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Thursday, August 21, 2008
Steve Chapman :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Perils of a Lower Drinking Age
by Steve Chapman
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There are other arguments for lowering the age. Maybe the most popular is that if you're old enough to join the Army and die for your country, you're old enough to buy a beer. But there is a good reason to avoid such blind consistency. Among the qualities that make 18-year-olds such good soldiers are their fearlessness and sense of immortality -- traits that do not mix well with alcohol.

Besides, we don't have a single age threshold for adulthood. We give driver's licenses to 16-year-olds, but a 20-year-old Marine returning from Iraq will find he may not buy a handgun or gamble in a casino.

Why permit 18-year-olds to vote but not drink? Because they have not shown a disproportionate tendency to abuse the franchise, to the peril of innocent bystanders.

Another reason is that extending the vote to 18-year-olds doesn't let even younger people gain illicit access to the polls. But if high-school seniors could legally patronize a liquor store, sophomores would find it much easier to get party fuel. Raising the drinking age to 21 reduced alcohol-related traffic fatalities not only among 18-year-olds, who lost the right to drink, but 16-year-olds, who never had it.

It's not hard to make a logical case for allowing 18-year-olds to buy alcohol, but only if you disregard the practical effects of letting them do something that many of them are not mature enough to handle. In this debate, the ultimate wisdom comes from Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, who reminded us that sometimes, a page of history is worth a volume of logic.

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About The Author
Steve Chapman is a columnist and editorial writer for the Chicago Tribune.
 
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Reply to eagle
In response to your name calling about this group. At least their trying to get the ignorant people who choose to drink and drive to suffer more severe punishment, or better yet,get'em off the streets for good.

After all, those moms whose children were killed by the stupity, and multiple offences of drunk drivers will suffer the rest of their lives, while the drunks go on drinking and driving.

I know what it's like to lose a child. No one will ever suffer a worse pain than that. So keep on fighting MADD, and making the laws more severe for the ones who choose to break the law, and murder innocent, unsuspecting, loving, children, and their families.

why is this a federal issue?
I don't see anything in the Constitution about a federal drinking age. The states are perfectly capable of making these laws. They are not the kind of laws that must be federal in order to make sense.

To the contrary, they address exactly the kind of issue that can be dealt with on a state level, with the results of each state helping other states determine what they want to do. So the right answer is to follow the freaking Constitution, and just as with most other potentially criminal acts, allow the states to make these rules. Some may take the age to 25, and others may go the route of most of Europe (where drinking is a non-issue, btw).
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