preview

To Drink, or Not to Drink, That is the Decision You Have to Make

Good Essays

To Drink, Or Not to Drink Try to remember the first house party you ever went to while you were in high school. I will be willing to bet it was crazy, wasn’t it? There is no party like an out-of-control shindig that contains alcohol and a ton of people who are under legal drinking age limit. Things always get broken, fights break out, people cry or pass out, people do things they will regret the next day, there is always that one inevitable person that throws up everywhere, and if the cops don’t show up to shutdown the party, it is a success. You hear about alcohol abuse all the time, from friends, the news, and on the internet, but you probably never question why it happens, until it happens near you. I honestly think that the drinking …show more content…

Because let’s be honest, anybody who is under the influence of alcohol can be a colossal threat to a person’s life. There is no age in particular. The same way we humans all differ from one another, not every young adult is going to behave the same as the next. I knew there was bound to be others who felt that the drinking age limit should be lowered, so I searched high and low. My pursuits and research for enlightenment lead me to the works of Professor Ruth C. Engs from the state of Indiana. Immediately as I read through her research, I realized that I shared the same views as professor Engs, that it would be better to lower the legal drinking age. She seemed to be the only doctor/professor I could find who had come to this conclusion through research, for this topic. Professor Engs conducted research for why she thought the drinking age limit should be lowered to eighteen. She researched at Indiana University, located in Bloomington, Indiana for over twenty years. She says, “Although the legal purchase age is twenty-one years of age, a majority of college students under this age consume alcohol but in an irresponsible manner. This is because drinking by these youth is seen as an enticing ‘forbidden fruit’, a ‘badge of rebellion against authority’ and a symbol of adulthood”. Prohibition of alcohol for young people under the age of twenty-one is not working. Professor Engs said, in her research,

Get Access