancreas to secrete insulin. Insulin accelerates the conversion of calories into fat. Finally, alcohol slows down our metabolism, as a result we burn those calories more slowly. 

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7-   Alcohol and death on the roads

Drinking excessive amounts of alcohol also impairs judgment, and reduces the body's reaction time. It is a fact that the large majority of traffic accidents are caused by excessive consumption of alcohol.

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8-   Alcohol and abnormal blood tests

Several blood tests may be abnormal in an alcoholic patient.  Often, alcoholics are anemic as a result of low intakes of folic acid. This type of anemia shows up as large, red blood cells, and is usually detected in lab work to determine blood counts.      

Alcohol also affects the liver, and various blood tests to gauge liver function may be abnormal. Liver enzymes (AST and ALT) are increased in the blood in a certain proportion to one another in alcoholic liver disease. The typical suggestive ratio is a level of AST that is twice the level of ALT. Another enzyme, GGT, may be high in the blood of someone who has been drinking recently.

In alcoholic patients with severe liver disease, as well as in other patients with liver disease, blood clotting factor levels may be low and bilirubin levels may be high. Counts of platelets (also involved in blood clotting) can also be low in these patients.

Although the above tests are not diagnostic of alcoholism on their own, they are often used to confirm a suspicion of alcohol abuse or its consequences in certain patients who may not admit to alcohol abuse.

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9-   Alcohol and male impotence

Men with chronic high-level alcohol consumption typically experience a decrease in the number of sperm as well as a decrease in sexual drive. Researchers believe that the alcohol lowers the level of the male hormone testosterone, both by decreasing the production of the hormone and by increasing the speed at which the body metabolizes it. This means that there is less testosterone available for normal sperm production and sexual function.

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10-   Alcohol and low motility

Alcohol may result in abnormal liver function and a rise in estrogen levels, which may interfere with sperm development and hormone levels. Alcohol is also a toxin that can kill off the sperm-generating cells in the testicle.  Consequently, there is indication that low motility may be linked to excessive alcohol intake.

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11-   Alcohol and pregnancy

Full-blown fetal alcohol syndrome may be seen in women drinking three ounces of absolute alcohol daily. (One ounce of absolute alcohol is equivalent to two beers, two four-ounce glasses of wine or two mixed drinks made with one shot of hard liquor.) Fetal alcohol syndrome involves poor growth both before and after birth, mental retardation, behavioral disturbances and a characteristic facial appearance; other defects such as heart problems and brain abnormalities are also common. Lesser amounts of alcohol may be associated with more subtle abnormalities, and these may be seen with as little as two drinks per day (one ounce of absolute alcohol). More than one drink more than two times a week has also been associated with a higher incidence of miscarriage.

Father's alcohol intake and fetal health

Over the long term, even a drink or two a day can result in abnormal liver function in the man, which can adversely affect hormones and sperm production.  Researches have shown that this may have an adverse relationship with regards to the risk of fetal alcohol syndrome or other birth defects.

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12-   Alcohol and post Gallbladder removal


It is found that some patients do experience looser stools after their gallbladders are removed, possibly related to the constant flow of bile into the intestine. Because alcohol can also lead to diarrhea, drinking may compound the problem of cholecystectomy-related diarrhea in certain people.

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13-   Risk of Psychiatric Problems for Kids with alcoholic parents

Children of alcoholic parents appear to be at increased risk of a variety of psychiatric disorders and behavioral problems, results of a number of studies suggest.

Such children were more likely than their peers to have attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, conduct disorder and overanxious disorder, according to a report in the June issue of the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.

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14-   Alcohol and domestic violence

The women (and children) at greatest risk for domestic violence are those whose partner is a regular drugs or alcohol consumer, according to results of a study conducted in emergency rooms across the US.

The fact that alcoholism is the major cause of domestic violence is also confirmed in police reports acrros the country.

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15-   Alcohol and Work Productivity

Due to the effect of alcohol on the body as a whole, and in personal levels of mental concentration in particular, alcohol significantly reduces productivity of the drinker.  An independent research indicated that alcohol-dependent workers more frequently cause alcohol-related work problems -- showing up late, leaving early, doing poor quality or inadequate work, and arguing with co-workers.

"Two specific kinds of drinking behavior significantly contribute to the level of work-performance problems: drinking right before or during working hours (including drinking at lunch and at company functions), and heavy drinking the night before that causes hangovers during work the next day," the researchers, Dr. Thomas W. Mangione of JSI Research and Training Institute in Boston, Massachusetts, and colleagues, explain.

In conducting the study, the researchers surveyed and interviewed more than 14,000 corporate executives, supervisors, and workers at seven Fortune 500 corporations.

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