Since July 17, 1984, when the United States Congress enacted the National Minimum Drinking Age Act, people only above the age of 21 could have the opportunity to legally purchase and publically possess an alcoholic beverage. The Congress’s purpose for establishing the law was primarily to combat motorist under the influence of alcohol, as the death rate of traffic accidents were significantly high before 1984 in the US where the typical minimum age to drink was 18. Which is the average age for a first year student in college, and apparently the age where minors become involved around alcohol. Meanwhile, it has been nearly unavoidable to prevent underage students in college the consumption of alcohol. As according to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, about four out five college students drink…
For instance, in a 2006 study by Aaron White, then an assistant professor at the Duke University Medical Center, discovered that 40% of college freshman admitted to engaging in binge drinking, which involves five or more drinks on one occasion, and 20% freshman admitted to consuming between 10 and 15 drinks per session. These results utterly shows how underage college students continue to violate minimum drinking age law, while the negative outcomes produced by drinking is well known. In order to drastically decrease the percentage of underage drinkers in college, the jurisdiction of college campuses should enforce strict policies in concern of the proliferating issue. As without the heavy degree of authority, the rates of deaths and injuries, unwanted sexual experiences, and academic failures, which are all directly and indirectly caused by the alteration of a person’s brain composition due to alcohol, will not…