¶ … alcohol drinking age be decreased?
The controversy surrounding alcohol use in the United States has been longstanding, and dates at least as far back as prohibition when the substance was banned largely due to moral issues. Although prohibition was repealed during the midst of the Great Depression, the controversy surrounding this subject persists to this day. Currently, there is widespread debate about whether or not to lower the drinking age. There are many arguments that are voiced by proponents on both sides, including the fact that lowering the drinking age would reduce the need for young people to engage in subversive behavior associated with illegal drinking and the fact that doing so would only encourage more rampant alcohol abuse. A sustained examination of this issue corroborated by a variety of sources, however, demonstrates that the legal age to drink in the U.S. should not be lowered because it would result in many harmful consequences.
One of the principle reasons that the drinking age should not be lowered in the U.S. is because it would allow those who are not legally adults to lawfully consume a mind altering substance when they are not mature enough to handle it. There are several different facts which support the notion that teenagers are not mature enough to drink responsibly. One needs only analyze the rules for driving in the state of California to understand that many teenagers are recklessly irresponsible. 20 years ago, teenagers were licensed to drive at 16 after completing driver's education and drivers training. However, there were a number of accidents regularly involving teenagers and those who had recently learned to drive, so the state changed the legislation regarding teenage driving. Currently, teenagers are not allowed to drive with other teens in the car without an adult, and cannot drive between 11 p.m. And 5 a.m. until they have had their license for a full year (California DMV). This legislation was enacted to counteract irresponsible teenage driving, and is a testimony to the fact that teenagers are dangerously irresponsible. Enabling them to legally consume alcohol to the point of intoxication by lowering the age limit to do so would only encourage such irresponsibility.
One of the frequently cited counterarguments for lowering the drinking age contends that doing so would take the mystique away from drinking for those underage, which would therefore encourage more responsible drinking for younger people. This viewpoint widely contends that
Although the legal purchase age is 21 years of age, a majority of college students under this age consume alcohol but in an irresponsible manner. This is because drinking by these youth is seen as an enticing "forbidden fruit," a "badge of rebellion against authority" and a symbol of "adulthood" (Engs).
The implication is that enabling young people to drink legally would somehow deter them from drinking to excess because there would be less of a reason to. However, this logic is flawed. Young people do not only drink to excess, but they engage in a lot of behavior to the point of success. They tend to drink to success, party to success, stay out late to excess, and do many things well beyond the limit that an older person, who has engaged in such behavior before, will refrain from doing. A perfect example of this fact is the prevalence of teenage suicides due to first loves and romantic relationships that have dissolved. Teenagers have a hard time of distinguishing between normalcy and reality and adolescent compulsions. Enabling them to drink alcohol freely would only reinforce their proclivity for over indulging to the point of excess.
Another reason that the drinking age should not be lowered is because drinking among those under the age of 21 can produce noxious effects. In fact, there is little positive that alcohol drinking can do for individuals who are under the age of 21. Most people under this age are involved in schooling of some sort, either at the elementary, secondary, or postsecondary...
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