Free Essays, Free Research Papers, Free Book Reports and Free Term Papers
Essay Express Free Essays, Free Research Papers,
Free Book Reports and Free Term Papers

FREE ESSAY ON WHY WE SHOULD KEEP THE DRINKING AGE AT 21

College Term Papers - Instant Download

(sponsored links)

U.S. Legal Drinking Age
A paper arguing against the National Minimum Drinking Age Act of 1984 in the U.S. which raised the legal drinking age to 21. -- 975 words; MLA

Legal Drinking Age in the U.S.
Presents arguments in favor of keeping the minimum drinking age at 21. -- 984 words; APA

Legal Drinking Age
This paper examines the debate over the legal drinking age. -- 840 words; MLA

Drinking Age
A discussion on the legal drinking age. -- 690 words; MLA

Drinking Age
An examination on the drinking age controversy. -- 2,530 words; MLA

Click here for more essays on WHY WE SHOULD KEEP THE DRINKING AGE AT 21

WHY WE SHOULD KEEP THE DRINKING AGE AT 21

Why We Should Keep the Drinking Age at Twenty-one
By Barry T. Hellman
English 116, section 6
Dr. Budler
11 May 2000 
Imagine winning the State Basketball Championship. You get back to your house with a few
friends and feel a party is in order, so you start drinking a few beers after your
parents go to bed. Someone suggests that you drive somewhere to get rid of the empty
cans. "Yes, that's not a bad idea", so you all pile into the car and take off. A few
hours later, your parents receive a telephone call to come down to the station. There has
been a terrible accident, and they must identify the body. This is the one phone call all
parents dread. This true story is detailed in the Germantown, Tennessee high school
newspaper. Stories like this compel me to believe that the legal drinking age should be
kept at twenty-one.
Almost every state set a legal drinking age of twenty-one, the legal voting age at the
time, after prohibition was repealed. Between 1970 and 1975, twenty-nine states lowered
the voting age from twenty-one to eighteen, twenty-nine states also lowered their
drinking age to eighteen or nineteen. During the late seventies, studies showed that
traffic crashes had drastically increased after lowering the drinking age. Once this was
announced publicly, many groups created a movement to increase the minimal drinking age,
and sixteen states responded. The Uniform Drinking Act was passed in 1984. This strongly
encouraged the remaining thirteen states to raise their drinking age. If the states would
not agree to do so by 1987, the government said that it would cut highway funding
(Encyclopedia of Alcohol and Drugs).
Many would argue that when the drinking age were set at twenty-one, there is an
unavoidably huge increase in alcohol use when youths, turning twenty-one, "make up for
lost time." However, a study done by Alexander Wagenaar and PM O'Malley found that when
the minimum drinking age was twenty-one, there was a lower use of alcohol after they turn
twenty-one.
One of the largest arguments in favor of lowering the drinking age is the use of Europe
as a comparison. Where as in Europe, where there isn't a prescribed legal age for
drinking, the age for obtaining a drivers license is eighteen. Sixteen is the average age
for obtaining a license. This lower age for driving in combination with the lowered
drinking age incurs a rise in traffic accidents and even death. Drinking before
twenty-one causes more deaths than illnesses. On the other hand, those countries have
their share of alcohol problems. The rate of alcohol-related diseases such as cirrhosis
to the liver is the same, if not higher, as in the United States. Also drunk driving
among youth in Europe is lower, but only because the legal driving age in most European
countries is higher. Furthermore the use of public transportation is greater in Europe,
where as in the United States fewer people take advantage of public transportation.
Public transportation is either frowned upon or not available.
It is also argued that even though the legal drinking age is at twenty-one, many youths
still can easily obtain and drink alcohol, so the current drinking age doesn't work. It
stands to reason to conclude that if the drinking age were lowered to eighteen, even
younger children would be using alcohol. This therefore, would have adverse affects on
our society, not a positive affect. Because it's illegal for people under twenty-one,
many of those people don't drink. Lowering the drinking age would increase alcohol
problems among teens, even at an earlier age. (Wagenaar and co. article, page 2)
My opinion is further supported by the Correlation between underage drinking and alcohol
abuse. Scientists of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism have said
that teens that begin drinking before the age of fifteen are four times more likely to
become alcoholics. The same institute also found that alcohol abuse doubles, in those who
start drinking before the age of fifteen compared to those who first begin drinking at
age twenty-one. Continuing, they found that twenty-five percent of those who began
drinking before the age of seventeen went on to become alcoholics.
Furthermore, most studies show an increase in traffic accidents, and even deaths, among
youths when the drinking age was lower. The Encyclopedia of Alcohol and Drugs also states
that the result of lowering the drinking age caused a five to twenty percent increase in
the number of fatal injury-causing crashes "likely to involve alcohol, such as
single-vehicle accidents occurring late at night" Alcohol use is typically reported in
one-fifth to two-thirds of these problems; youth drowning, vandalism, assaults, suicides,
and teenage pregnancies (Toomey, Rosenfeld, and Wagenaar 3).
Besides accidents, there is also an association between alcohol abuse and suicide.
Between one-third and two-thirds of adolescent suicide victims have a measurable blood
alcohol level. A study of suicides from 1970 to 1990, done by Johanna Birckmeyer and
David Hemenway, found that the suicide rates of eighteen to twenty year olds living in
states with a drinking age of eighteen was eight percent higher than in states with a
drinking age of twenty-one.
The last point to consider is that when the drinking age was lowered to eighteen or
nineteen an increase in traffic accidents occurred. Drinking before twenty-one causes
more death than illnesses.
It seems to me that there is little valid argument against leaving the legal drinking age
at twenty-one. Auto accidents, suicides, illnesses early drivers licences varying
cultures, and alcoholism are all reasons in favor of maintaining a legal drinking age of
twenty-one Too much, too soon, kills!
Works Cited
Birckmayer, Johanna; Hememway, David. "Minimum-age drinking laws and youth suicide,
1970-1990." American Journal of Public Health (1999). 29 April 2000. 
Bower, B. "Alcoholism shows its youthful side." Science news 26 April 00
Quigley, Loria, et al. Drinking among young adults. Alcohol Health and Research World.
April 00:p185-191.
Sherman, Laura. "Tragedy After An Enormous Accomplishment." Germantown High School News.
4-15-99
Toomey, Rosenfield, and Wager. Encyclopedia of Alcohol and Drugs. New York 1995
Toomey, Rosenfield, and Wager. The minimum legal drinking age: history, effectiveness,
and ongoing debate. Alcohol Health and & Research World, 4-28-00 p213(5)
Wagenaar,Alexander, et al. Deterring sales and provision of alcohol to minors: a study of
enforcement in 295 countires in four states. Public health Reports. April 00: p185-191.
Bibliography
already in the paper, the works cited

Use the Search box at the top to find Term Papers for Sale by keywords or browse Free Essays page by page
(sorted alphabetically by Essay Title):

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39
For college-level Term Papers, Essays, Research Papers and Book Reports, please go to the Term Papers for Sale Website


This Free Essays Web Site, is Copyright © 2008, Essay Express. All rights reserved.




Partner websites: Interior Decor Art :: Immigration Lawyer Toronto :: Laser Clinic Toronto :: Original Abstract Paintings :: Learn Violin in Thornhill :: Learn Violin in Toronto :: Buy used Yamaha piano in Toronto