scooter1369;898299; said:
When you've seen someone sent to rehab and the counselor says the person was clinically an alcoholic at the age of 13, you see the alcohol problem our kids face
This is what worries me. Both high schools that I taught at from 1980 to 2000 were upper middle class suburban schools and the drinking was significant. Parents willingly intervened when the police got involved making a mockery of 'keg laws' and drinking age laws. I have NO DOUBT that some triggered the alcoholism gene during this time frame.
So why would you lower the age by proposing 3.2 beer?
1. Most of the parents of the kids do not support the current law, or set an expectation of no drinking. Many hosted parties knowing drinking was going to take place. More than a few hosted cocktail parties before the prom because the kids were going out in limos. In short, you have a very tough time enforcing laws which the general public doesn't accept...See college and marijuana in the 60s and 70s... while 3.2 doesn't address the alcoholism issue it at least provides a more viable outlet for the desire to find out what beer is all about.
2. There's a cultural factor, especially in German - Irish - Italian Catholic Cincinnati...birthday? let's drink beer... holiday? hey, where's the beer?
football/basketball/baseball game? hey let's get a coupla beers before/after
death in the family? well he/she will sure be missed, now where's the beer?
It's ingrained in how we live and therefore we all grow up expecting to make the association between good/bad times and beer.
3. Given all that, it sets up either the law as being patently out of touch or parents as hypocrites.
4. My understanding of alcoholism (not necessarily the facts) is that it is a genetic disease and can be triggered at any time, from first drink, to someone late in life who suddenly loses their ability to know when to say when. That the age point at which you begin drinking can cause the disease to be triggered sooner. i.e. the longer you postpone drinking, the less likely you are to suffer alcoholism.
5. That seems to put the medical realities of alcoholism at odds with the culture.
6. I don't know that many teens who are attracted to hard liquor unless it's in the form of bad wine and fruity tooty things like hard lemonade. As a teen I was pretty content to settle for 3.2, though we often tried to get 6 and hoped the counter guy was too busy to check the bottle tops. "OH, I thought this was 3.2. I just reached in..." bull shit, bull shit, bull shit.
7. Given that, wouldn't a more realistic approach be:
1. to allow beer drinking at 18
2. to provide better education on alcohol in schools
3. to provide AA type programs geared to HS and undergrads
4. do a better job of enforcing laws against anything other than beer