drinking_age_not_lowered.pdf

drinking_age_not_lowered.pdf

The Minimum Legal Drinking Age Should NotBe LoweredTeens at Risk, 2013

"Alcohol should be forbidden to 18- to 20-year-olds precisely because they have apropensity to binge drink whether the stuff is illegal or not."

In the following viewpoint, Carla T. Main assesses the arguments for and against lowering thelegal drinking age from the current age of twenty-one. Main contends that the arguments infavor of a lower drinking age—especially the argument that binge drinking woulddiminish—are simply wrong. She argues that the solution to the problem of underagedrinking is to better enforce the laws that are currently in place. Main, who produced thispolicy study for the Hoover Institute of Stanford University, is the author of Bulldozed (2007),and she writes frequently about issues of law and society.

As you read, consider the following questions:

Why, according to the author, did many states lower the drinking age to eighteen in the1.early 1970s?

What grassroots organization played a big role in getting the drinking age moved back up2.to twenty-one?

In the viewpoint, one expert on college drinking believes that what percent of students have3."deeply engrained drinking habits" by the time they arrive at college?

The problem of underage drinking on college campuses has been brewing for many years, to thecontinued vexation of higher education administrators. In 2008, John McCardell, president emeritus ofMiddlebury College, began to circulate for signature a public statement among colleagues titled "TheAmethyst Initiative," which calls for elected officials to reexamine underage drinking laws. The projectgrew out of outreach efforts of a nonprofit organization he founded in 2007 called ChooseResponsibility. The nonprofit advocates lowering the drinking age to 18 and licensing alcohol use foryoung people in much the same manner as driving—following coursework and an exam. ChooseResponsibility also favors the repeal of the laws that set 21 as the mandatory minimum age fordrinking (known as the "21 laws") and encourages states at the least to adopt exceptions to the 21laws that would allow minors to drink at home and in private clubs. It also favors social changes thatshift the focus on alcohol use among youth to the home, family, and individual.

The Amethyst Initiative's statement has been signed by 135 college presidents and chancellors atschools from Duke to Bennington. The majority is private; most are in the Northeast. The statementtakes no formal position, unlike Choose Responsibility. It does, however, drop heavy hints as towhere the debate ought to come out. The statement says "21 is not working" and asks "How manytimes must we relearn the lessons of Prohibition?" It draws comparisons to other age-of-majority

rights conferred on 18-year-olds, such as voting and serving in the military, and calls upon electedofficials to consider "whether current public policies are in line with current realities."…

Removing the Allure of Drinking

The primary argument made in the Initiative's statement in favor of repealing the 21 laws is that the21 laws make alcohol taboo, thus driving underage drinking underground and causing more bingedrinking to take place than otherwise would, due to the allure of forbidden fruit and the need forsecrecy. Hence, by lowering the drinking age, youth consumption would come out in the open andbinge drinking would be largely reduced or even eliminated. The second salutary effect of loweringthe drinking age, the Initiative argues, would be educational: Colleges would be allowed to have open,frank discussions about responsible drinking. In other words, institutions of higher education couldteach young people how to drink responsibly. The Initiative makes vague references to the"unintended consequences" of 21 "posing increasing risks to young people," and says that theoriginal impetus for the 21 laws—reduction of highway fatalities by young drivers—has outlived itsusefulness….

The Initiative is a welcome development insofar as it challenges us to examine whether 21 "isworking." The answer: It is not, as currently enforced. So should 21 be scrapped or salvaged? First, alook at how we got here, and why the 21 laws are broken….

Raising the Minimum Drinking Age to Twenty-One

During the 19th century, cultural and social norms prevented young people from drinking. The

expense and limited availability of liquor also helped keep it out of youthful hands. After Prohibition, itwas left up to the states to regulate alcohol, and most states made the legal drinking age 21, thesame as the age for voting and other adult rights. The issue remained largely untouched until the late1960s when protests over the Vietnam War raised the question of the national voting age. For the firsttime, the question of the draft age and the voting age were linked in the popular imagination, at leastamong the left. "If a boy is old enough to fight and the for his country, why isn't he old enough tovote?" was the popular refrain.

The legal drinking age got swept up in the political upheaval of the era, as states generallyreexamined their age-of-majority laws. Between 1970 and 1976, 29 states lowered their age fordrinking alcohol. The results were catastrophic. Highway deaths among teenagers and young adults

skyrocketed. Almost immediately, states began raising the minimum drinking age again—yearsbefore Congress in 1982 and 1984 dangled the carrot of federal highway monies as an incentive.Between 1976 and 1984, 24 of the 29 states raised the age back up again. By 1984, only three statesallowed 18-year-olds to drink. Five states and the District of Columbia regulated various degrees ofalcohol consumption among those 18 and over. The remaining states had a patchwork of minimumages ranging from 19 to 21.

The Link Between the Drinking Age and DrunkDriving

While states experimented with age-of-majority laws, a cultural shift was taking place in how society

regarded drunk driving. In 1980, a 13-year-old California girl named Cari Lightner was walking to acarnival when she was struck by a hit-and-run drunk driver and killed instantly. Her mother becameenraged when she learned that drunk driving was not treated seriously in the American judicialsystem. What followed was one of the great stories of American grassroots activism. Together with afriend, Candace Lightner founded Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD), which quickly garnered

local and later national support in a campaign that focused on putting a human face on the damagedone by drunk drivers. By 1982, with MADD 100-chapters strong, President [Ronald] Reagan createda presidential commission to study drunk driving and Congress authorized highway funds to statesthat passed stiffer drunk driving laws. In 1984, Congress passed the Uniform Drinking Age Act, whichrequired states to have a minimum drinking age of 21 for all types of alcohol consumption if theywanted to receive federal highway monies. The legal drinking age has stayed at 21 since then.

In most of the television debates about the Amethyst Initiative, the success or failure of 21 has beenprimarily linked to the issue of highway deaths, with the debaters arguing fatality statistics to provewhether the 21 laws should be shelved because of the advent of safer cars. But that suggests,wrongly, that the debate largely begins and ends with the question of teenage bodies splatteredacross the interstates. While drunk driving among underage drinkers remains a problem,unfortunately it is only one of several ways that underage drinking threatens young people. Time hasnot stood still since 1984. American campuses and drinking patterns have changed, and not for thebetter.

The Law Does Not Lead to Binge Drinking

The logic of the Initiative is that if we take away the allure of illegality, American youth will stopbinging. That conclusion is wrong. Alcohol should be forbidden to 18- to 20-year-olds preciselybecause they have a propensity to binge drink whether the stuff is illegal or not—especially males.

Henry Wechsler and Toben F. Nelson, in the landmark Harvard School of Public Health College

Alcohol Study, or CAS, which tracked college student drinking patterns from 1992 to 2001, explainedthat binge drinking is five or more drinks on one occasion. Binge drinking brings the blood alcohol

concentration to 0.08 gram percent or above (typically five drinks for a man or four for a woman withintwo hours). To understand just how drunk that makes a person, consider that it violates criminal lawsto drive with a blood alcohol level of 0.08 gram percent or above.

To call alcohol taboo implies that drinking is done in secret and rarely. Yet college drinking is socommon as to have lost all tinge of intrigue. Drinking greases the social wheels, and college life formany is saturated with popular drinking games that no doubt seem brilliant to the late-adolescent:Beerchesi, Beergammon, BeerSoftball, coin games like Psycho, Quarters, and BeerBattleship, andcard and dice games linked to beer.

When undergraduates binge drink, they get into trouble—a lot of it. They endanger and sometimeskill their fellow students by setting fires. They sexually assault their female companions(approximately 100,000 incidents annually). They get into fights with other young undergrads (some700,000 assaults annually). On average 1,100 a year die from alcohol-related traffic crashes andanother 300 die in non-traffic alcohol-related deaths. According to the CAS, among the 8 million

college students in the United States surveyed in one study year, more than 2 million drove under the

influence of alcohol and more than 3 million rode in cars with drivers who had been drinking. Eightpercent of students—474,000—have unprotected consensual sex each year because they havebeen drinking. In short, college students do stupid, illegal, dangerous, and sometimes deadly thingswhen they drink.

Students Bring Drinking Habits to College

Moreover, the drinking doesn't begin in college. More kids drink alcohol than smoke pot, which is themost commonly used illicit drug. A third of our youth taste their first drink before the age of 13 andhave drinking patterns as early as 8th to 10th grade. In a pattern that continues in college, boys fallinto binge drinking patterns in greater numbers than girls by 12th grade. The Pacific Institute forResearch and Evaluation has estimated the social cost of underage drinking (for all youth) at some$53 billion. That includes only highway deaths and injuries and does not factor in brain damageassociated with early adolescent drinking, or the array of other injuries and social problems such asopportunity costs that crop up when children drink.

The majority of those who binge drink in college started down that road long before theymatriculated—they simply continue their drinking habits once they arrive on campus. Brett Sokolow,president of the consulting firm National Center for Higher Education Risk Management, whichcounsels colleges on reducing "risk" through educational programs and institutional policies, said inan interview that based on his anecdotal experience, 60 to 70 percent of the students attending hison-campus alcohol seminars have had drinking experiences prior to attending college and about 40percent have "deeply engrained drinking habits" by the time they get to college….

Enforcing the Law

The Amethyst Initiative says, in essence, that the phenomenon of underage drinking is a tidal wavethat society cannot stop. Our only hope is to ride the wave along with our children, give them an oar,and hope they don't drown. That relies on the very big—and untested—assumption that their youngminds have the capacity to listen when it comes to alcohol, no matter how badly they want to party,hook up, fit in.

Given the stakes, America should not throw in the towel on the 21 laws until we have actuallyenforced them as they were meant to be enforced though it will require a clear dedication of politicalwill. It can be done; a similar revolution occurred during the 1980s with respect to driving under theinfluence laws. Disparities in enforcement do not mean that the laws are impossible to enforce. Itsignals that we have not gotten serious as a nation about using the laws we have—and improvingthem where needed.

Further ReadingsBooks

Joseph Allen and Claudia Worrell Allen Escaping the Endless Adolescence. New York: Ballantine

Books, 2009.

Mark Bauerlein The Dumbest Generation: How the Digital Age Stupefies Young Americans andJeopardizes Our Future. New York: Tarcher, 2008.

Donna J. Cornett Beat Binge Drinking: A Smart Drinking Guide for Teens, College Students andYoung Adults Who Choose to Drink. Santa Rosa, CA: People Friendly Books, 2011.

Michael A. Corriero Judging Children as Children: A Proposal for a Juvenile Justice System.Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2006.

Kathi A. Earles and Sandra E. Moore Scale Back: Why Childhood Obesity Is Not Just AboutWeight. Chicago: Hilton, 2008.

Annette Fuentes Lockdown High: When the Schoolhouse Becomes a Jailhouse. New York:VersoBooks, 2011.

Gina Guddat Unwrapped: Real Questions Asked by Real Girls (About Sex). Houston TX:Providence, 2007.

Stephen Hinshaw with Rachel Krantz The Triple Bind: Saving Our Teenage Girls from Today'sPressures. New York: Ballantine Books, 2009.

Kelly Huegel GLBTQ: The Survival Guide for Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender, andQuestioning Teens. Minneapolis, MN: Free Spirit Publishing, 2011.

Matt Ivester lol … OMG!: What Every Student Needs to Know About Online ReputationManagement, Digital Citizenship and Cyberbullying. CreateSpace, 2011.

Thomas A. Jacobs Teen Cyberbullying Investigated: Where Do Your Rights End andConsequences Begin? Minneapolis, MN: Free Spirit Publishing, 2010.

KidsPeace I've Got This Friend Who: Advice for Teens and Their Friends on Alcohol, Drugs,Eating Disorders, Risky Behavior and More. Center City, MN: Hazelden, 2007.

Catherine Kim, Daniel Losen, and Damon Hewitt The School-to-Prison Pipeline. New York: NYUPress, 2010.

Robin M. Kowalski, Susan P. Limber, and Patricia W. Agatston Cyberbullying: Bullying in theDigital Age. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Blackwell, 2012.

Lawrence Kutner and Cheryl K. Olson Grand Theft Childhood: The Surprising Truth About ViolentVideo Games. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2008.

Elizabeth Magill, ed. Drug Information for Teens: Health Tips About the Physical and MentalEffects of Substance Abuse. Aston, PA: Omnigraphics, Inc., 2011.

Mike Males Teenage Sex and Pregnancy: Modern Myths, Unsexy Realities. Santa Barbara, CA:Praeger, 2010.

Courtney E. Martin Perfect Girls, Starving Daughters: The Frightening New Normalcy of HatingYour Body. New York: Free Press, 2007.

Jane McGonigal Reality is Broken: Why Games Make Us Better and How They Can Change theWorld. New York: Penguin, 2011.

Pedro A. Noguera The Trouble With Black Boys and Other Reflections on Race, Equity, and theFuture of Public Education. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2008.

Garrett Peck The Prohibition Hangover: Alcohol in America from Demon Rum to Cult Cabernet.Piscataway, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2009.

Mark D. Regnerus Forbidden Fruit: Sex & Religion in the Lives of American Teenagers. New York:Oxford University Press, 2007.

Marsha Rosenbaum Safety First: A Reality-Based Approach to Teens and Drugs. San Francisco:Drug Policy Alliance, 2007.

Dan Savage and Terry Miller, eds. It Gets Better: Coming Out, Overcoming Bullying, and Creatinga Life Worth Living. New York: Dutton, 2011.

Wendy Shalit Girls Gone Mild: Young Women Reclaim Self-Respect and Find It's Not Bad to BeGood. New York: Random House, 2007.

Don Tapscott Grown Up Digital: How the Net Generation Is Changing Your World. New York:McGraw-Hill, 2009.

Jessica Valenti The Purity Myth: How America's Obsession with Virginity Is Hurting YoungWomen. Berkeley, CA: Seal Press, 2009.

PeriodicalsThe American Cancer Society "Child and Teen Tobacco Use: Understanding the Problem,"November 10, 2011. www.cancer.org.

Morris E. Chafetz "The 21-Year-Old Drinking Age: I Voted for It; It Doesn't Work," Huffington Post,August 18, 2009. www.huffingonpost.com.

Steve Elliott "Federal Report: Most in Pot Rehab Were Forced Into It," May 28, 2010.www.tokeofthetown.com.

David J. Hanson "Underage Drinking," 2011. www2.potsdam.edu.

David J. Hanson "Underage Drinking Rates," 2011. www2.potsdam.edu.

Huffington Post "Marijuana Use and Driving Under the Influence on the Rise Among Teens, StudySays," February 23, 2012. www.huffingtonpost.com.

John M. McCardell, Jr. "Commentary: Drinking Age of 21 Doesn't Work," CNN.com, September16, 2009.

Mothers Against Drunk Driving "Myths and Facts About the 21 Minimum Drinking Age,"www.madd.org.

National Institute on Drug Abuse "Marijuana: Facts for Teens," 2011. www.drugabuse.gov.

National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign "Marijuana Facts," 2011. www.theantidrug.com.

Karen O'Keefe and Mitch Earleywine "The Impact of State Medical Marijuana Laws," TheMarijuana Policy Project, June 2011. www.mpp.org.

Philip Smith "Teens Rejecting Alcohol, Tobacco; Selecting Marijuana," December 14, 2011.www.stopthedrugwar.org.

Michael Winerip "High Season: Teens and Marijuana Use," Family Circle, 2012.www.familycircle.com.

Full Text: COPYRIGHT 2013 Greenhaven Press, a part of Gale, Cengage Learning.

Source CitationMain, Carla T. "The Minimum Legal Drinking Age Should Not Be Lowered." Teens at

Risk. Ed. Stephen P. Thompson. Detroit: Greenhaven Press, 2013. OpposingViewpoints. Rpt. from "Underage Drinking and the Drinking Age." www.hoover.org 155 (1 June 2009). Opposing Viewpoints in Context. Web. 14 Jan. 2015.

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