Robin Garr wrote: I think this argument fails on logic when we set apart youngsters for separate consideration. Even granted that immaturity fosters bad decisions, can we honestly argue that the public costs associated with the carnage caused by drunk teens proportionately exceeds that caused by all drunks of all ages?
OK, just screwed up a long reply. Short version:
Teens are quite different. The frontal lobes of their brain are way less developed. That makes their risk-taking analysis far worse than someone over 21. Which by the way is one reason why 18 yr olds are prized as foot soldiers.
Besides the drunk driving issues (teens are far more likely to drive when drunk than drunk adults, and then to compound the danger by driving fast), there are other issues where teen drinking leads to far more harmful effects:
alcohol poisoning (ask any ER doc what % of cases are teens)
fights/violence (I just had a 19 yr old doing community service hours for hitting a friend in the face outside a bar. I'll further say that as someone who worked as a bartender/bouncer in a college town bar the age of fighters was not a bell curve, but a steep slope with 18 year olds (legal at the time) being the most ornery, by the time you hit 23-24 fights were rare. And then there's relationship violence.
other crimes- ask any local judge re breakins, etc and alcohol is disproportionate.
All of those things happen with adults, but are way more common (proportionately) among teens.
We continue to try to teach David to drink responsibly. But anyone who thinks even 50% of teen drinking is responsible is delusional.
As an adult drinker, I can't see how anyone was harmed by Disney's decision (and even less how it could be deemed censorship).