The Pros And Cons Of Binge Drinking

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It is Saturday, September 11, 2010 and Travis, Mitchell, and Kevin are preparing to host a typical house party at UW-Madison. Travis is the only drinker that is of age, so he has purchased kegs for the night, with the intention to charge attendees 5 dollars a cup. Night comes around and the party is in full swing with hundreds of attendees. But at 11:30pm, everything takes a turn for the worse. The cops have been called and the boys end the night with a total of $86,000 in fines combined. They are astonished at the total of fines they received. Travis expresses his shock in his statement “Yeah, it’s the law, but it goes on probably everyday here on campus and people have much larger parties than we’ve ever had close to. I don’t think it’s very …show more content…

Higher prevalence of bars and liquor stores on campuses were found to be correlated with higher levels of binge drinking (Chaloupka). Additionally, research has show underage students can purchase alcohol without identification more than half the times they attempt it. (p. 195, Toomey). Not only are these bars available for underage students but also they are promoting binge drinking as a problem by not sticking to the guidelines of a standard drink. A gin and tonic served at any bar institute is 1.6 standard drinks (National Institute of Health). It’s easy to see how students can binge drinking in these situations, even when they do not intend to. Liquor associations on campuses have amplified the underage drinking problem through their lenience with fake IDs and excessive liquor content in one drink. Clearly responsibility can be placed on these businesses for there lack of …show more content…

According to a study done by the Journal of Substance Abuse, social influences become stronger in college for two reasons. First, the shift form living in an environment where parents have an extensive influence over their children’s actions to an environment where their actions are strongly influenced by their peers. Second, a majority of students regard college as an opportunity to drink as much as they can for the brief time they have before entering the workforce

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