Nanny state drinking age questioned by university system officials
Tuesday, 19 August 2008 | 201 readers so far
Some college bureaucrats around the country are banding together to send a message that the federal nanny system isn’t working in regards to drinking age.
Top university officials in Maryland - including the chancellor of the state university system and the president of the Johns Hopkins University - say the current drinking age of 21 “is not working” and has led to dangerous binges in which students have harmed themselves and others.
Six college presidents in Maryland are among more than 100 college and university presidents nationwide who have signed a statement calling for a public debate on rethinking the drinking age.
One of the biggest gripes I’ve had with the drinking age is the mentality that goes with it. Parents should set the drinking age. When the state sets the drinking age it sends a subtle message that the state owns you. This is the same message that is sent with any prohibition type rules, regulations and legislation.
If you believe, as I do, that you own your own physical being and your own mind, then the state has no place telling you which substances are legal to put into your body. As long as you are not injuring other people you cannot commit a crime by ingesting a substance. Injuring yourself is not a crime because you are damaging your own property. The problem with this is that our current society teaches that the state has an obligation to take care of all of us individuals collectively. That means that all of us are expected to give up individuality to some extent.
We teach young adults that they are not responsible enough to decide for themselves what they put into their bodies instead of explaining the available options and allowing them to decide for themeselves in responsibly managed environments. Because of the nanny state, young adults have to hide their experimentation with substances that alter reality. This means that they are more likely to get into serious trouble or be injured during the learning process.
Instead of patronizing young people, we should teach them individual responsibility. Few legal adults, no matter how young or old, want to be coddled and talked down to. It’s time we recognized the hypocrisy of making someone a legal adult at 18 while telling them they are still not responsible enough to consume an alcoholic beverage. It’s time we understood that prohibition always causes more problems than it addresses.












1 August 19th, 2008 at 12:16 pm
Coralie Solange says:
I remember my college days, sort of. I was so drunk through most of it that it probably didn’t actually happen the way I think it did. I’m also 90% sure that I’d have drank far less if it hadn’t been illegal for me, as an adult, to drink. I was already committing a crime so I might as well get completely plastered, no? Why take the risk if you’re not going to make it worth it.
2 August 20th, 2008 at 4:48 pm
Trevor says:
My college days started in my 30’s so I didn’t have the same type of experience.