The Consequences Of Lowering The Drinking Age

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Should the U.S Lower the Drinking Age to 18? Did you know that underage excessive drinking is responsible for more than 4,300 deaths among the teen youth each year? That is about 10 fatalities per day. Imagine you driving back home from a party and had a little too much to drink. Next thing you know, you're whole world is upside down. You're conscious, but can't process anything in. You just see strangers running towards your upside down car, panicked, with phones tight to their ears. Imagine the face on your loved ones when the police show up to their door, with most terrible news a person can give and receive. You didn't know any better. You're an adolescent. Adolescents don't know the risks of drinking and what it can do to their health. The U.S should not lower the drinking age to 18 because it would decrease the number of alcohol-related traffic accidents, it would give teenagers easier access to it, and it would cause damage to the adolescent’s developing brain. By leaving the Minimum Legal Drinking Age, MLDA, at 21, it would decrease the number of …show more content…

A non-profit organization, Mothers Against Drunk Driving, also are in favor of not lowering the drinking age. In fact, parents should be the ones to educate their children about alcohol. If adolescents knew the dangers of alcohol, it would “reduce traffic fatalities...while keeping booze out of the hands of teens” (Griggs 1). If teens knew this information, they wouldn’t be ignorant enough to drink and drive. Educating young adults about this has a positive outcome for both the adolescent and the parent(s). The adolescent is aware of the risks of alcohol, and the parent(s) wouldn’t as worried when their child is out because the adolescent knows better to drink and drive. Along with the missed information about alcohol, another cause of increased underaged drinking is the easy accessibility adolescents have to

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