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Jay Evensen: Lowering legal drinking age an absurd idea
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While there still are those that abuse alcohol, there is still a substantially lower rate of alcoholics and drunk driving than the US.
First of all, binge drinking is a part of the learning process. In Europe, it starts under the supervision of parents. Many of the parents require the children to wake up early and do chores the day after drinking while the child is hangover.
Then, by the time the kids reach 16 or 17, it is socially very uncool to over-drink. So, peer pressure adds to the learning process of responsible drinking. Then, by the time the children are 18 and allowed to drive, drinking alcohol has lost the novelty that it still holds for their American peers, and it just isn't an issue.
The perspective of these nations: America is backwards. People shouldn't learn to drink after they learn to drive. They start driving at 18.
consumtion of alcohol would not change one glass
you want the truth see your local distributors
What needs to change is the culture in America associated with alcohol in general. The real problem is the binge drinking by young college age Americans. There needs to be a cultural change. You don't see 19 year old Europeans in frat houses getting black out drunk and vomiting out of balconies. Their culture is one of temperance, where as we Americans tend to supersize and consume everything beyond what is reasonable.
Meth/speed were issues in the 1930's and it seems that laws prohibiting the use has only increased the problem. Prohibition is what gave strength and money to mafia the parent of modern gangs.
This allows discussion, and discussion only. If you chose not to drink or teach your children what responsible behavior is in drinking, that is fine but please allow me the legal right to teach my offspring responsible behavior.
thanks.
THERE ARE THREE TYPES OF LIES:
*Lies
*Damn Lies
*Statistics
Accidents go up as responsibility goes down. You cannot legislate responsibility without opression. You are either responsible or you aren't. Quit givivg up the choice to act responsibly!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Changing the legal drinking age will not reduce consumption or binging. Rather, it will increase since it will be perceived as acceptable and the alcohol will be more available. Does anyone really believe that the party school rankings play no role in deciding where to go to college, or that they result in a change in campus enforcement?
I am old enough to remember when WYO had a lower drinking age than Utah and many college kids made the weekend pilgrimage to Evanston to pick up booze and get smashed. At least when they couldn't find a pliable 21 y.o. to buy for them here.
Binge drinking is cultural. Lowering the drinking age will not reduce its frequency. These college president's know it. They just want to change the drinking age and remove the enforcement responsibility, liability and cost from their own shoulders.
You feel I am responsible enough to vote.
You feel I am responsible enough to get married.
You feel I am responsible enough to serve in the military and make life-or-death decisions.
You feel I am responsible enough to be tried as an adult and be put in prison or even be executed in certain cases.
BUT...you do not think I can handle drinking alcohol?
No-where anywhere else in our legal system does such a disparity in legal rights exist. The "effect" of lowering the drinking age is irrelevant. This is about rights as an adult. If you don't agree, then you shouldn't be sending 20-year-olds to war.
I don't like the use of tobacco as a rhetorical bogeyman though. At least the column recognizes that tobacco and alcohol are very different--I don't think there is any such thing as binge smoking, and if there is it just does not have the same dramatic effects as binge drinking. But I for one would not reject a proposal to bring Utah law into line with the vast majority of the country by lowering the age of tobacco use from 19 to 18. Also, the idea that there is no such thing as responsible tobacco use is ridiculous and represents a categorical rejection of adult autonomy.
I think that we need to remember that all of these laws are only a part of our overall goal to transition the citizenry from childhood to adulthood (or what passes for adulthood in Utah). I'm not sure that treating any particular birthday as a "magic day" is the best or only way to achieve that goal.
Universities and colleges are, to a certain degree, liable when one of their students gets hurt on their property. And a LOT of binge drinking occurs in - guess where - university dorms.
So, when little Johnny 18-year old gets plastered in his dorm during a kegger and ends up hurting himself (e.g., falling off a balcony) or, worse yet, commits a criminal act (there's a reason that alcohol and sexual assault cases are closely intertwined in colleges), Johnny's parents - or even Johnny himself - can actually sue the university for failing to protect their child from alcohol.
And, based on precedent, they will probably win.
Also, as others have pointed out, binge drinking is not the realm of the under 21 crowd - it occurs well beyond 21 years of age.
Perhaps there are arguments to lower the drinking age to 18 - the rights and responsibilities of an adult among them. That can be debated. But let's not pretend for one minute that those pushing this have noble intentions - they're just trying to cover themselves.
Point is, think before reacting. Many people wont open their minds to this debate.
Live and let live. Oh no you can't do that, because God knows YOU know best.
Lowering the drinking age is only going to make the problem worse. Kids aren't binging because it's illegal, they're binging because they think it's fun. But if it's more easily accessible, more kids will try it.
Dont believe me? Go buy some ephedra.
And the points about the military here are just ridiculous. There's no comparison. In the military you can't even go to the bathroom without permission. The military is more supervised than any other environment out there. There are rules galore, and if you don't follow them, the punishments are severe. And guess who the supervisors and rulemakers are...I'll give you a hint, they're not 18!
In sum...yeah...let's give the brain dead, spoiled, over-indulged, disrespectful, irresponsible the legal right to increase DUI fatalities...great idea. No, we should raise the drinking age to 30, after people have been forced to live with responsibilities for a good while.
Prohibition does not work! Lower the age and the "taboo" will fade.
This country tried prohibition and it was an abject failure. Pandering to the moralistic minority and criminalizing socially accepted behavior will always fail. Moreover, it creates a climate of distrust for authority and disrespect for the law.
2. Old enough to kill, but not old enough to legally drink? Give me a break.
Your arguments about binge drinking or drunk driving are beside the point. Either make "adulthood" 21 or give 18 yr olds total rights as an adult.
18-21 yr olds don't do anything about the obvious inconsistency because... guess what? They show themselves as a group to be irresponsible and apathetic about important issues that should concern those who claim to be "adults"!
Their apathy just proves that we should raise the legal age of emancipation to 21.
i was a valet for a while, and only the 30 and 40 year olds would come out sloshed and i would hand them the keys to their bimmers and they would swerve off. most of the younger kids would ask to leave their cars there for the night.
So, let's make 25 the minimum age to enroll in the military, since I'm pretty sure going to war is more harmful to a young mind than drinking. Also, since 20 year olds are not mature enough to decide whether they want to have a beer, let's also raise the legal age to vote, smoke, drive a car, sign a contract...
The 21 limitation started as a way to reduce drunk driving, but it is increasingly clear that now it's just being pushed by people who is against all forms of drinking at any age.
To 'accidents go up': the legal drinking age in Canada is 18, and it has seen the exact same reduction in alcohol related accidents than the US since the US raised it to 21.
To the contrary. The easier alcohol is to obtain, the more it will be used and at younger ages. The problem will be pushed down to high schools. Drinking to excess is not due to "sneaking around" or "chasing". It is a product of culture and no amount of wishing will make the prevalence of a 'spring break' mentality go away. Watch MTV for awhile and you get the picture.
Popular culture focuses on, is obsessed with, alcohol. Drink to be pretty, drink to have fun and be fun, drink to be smart, drink to be popular. Whatever you do, just drink.
Lowering the drinking age will unfetter an over-indulgent culture from any semblance of moderation and responsibility.
Examples
1. 18-20 not allowed in bars.
2. have a limit of alcohol they can purchase
You may think just because we are just becoming adults doesn't mean we aren't responsible. So you know we always have things planned. Like taxis, dd's, or we make arangements to stay where we are drinking. We are not irresponsible. Let us do what we want. Its our desicion not yours.
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