Quoting: Guest, Post #2
Another strange thing is that, mostly at night, but even during daytime, you can see drunken people in the street. This is very uncommon in the West, but the Poles do drink a lot outside their homes and often ride a bus or a tram or simply walk home - singing, talking (often to themselves or others), swearing, sometimes abusing or even attacking strangers. This is the famous Polish vodka talking. Unfortunately, nowadays, many drunks have an easy access to a vehicle and choose instead to drive into the night. No wonder that Poland has triple the rate of the drink driving accidents compared to the West.
Looks like the author is not a foreigner, but perhaps some adolescent Pole who's never been abroad. What is "the West"? That's a typical Polish misconception about the world West of the Oder River, that all the people accross the Western border are the same, sharing the same "Western" views, opinions, values, habits and religious beliefs.
You think Poland has a drinking problem? Go to Ireland or UK, take a good look at them crowds of zombies locked out of their sane minds, pouring out of pubs and nightclubs at around 3 a.m. each weekend. Fail not to notice the shocking number of youths stumbling down the streets on their way home, slurring curses through their oozing gaping mouth and unashamedly indulging in acts of teritorial pissing. Observe these disgraceful girls in their early twenties, so desperately looking for some fun and love that at the end of the night they end up as sad, miserable slightly overweight ferrets standing in their far too skimpy outfits, holding their expensive high heels in hands for quite reasonable fear they would fall over to the ground, face-first and loose several teeth if they tried to take even the smallest step wearing those.