Reconsidering the Legal Drinking Age: A Debate

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The Legal Drinking Age In 1984, Congress passed the National Drinking Age Act, which required states to raise their legal drinking from 18 years old to 21 (Trex). It was raised because some studies show that alcohol has negative effects on the brain, and the brain is more developed at 21 than at 18. Studies have also shown that the younger someone gets into drinking, more likely he is to binge drink and have alcohol problems later on. While those are solid points, it is important to remember that at 18 year olds are trusted as adults to make critical decisions. This is why the national drinking age should be lowered from 21. Some people believe that the legal drinking age should be lowered all the way down to 18. That would turn out disastrous considering the majority of 18 years olds are still in high school alongside people as young as 14. This would lead to …show more content…

In fact, lowering the drinking age might even decrease the amount of younger people who struggle with binge drinking. Most people who are younger than 21 are only able to drink at parties with alcohol, which leads to them binge drinking. If they were able to drink legally, they might drink more often, but they would be less likely to binge drink all at one time (Underage Drinking). Kids from the ages of 12 to 20 consume close to 11 percent of all alcohol consumed in the United States and of that 11 percent 90 percent is consumed by binge drinking (Underage Drinking). Lowering the drinking age would decrease the amount of young people binge drinking and be much safer for them. In European countries with a legal drinking age as low 18 only 10 percent of all drinking occasions result in intoxication while in the United States nearly 50 percent of all drinking occasions result in intoxication

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