ipl-logo

Pros And Cons Of Lowering The Drinking Age

629 Words3 Pages

Risky? I Think So. In 1984, Congress passed the National Minimum Drinking Age Act, to be 21 years old. They did this for a number of reasons. For decades, people have agreed that alcohol should not be offered to young adults, but recently some disagree. Across the United States people have brought up the discussion on whether or not to lower the drinking age to 18. The drinking age in the United States should not be lowered to 18 years old. The freedom of being able to drink as an official adult at the age of 18 sounds desirable, but is it really worth anyone's life? Drunk driving is a huge problem in the United States and has been around for years. The problem is the age of the DUI’s issued and the number of crashes. According to M.A.D.D. (Mothers Against Drunk Driving), the rate of drunk drivers is most common between 26 to 29 year olds. Along with that, in 2014, the highest percentage of drunk driving related crashes was for drivers ages 21 to 24. This shows that if the age was to be lowered to 18, the age of crashes and drunk driving incidents would be right around that 18 year old age. Does any parent really want their child involved in a drunk driving incident at that age. …show more content…

According to the NIAAA (National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism), 86% of homicide offenders, 37% of assault offenders, and 60% of sexual offenders were convicted of having alcohol at the time of the crime. For a long time scientists and alike have seen alcohol to specifically change the way the brain and body acts, as it is a

Open Document