Transcript
Page 1: Mediating the Drinking Age Debate

Mediating the Drinking Age Debate

Kevin Johnson

Page 2: Mediating the Drinking Age Debate

The drinking age

• Changed from 19 to 21 in 1984• Must be 21 to drink or purchase alcohol

anywhere in the United States

Page 3: Mediating the Drinking Age Debate

Reasons for change

• Underground drinking by underage teens

• Results in binge drinking and the drinking for the thrill of breaking the law

• Can vote, smoke, get married, sign contracts and join the military at age 18

Page 4: Mediating the Drinking Age Debate

Reasons for change cont.

• In Oregon, 17-20% of all alcohol sold is to minors

• $71 million dollars spent on underage drinking programs and enforcement by U.S. government

• College presidents sending letters to lawmakers asking them to reconsider lowering the age

• Highest drinking age in the world

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Reasons to stay at 21• Alcohol is a known depressant• Teens get drunk twice as fast

as adults do• Results in 70,000 sexual

assaults each year by college students

• Crashes have decreased 16% since the change

• Before change, underage drinkers were involved in over twice as many fatal traffic crashes as they are today

Page 6: Mediating the Drinking Age Debate

Reasons to stay cont.

• More vulnerable to drug abuse, unprotected sex, and depression

• Higher chance of academic failure• Inhibits growth of brain• 11 American teens die every day from crashes

that involve alcohol

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Mediation• Change the drinking age to 19• Age demographic for drinking and

driving accidents went from 18-20 to 21-24 with the age change

• Educate teens on drinking• Keeps alcohol out of high schools• Takes away thrill of breaking the

law for most college students (more normalized process)

• Money spent on enforcing the underage drinking law goes to educating teens and monitoring drinking and driving

Page 8: Mediating the Drinking Age Debate

Conclusion

• The law isn’t stopping underage drinking and now is the time for change.

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Works Cited• Alan, Jeff. "The Drinking Age: A "Spirited" Debate." Weblog post. Oregon Catalyst. Cascade

Policy Institute, July-Aug. 2008. Web. 29 Mar. 2012. <http://oregoncatalyst.com/1657-The-Drinking-Age-A-Spirited-Debate.html>.

• "Drinking Age ProCon." Drinking Age ProCon.org. ProCon.org, Mar.-Apr. 2012. Web. 29 Mar. 2012. <http://drinkingage.procon.org/>.

• Minton, Michelle. "Lower the Drinking Age for Everyone - Michelle Minton - National Review Online." NRO. National Review Online 2012, 20 Apr. 2011. Web. 29 Mar. 2012. <http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/264916/lower-drinking-age-everyone-michelle-minton>.

• Miron, Jeffrey A., and Elina Tetelbaum. "The Dangers of the Drinking Age." Forbes. Forbes Magazine, Apr.-May 2009. Web. 29 Mar. 2012. <http://www.forbes.com/2009/04/15/lowering-legal-drinking-age-opinions-contributors-regulation.html>.

• "SADD Statistics." Welcome to SADD. SADD Inc., Jan. 2011. Web. 01 Apr. 2012. <http://sadd.org/stats.htm>.

• "WHY 21?" MADD -Why 21. 2011 Mothers Against Drunk Driving. Web. 29 Mar. 2012. <http://www.madd.org/underage-drinking/why21/>.