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- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
That’s horrible, did the bootleggers know they were adding methanol or is it like the US during prohibition where the government mandated manufacturers poison their alcohol so bootleggers wouldn’t use it
My understanding is that it is intentionally adulterated by illegal distillers in order to increase potency while keeping costs down in a competitive black market of alcohol sales to those who can not afford legal alchohol.
Just looking at the production process of methanol vs ethanol it’s way more likely that some asshole found some industrial methanol and stole it and used it to boost the potency of their product to boost their profit. Making enough methanol on a homebrew level to be dangerous is actually pretty tricky to do.
Or, the lazier method would be they just don’t throw away their first pours which are full of methanol and so 3 or 4 bottles from each batch are poison. This can easily happen with someone who just doesn’t know what they are doing trying to not waste product.
The simplicity of that explanation makes it feel more likely to me.
That is a lot of it, but there are cultural factors too. For traditional weddings in much of Asia you drink local palm/rice/whatever wine. Drinking is often competitive, you keep your empties in front of you on the table.
Pick a random country in Asia and search ‘methanol poisoning’ here’s Cambodia, the number of results is shocking. This has made international news because of the death toll, not because it’s an unusual occurrence.
https://search.privacyguides.net/search?q=cambodia+methanol+poisoning&category_general
This story is really not being reported fairly. If it was, it would be about the fact that they are so desperately poor that the only way they can think to have even a brief escape is through alcohol, but they’re even too poor to buy legal alcohol.