"A group of influential college presidents say that letting kids drink earlier might help them drink safer, an argument that many parents are finding hard to swallow."
"College presidents from about 100 of the best-known U.S. universities, including Duke, Dartmouth and Ohio State, are calling on lawmakers to consider lowering the drinking age from 21 to 18, saying current laws actually encourage dangerous binge drinking on campus.
The movement called the Amethyst Initiative began quietly recruiting presidents more than a year ago to provoke national debate about the U.S. drinking age, which is among the highest in the world."
"Mothers Against Drunk Driving says lowering the drinking age would lead to more fatal car crashes. It accuses the presidents of misrepresenting science and looking for an easy way out of an inconvenient problem. MADD officials are even urging parents to think carefully about the safety of colleges whose presidents have signed on."
"A recent Associated Press analysis of federal records found that 157 college-age people, 18 to 23, drank themselves to death from 1999 through 2005.
Moana Jagasia, a Duke University sophomore from Singapore, where the drinking age is lower, said reducing the age in the U.S. could be helpful.
"There isn't that much difference in maturity between 21 and 18," she said. "If the age is younger, you're getting exposed to it at a younger age, and you don't freak out when you get to campus."
McCardell's group takes its name from ancient Greece, where the purple gemstone amethyst was widely believed to ward off drunkenness if used in drinking vessels and jewelry. He said college students will drink no matter what, but do so more dangerously when it's illegal.
The statement the presidents have signed avoids calling explicitly for a younger drinking age. Rather, it seeks "an informed and dispassionate debate" over the issue and the federal highway law that made 21 the de facto national drinking age by denying money to any state that bucks the trend.
But the statement makes clear the signers think the current law isn't working, citing a "culture of dangerous, clandestine binge-drinking," and noting that while adults under 21 can vote and enlist in the military, they "are told they are not mature enough to have a beer." Furthermore, 'by choosing to use fake IDs, students make ethical compromises that erode respect for the law.'"
SO basically the 2 arguments are as follows:
Teenagers are already drinking and it would be safer if they could do it legally so they would not be scared to seek help and they would know their limits by beginning drinking around their parents at a younger age.
Teenagers are not responsible enough to know when it is time to stop drinking and when they should not be driving. This is just an attempt by colleges and universities to not have to deal with the discipline.
Please comment I am very interested in what everyone has to say.
Oli
Marc by Marc Jacobs
Rebecca
Sorry I ment to cite my source... www.msn.com
1Hate it. If you think you are too young to get married, you are too young to drink. They both desire the utmost maturity and discretion. I will NOT be arguing this point with anyone, thank you.
2i say no, to a extent. if a man can serve or die for his country, meaning the military...i say give the man a beer,its just how i feel. and i won't argue either, its just my opinion on the subject...funny...hubby and i just stood in the kitchen this afternoon and had a loud discussion over this...
3i say yes because here teens and go over the border to Quebec and drink at 18 and are coming home a little drunk.
4old enough to die for your country, but not to have a margarita. yes lower it. It's a known fact that in countries that do not have such a high drinking age have less cases of alcohol abuse and DUIs. If moderate drinking becomes common place teens won't feel the need to get plastered once they get there hands on liquor.
5The legal drinking age in Australia is 18.
6I hate this simply on principle because the logic behind the advocates' arguments is SO FLAWED.
They're already being irresponsible and illegal, so we should just make it legal? That doesn't make a lick of sense.
It's a slippery slope. Lower the drinking age. Legalize marijuana. Legalize all drugs. Really, where WOULD you draw the line using that kind of logic?
I think there are plenty of other reasons to lower the drinking age (I think that there are plenty of eighteen-year-olds out there who would probably drink responsibly if given the right), but the reasons cited are simply retarded.
7When I was in school people abused alcohol before and after they were of legal age.
It's 19 here which I don't think is inappropriate.
8For some reason though, 18 still seems too young.
Lower it.
9you should come to CANADA cuz tha drinkin age is 18 here! BOO~YA!
10Hey! Im from northern ireland and the drinking age here is 18! personally I think it is more of an appropriate age because to be quite honest over here it is normal to be drinking from as young as 14! I think that lowering the age will actually make the teenagers more mature and its far safter for 18 year olds drinking in clubs legally then to drink on the streets illegally! and theres no point denying that nobody drinks until they are 21... it just doesnt happen!
11this is not for this group!!
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