National Minimum Drinking Age Act

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    Minimum Drinking Age

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    Drunk driving is a serious issue in today's society, even with the age being 21. So, the age should not be lowered. The National Traffic Highway Administration (NHTSA) states “the 21 minimum drinking age law has saved about 900 lives per year”. If this was to be changed to a lower drinking age, the crash related alcohol rates would increase. Alcohol-related traffic deaths in the United States was 12,998 in 2007, and increasing dramatically as time goes on. This statistic is three times as many…

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    MLDA Pros And Cons

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    The National Minimum Drinking Act, an Unjust Civil Liberty Violation The age of adulthood in the United States is 18, and adults should have the right to make their own decisions about alcohol consumption. The National Minimum Drinking Age Act, MLDA, is a policy that was intended to lower alcohol consumption and related problems among teenagers. Studies and research have proven this act to be outrageously unsuccessful, and ineffective, especially among college age students. The National…

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    lower the national legal drinking age from twenty-one years old to eighteen years old in order to guarantee the rights and safety of those otherwise considered legal adults. The battle to lower the legal drinking age pins U.S. citizens’ pursuit of happiness and equality against others’ common good. At eighteen years old you’re expected to behave like an adult and be a productive member of society and many believe being able to drink is a right they have…

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    and freedom is just exploding out of you. Wooh! You now have the opportunity to do almost anything, well except purchase alcohol. All thanks to the National Minimum Drinking Age Act, requiring U.S. states to raise the age for purchase and possession of alcohol to twenty-one. Drinking is one of the most common social activities in America and this act has been plaguing our youth since 1984 and continues strong to this day. The sad truth is; this law does more harm than good as those underage find…

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    The National Minimum Drinking Age Act in 1984 set the drinking age in the US to 21 and there has been an intense debate ever since of whether or not the age a person is allowed to drink should be changed back to the age of 18. On one hand, you have some people who say the drinking age should not be lowered because it would increase drunk driving and alcoholism. On the other hand, there are people who question why we can vote, get married, join the military, buy guns, and serve on juries at the…

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    idea that the drinking age should be lowered to 18 is a foolish statement. The drinking age was 18 at one time, but was changed in 1984 for the greater good in the 1984 National Minimum Age Drinking Act. (APIS) I believe the national drinking age should stay the same because the brain doesn’t fully develop by age 18, 18 year olds still hang out with enough minors, and if you’re going to drink for an appropriate reason, most states allow underage drinking anyways. Lowing the drinking age would…

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    MLDA: Save The Youth

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    number of deaths would have been much greater, but with the legal drinking age set at twenty-one, deaths have been reduced. Although many studies confirm that the minimum legal drinking age (MLDA) is effective in reducing underage drinking and the consequences from alcohol drinking, some argue that the MLDA is ineffective and has driven young adults to drink more in less supervised and controlled environments. The current legal drinking age of twenty-one is the most effective effort to reduce…

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    Time to Rethink the Drinking Age (The Harbrace Guide to Writing, 2013, p. 29). The Amethyst Initiative (AI) was founded by John McCardell, a former history professor and President of Middlebury College in Vermont, and a group of U.S. college presidents and university chancellors in 2008. The AI is an organization whose mission is to call on the United States Congress to reconsider the minimum drinking age of 21, which formed the basis of the National Drinking Age Act of 1984 (U.S.…

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    Alcoholism In 1984

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    The National Minimum Legal Drinking Age Act of 1984 was passed on July 17th of 1984. This act prohibits the consumption, purchase and distribution of alcohol unless one is 21 years of age or older. The United States is one of twelve countries that have a minimum drinking age of 21. To put this into perspective, this beautiful world is home to 190 recognized countries, it seems that either the rest of the world is missing out on something or the opposite is true. The question of whether or not to…

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    Years In Belgium, the drinking age is fifteen years old, meaning teenage McLovin and his friends from the Blockbuster film Superbad would have had no problem purchasing alcohol if they lived there. Unfortunately, they lived in the United States which has one of the highest legal drinking ages in the world at twenty-one. The majority of the world, however, has settled on a drinking age of eighteen. This difference is due in part to the National Minimum Drinking Age Act of 1984, Mothers…

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