Surgeon General Gins Up a Questionable Drinking Causes Cancer Scare
Stealth alcohol prohibition in the guise of an anti-cancer campaign.

Our national health scold, Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, issued an advisory on his way out of office, asserting that drinking beer, wine, and liquor is "a leading preventable cause of cancer in the United States." The report warns that for some cancers, "evidence shows that this risk may start to increase around one or fewer drinks per day." It is worth noting that the current U.S. dietary guidelines suggest that alcohol consumption should be limited to two drinks per day for men and one per day for women.
Specifically, Murthy's advisory asserts that drinking is associated with an "increased risk for at least seven different types of cancer, including breast (in women), colorectum, esophagus, liver, mouth (oral cavity), throat (pharynx), and voice box (larynx)."
Inexplicably, Murthy did not address the comprehensive review of evidence on alcohol and health issued two weeks earlier by the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine (NAS).
Contrary to the surgeon general's claims, the NAS report determined that "no conclusion could be drawn regarding an association between moderate alcohol consumption and oral cavity, pharyngeal, esophageal, or laryngeal cancers." In addition, the NAS report determined that "no conclusion could be drawn regarding the association between moderate alcohol consumption compared with lifetime nonconsumers and risk of colorectal cancer." Interestingly, a June 2024 study in Scientific Reports, not cited by either the NAS or Murthy, found that moderate drinking "was a protective factor for colorectal cancer." The NAS did find with moderate certainty that moderate drinking was associated with a slight increase in the risk of female breast cancer.
But even Murthy's advisory notes that only 17 percent of the 20,000 or so annual cancer deaths associated with drinking occurred among moderate drinkers. Assuming that Murthy's figures are correct, then only about 3.2 percent of the annual 609,000 cancer deaths last year are attributable to drinking alcohol. Of those, moderate drinking contributed to 3,400 deaths last year, amounting to just 0.6 percent of all cancer deaths.
Looking at the bigger picture, NAS researchers concluded with moderate certainty that "compared with never consuming alcohol, moderate alcohol consumption is associated with lower all-cause mortality." This is the classic U- or J-shaped curve graphical representation that shows the risks for overall mortality are lower for light to moderate drinkers than for nondrinkers and heavy drinkers. Moderate drinkers tend to have fewer heart attacks and strokes than nondrinkers and heavy drinkers. With respect to overall mortality, the cardiovascular benefits tend to outweigh the modest cancer risks.
NAS researchers fully acknowledge that "there is strong evidence for the adverse effects of heavy drinking on the risk of the leading causes of death, including heart disease, stroke, and cancer." There is no need for epidemiologists to torture data to prove the deleterious effects of heavy drinking to all of us who overindulge. After all, English physician and pathologist Matthew Baillie in his The Morbid Anatomy of Some of the Most Important Parts of the Human Body first described the relation between hard drinking and cirrhosis of the liver in 1793. In 2023, nearly 43,000 Americans died of liver disease related to drinking alcohol.
Nevertheless, epidemiologists kept themselves busy. A search of Google Scholar using the terms "alcohol consumption" and "epidemiology" turns up 1,620,000 articles. Changing the search parameters to "moderate alcohol consumption" and "epidemiology" reduces the number of articles to a mere 22,600. The upshot is that advocates can slice and dice data to find just about any conclusion about the effects of alcohol consumption that they may want. Alcohol abuse researcher Mark Nason at the Prevention Research Institute recently observed, "The findings of a broad range of research on low-level drinking are equivocal and thus do not support a firm conclusion that it can be beneficial or that it increases health risks for most populations."
Nonetheless, Murthy wants to slap cancer warning labels on beer, wine, and liquor, and "reassess the recommended limits for alcohol consumption." Even more worryingly, he wants to "incorporate proven alcohol reduction strategies into population-level cancer prevention and initiatives and plans." Citing the work of neo-prohibitionist researchers like Timothy Naimi, Murthy's strategies would doubtlessly include "evidence-based policies that reduce the availability and affordability of alcohol (e.g., increasing alcohol taxes, reducing alcohol outlet density)." The surgeon general is evidently eager to deploy a questionable cancer scare in his campaign to impose stealth prohibition. For your own good, of course.
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Nobody listens to those clowns anymore.
I always get a kick out of dressing up civilian sorry-ass doctors in naval uniforms. Pretty much sums up government in general. Then I remember Nixon's fancy-schmancy uniforms.
C. Everett Koop looked really cool in his white naval uniform.
Funny enough, the military uniforms I like the most are the Navy, followed by the Marines. The crackerjack uniform has a lot of tradition, and I always liked watching the dress blue legs and their reverse creases. The white officer uniforms are the kind of nonsense on ships that require a certain arrogance that seems so opposite to the simple khaki undress uniforms, and the old bell bottom dungarees were practical and comfortable.
Then they blew it with camo on ships and bases. Who the heck thinks anyone on a ship or naval base needs camo? Idiots.
The air force look like bus drivers. The army is just army green. But camo at least makes some sense on forward deployed bases.
That’s not a US Navy uniform, it’s a Public Health Service uniform. It looks the same as a Navy uniform because the USPHS started by inspecting incoming ships to certify them free of disease etc
Poor sarc.
Yes, pour Sarc.
Murthy's lame duck shenanigans stem from executive orders issued in the last days of the Obama administration that Trump, all but oblivious to science policy, failed to rescind, and were subsequently amplified by Biden's entourage. Here's what 44's Presidential Science Advisor said in 2016:
"As President Obama noted in his Executive Order 13707, behavioral science insights can support a wide range of national priorities ...
That Executive Order, 13707, directs Federal agencies to apply behavioral science insights to their policies and programs, and it institutionalizes the Social and Behavioral Science Team… The administration is releasing new guidance to agencies that supports continued implementation of The Behavioral Science Insights Executive Order. "
https://vvattsupwiththat.blogspot.com/2016/09/the-behavioral-science-insights.html
Prohibition i where you find it:
https://reason.com/2008/07/23/carbon-based-prohibition/
That's disgusting.
Does anyone wonder why the public is loosing (has lost) its faith in science? But what does it matter since the planet has only five years left, according to AOC.
Why don’t we simply put masks on liquor bottles and have the bottles practice social distancing? Surely that will solve the problem.
Murthy's call to "reassess the recommended limits for alcohol consumption." inspired Roni Caryn Rabin the NYTimes resident Carrie Nation to declare " alcohol is alcohol" when asked about extending the warning label campaign.
If Murthy really wants to "incorporate proven alcohol reduction strategies into population-level cancer prevention and initiatives and plans." , " no dose is safe " campaigners may shift from microplastic and PFAS to warning labels on hand sanitizers and fermented products from bread to yoghurt, which can contain half as much alcohol as light beer.
FFS. FINE.
*puts away the hooch*
*starts eating red meat again*
An AT joke! I love it.
If you think that's questionable you should go read the crap this Bailey guy was posting about the wu flu
Moar testing needed!
Challenge accepted! On my way to the bar to test this theory myself.
Think he is still getting a booster every couple of months?
What do you expect from another of Biden's diversity hires?
The two biggest risk factors for cancer are age and genetics (with the latter being the largest risk factor). I shudder to think how the government would regulate those two risk factors.
M.A.I.D. could potentially prevent a lot of deaths due to cancer.
Would somebody please strip that imitation uniform off of Murthy? And his ribbons? Good attendance and penmanship?
Why cancer when we already know it causes cirrhosis?
Can't anything that causes repeated cell damage and inflammation increase cancer risk?
Listening to Vivek's voice probably causes cancer.
While stupid, guidelines and warning labels are in no way prohibition. Over react much Bailey?
2021 was the current administrations happiest year, unchecked authoritarianism hyped by hysteria. This is just another attempt by a dying regime to relive its glory days.
There is a book out , heavily researched, that shows the entire falsity of the sazerac/absinthe scare years ago. If REASON would quit waiting for the enemy to fire ---- and actually advance something positive. Kill off every enemy you know of and you still have not made YOUR POINT
Ron, Thank you!
I doubt this NAS study will be heard about on the legacy media, and will be glad to have it in my files as yet one more case of why I have decided to focus on how food / drink / meds make me feel overall, rather than trying to hit magic, average target values set by the medical-governmental complex (BMI, cholesterol, triglycerides, glucose, etc.).
"Figures don't lie, but liars - and politicians - sure do lie!"
If any amount is not good and alcohol is not a staple , why not ban it outright --- and there is your answer to why this is silly.
Why not have a warning on all boxes weighing more than X pounds: Pregnant women should not life heavy objects.
We are accomplishing the very opposite.Now unless a Blimp goes by saying " do or don't do _______" people just turn off all priudence and judgement
"one or fewer drinks per day."
LOL WUT
He's a Dementia Joe appointee. What did you expect?
Nope, clear back to Oh-bummah. Trump left him there, but apparently it's starting to go to his head, or maybe Joe's handlers told him to get this out now before 47 gets going on accepting the presigned letters of resignation.
Can't wait for them to slap it on bacon
MMMMMMMMMM, bacon!