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A culture of bingeing tied to America's drinking age (21)
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HardTranceProd
From TIME magazine

http://www.time.com/time/magazine/a...1096516,00.html

How Bingeing Became the New College Sport
And why it would stop if we lowered the drinking age
By BARRETT SEAMAN

In the coming weeks, millions of students will begin their fall semester of college, with all the attendant rituals of campus life: freshman orientation, registering for classes, rushing by fraternities and sororities and, in a more recent nocturnal college tradition, "pregaming" in their rooms.

Pregaming is probably unfamiliar to people who went to college before the 1990s. But it is now a common practice among 18-, 19- and 20-year-old students who cannot legally buy or consume alcohol. It usually involves sitting in a dorm room or an off-campus apartment and drinking as much hard liquor as possible before heading out for the evening's parties. While reporting for my book Binge, I witnessed the hospitalization of several students for acute alcohol poisoning. Among them was a Hamilton College freshman who had consumed 22 shots of vodka while sitting in a dorm room with her friends. Such hospitalizations are routine on campuses across the nation. By the Thanksgiving break of the year I visited Harvard, the university's health center had admitted nearly 70 students for alcohol poisoning.

When students are hospitalized--or worse yet, die from alcohol poisoning, which happens about 300 times each year--college presidents tend to react by declaring their campuses dry or shutting down fraternity houses. But tighter enforcement of the minimum drinking age of 21 is not the solution. It's part of the problem.

Over the past 40 years, the U.S. has taken a confusing approach to the age-appropriateness of various rights, privileges and behaviors. It used to be that 21 was the age that legally defined adulthood. On the heels of the student revolution of the late '60s, however, came sweeping changes: the voting age was reduced to 18; privacy laws were enacted that protected college students' academic, health and disciplinary records from outsiders, including parents; and the drinking age, which had varied from state to state, was lowered to 18.

Then, thanks in large measure to intense lobbying by Mothers Against Drunk Driving, Congress in 1984 effectively blackmailed states into hiking the minimum drinking age to 21 by passing a law that tied compliance to the distribution of federal-aid highway funds--an amount that will average $690 million per state this year. There is no doubt that the law, which achieved full 50-state compliance in 1988, saved lives, but it had the unintended consequence of creating a covert culture around alcohol as the young adult's forbidden fruit.

Drinking has been an aspect of college life since the first Western universities in the 14th century. My friends and I drank in college in the 1960s--sometimes a lot but not so much that we had to be hospitalized. Veteran college administrators cite a sea change in campus culture that began, not without coincidence, in the 1990s. It was marked by a shift from beer to hard liquor, consumed not in large social settings, since that is now illegal, but furtively and dangerously in students' residences.

In my reporting at colleges around the country, I did not meet any presidents or deans who felt that the 21-year age minimum helps their efforts to curb the abuse of alcohol on their campuses. Quite the opposite. They thought the law impeded their efforts since it takes away the ability to monitor and supervise drinking activity.

What would happen if the drinking age was rolled back to 18 or 19? Initially, there would be a surge in binge drinking as young adults savored their newfound freedom. But over time, I predict, U.S. college students would settle into the saner approach to alcohol I saw on the one campus I visited where the legal drinking age is 18: Montreal's McGill University, which enrolls about 2,000 American undergraduates a year. Many, when they first arrive, go overboard, exploiting their ability to drink legally. But by midterms, when McGill's demanding academic standards must be met, the vast majority have put drinking into its practical place among their priorities.

A culture like that is achievable at U.S. colleges if Congress can muster the fortitude to reverse a bad policy. If lawmakers want to reduce drunk driving, they should do what the Norwegians do: throw the book at offenders no matter what their age. Meanwhile, we should let the pregamers come out of their dorm rooms so that they can learn to handle alcohol like the adults we hope and expect them to be.

Barrett Seaman, a former TIME editor and correspondent, is the author of Binge: What Your College Student Won't Tell You
Floorfiller
uh...i'm 22...and still like to pregame. alcohol is ing expensive in clubs...that's why you do it...
jonze234
quote:
Originally posted by Floorfiller
uh...i'm 22...and still like to pregame. alcohol is ing expensive in clubs...that's why you do it...


+1
D-res
quote:
Originally posted by Floorfiller
uh...i'm 22...and still like to pregame. alcohol is ing expensive in clubs...that's why you do it...


stop ruining my dreams!!
Lepanto
I would pregame regardless of the sort of job I hold. I'm 19 but I have ID that mostly never fails and i do get drinks inside but only when im out with my boys and we just wanna get some shots by the bar or something. But if i wanna go really ed up and i know a shot is like 9 bucks id much rather get a six pack for that or get a forty for like 3 bucks.
jonze234
quote:
Originally posted by D-res
stop ruining my dreams!!



you dream about jason?!!?!? :wtf:
Zombie0729
i thougth the whole reason my friends & i pre-gamed was to get ready to go out and not have to drag a lot of alcohol with us.

if you're drinking 20shots while pre-gaming... what the hell are you doing while 'gaming'...




(a thank you)
jdat
I didn't read what you were saying and I'm not going to comment on it exactly but the reason why I believe there's binge drinking is much deeper then age restrictions.

It has a lot to do with the way americans carry out most of what they do into excess.
Zewad
yes sir.. americans and their excess.. its what we do best..

:D

I'm 25 and pre-gaming is still always a kick off to my nightly going out activities....
Floorfiller
quote:
Originally posted by HardTranceProd
What would happen if the drinking age was rolled back to 18 or 19? Initially, there would be a surge in binge drinking as young adults savored their newfound freedom. But over time, I predict, U.S. college students would settle into the saner approach to alcohol



so wait...


lets lower the drinking age so that binge drinking happens earlier in life and then when they get to college they won't want to drink as heavy anymore

really most of the people i know...yes...might have drunk heavily freshman year or something...nothing even too bad, but nowadays just like to have one or two socially...we don't really get crazy anymore...

Zombie0729
quote:
Originally posted by Floorfiller
so wait...


lets lower the drinking age so that binge drinking happens earlier in life and then when they get to college they won't want to drink as heavy anymore

really most of the people i know...yes...might have drunk heavily freshman year or something...nothing even too bad, but nowadays just like to have one or two socially...we don't really get crazy anymore...


yeah i agree.. it's just going to push back the age when they first start to drink hard. a lot of people who didn't drink in high school waited until college

imagine if senior year in HS everyone was legal to drink. what age do you think they actually started?
jonze234
quote:
Originally posted by Floorfiller
so wait...


lets lower the drinking age so that binge drinking happens earlier in life and then when they get to college they won't want to drink as heavy anymore

really most of the people i know...yes...might have drunk heavily freshman year or something...nothing even too bad, but nowadays just like to have one or two socially...we don't really get crazy anymore...




i think what the guy is trying to say is that if we lower the drinking age less people will drink in their dorm rooms where there is no supervision. if they drink at the bars they will be less inclined to get alcohol poisoning and not get treatment for it.
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