Recently, Jay Leno has attracted more attention to the controversy that surrounds Ottawa’s Inner City Health “wet” program by poking fun it for doling out wine to many of the city’s homeless alcoholics as a method of treatment. Some of the participants in this Canadian treatment program are drinking up to 72 ounces or 3 bottles of wine each day depending on the severity of their addiction. Basically, chronic alcoholic residents of these programs are offered varying amounts of wine with alcohol content ranging from 0{c754d8f4a6af077a182a96e5a5e47e38ce50ff83c235579d09299c097124e52d} – 12.5{c754d8f4a6af077a182a96e5a5e47e38ce50ff83c235579d09299c097124e52d} every hour between 7:30 a.m. and 9:30 p.m. Despite fairly positive research on the effectiveness of these programs, most people cannot fathom how feeding an alcoholic wine could possibly treat alcoholism. For instance, Cyril Morgan, director of the Welcome Hall Mission in