Lower Legal Drinking Age
Since the states increased their drinking age to 21 in 1987, every citizen of this country between the ages of 18 and 20 have been oppressed by the very people elected to power to protect their rights. It is evident that the legal drinking age among Americans should be lowered to the legal age of adulthood, 18 years. At this age, any American can marry without their Parent 's approval and can move out of their guardian 's house and live on their own. Why are these adults deprived of their right to consume alcohol? A police officer unexpectedly arrived at a party where many young adults were drinking alcoholic beverages. He asked to see two young gentlemen 's identification to prove that they were of legal age to be consuming. Both were respectable citizens. Neither had caused a disturbance or been involved in any trouble. They both were voters, they were peaceful and respectful, they were both registered for the selective services, as every 18-year-old man is required to do, and both paid their taxes. However, since one of the men was only 20 years of age, he was issued a citation that cost him over one hundred and seventy five dollars and he lost his privileges to drive a car for an entire year. The other, who was 21, was of course allowed to continue on without further interferences. The issue presented in this scenario is a very serious problem today and threatens the very liberties that make this country so exemplary. There may not be one credible or plausible reason why this age group is lawfully bound from having a beer after graduation or a glass of champagne on their wedding day, yet everyday more and more Americans are arrested or cited for practicing what should be a legal prerogative. Many young adults face these extreme injustices on an account of this unwarranted restriction that so unjustly harasses them. There is a simple and agreeable solution to this matter. The government should revise the law back to what it was years ago. Most states in the
Cited: Allen, D. N., Sprenkel, D. G., and Vitale, P. A. "Reactance Theory and Alcohol Consumption Laws: Further Confirmation Among Collegiate Alcohol Consumers." Journal of Studies on Alcohol 55 (1994): 34-40.
Hanson, David J., Ph. D. "The Legal Drinking Age: Science or Ideology." Alcohol: Problems
and Solutions. 8 Nov. 2001. <http://www.student.potsdam.edu/alcohol-info/ InMyOpinion/ScienceIdeology.html>.
---, "The United States of America." International Handbook on Alcohol and Culture. Ed. Dwight B. Heath. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1995. 300-315.