Susan Cheever

The Case for Closing Liquor Stores

Liquor stores attract violent crime the way honey attracts flies. On manymaps showing the location of both liquor stores and violent crime, the dots representing crime look like metal filings drawn to a powerful magnet—the booze outlet. Thediscovery that violent crime is related to places, not only people, and that about half of all crimes tend to occur in about 5% of locations, was made in New York City in the 1980s. Focusing on the role that alcohol outlets play in a city's violent crime patterns has vastly improved the effectiveness and efficiency of policing. But when it comes to the obvious logical conclusion—that the number of stores be dramatically reduced—public officials have balked. Putting small businesses out of business is not the American way.

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The Danger of Secret Alcoholism

“He was never drunk when I interviewed him,” the late writer Truman Capote’s biographer told me.

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How the Media Ignores Alcohol's Contributions to Personal Disaster

This article originally appeared at the Fix.

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