Alcohol can easily become an addiction if not used responsibly and with careful moderation. Drinking in the modern age has become known as something used as a stress-reliever. At social events, they are given out as party favors. The media has commercialized alcohol consumption to young adults as a rite of passage into adulthood. Alcohol consumption under the age of twenty-one has become normalized. However, the effects of underage drinking are not broadcasted enough. If you take into consideration the aversive effects of the use of alcohol over the positive effects on an individual mental and physical state, you will see that it does more harm than good. Some may argue that putting restrictions on the drinking age limit is prejudiced since …show more content…
The average eighteen years old should be able to cope with the ebb and flow of everyday life. The human brain does not fully develop until the age of twenty-five. If the United States introduces drinking alcohol sooner, young adults will most likely develop an alcohol dependent behavioral problems. Education, financial stability, and career success should be the main priority after graduating high school. Relying and trusting upon their own decisions and beliefs is essential to becoming an independent individual. Alcoholism is one of the most common forms of addiction. When people become reliant upon drugs or alcohol, they become sluggish, delusional and unconcerned, unable to focus on aspects of life that really matter. Alcoholism, Crews (2000) reaffirms the classification by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism as, “alcohol dependence (impaired control over drinking, tolerance, withdrawal syndrome when alcohol is removed, neglect of normal activities for drinking and continued drinking despite recurrent physical or psychological problems)...” Relationships with peer and family will suffer. They will be more susceptible to health problems. They will get into trouble with law enforcement which will jeopardize their chances of possible job