I've only just come back to this thread but I'm glad the article seems to have provoked some further debate at least. Whether it should be on the thread about Charles Kennedy is another matter and I take the point that perhaps it's not really appropriate. For what it's worth I think he was an admirable man and is a very great loss to the country as well (of course) as his family and friends.
Also an apology to Soutra as my post came straight after yours and I'm sorry I didn't acknowledge how difficult it must be to have such worries about your DH. I do hope he will remain as well as possible for a very long time to come.
I don't particularly like the Daily Mail Gracesgran but I read it online and I try to keep am open mind about some of the content. As you say, sometimes there is a good, balanced article that is worth reading. I have no idea whether Max Pemberton calls himself 'the Mind Doctor' or if that is a title the DM has decided to give him, but I have read other stuff he has written (not in the Telegraph but elsewhere) and I often agree with him. I like the fact that as a psychiatrist he takes a wider view than many conventional psychiatrists. I don't see anything contentious in this article, but I accept that others do. He argues very clearly that alcoholics should receive compassion, support, and treatment, however we regard it.
I agree with him that alcoholism is not an illness. I don't think it is a lifestyle choice, or something that people set out to acquire. I think it is something that people fall into gradually for all sorts of reasons, often (as others have said) in an attempt to shut out painful feelings and traumatic experiences. I think that sometimes it starts as a social habit and becomes addictive, like many substances. I also think that some people have a predisposition to risky and addictive behaviours, but I don't think it's as simple as 'an addictive gene' as I think human psychology is far more complicated than that. It has certainly appeared in several members of my family and has destroyed lives. Unfortunately I sometimes find it difficult to practise the compassion I would like to feel for my own relatives and instead feel angry at the sheer waste of life, talents, everything. Sadly, Charles Kennedy's son may feel that anger at some stage at the loss of a father he needed throughout his childhood and beyond. I'm sorry if that offends anyone, but grief at the death of an alcoholic is always complicated.
Sorry for the long post.