Pubdate: Sun, 26 Sep 2004 Source: Denver Post (CO) Copyright: 2004 The Denver Post Corp Contact: http://www.denverpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122 Author: Ed Quillen Note: Ed Quillen of Salida is a former newspaper editor whose column appears Tuesday and Sunday. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) THE LOGIC OF RESPONSIBILITY So far this month, two university students in Colorado have died after drinking too much alcohol. Many people think this means that somebody should do something to prevent future tragedies like this, but what? The law does not appear to be much help here. It is already illegal to drink alcohol in Colorado if you are under 21. One student was 18 and the other 19, so they were already breaking the law, as were the people who provided them with alcohol. Sure, there will be calls for new and improved laws with stiffer penalties. But if the current laws are not enforced, why should we think that stricter laws would be enforced? And if they could be, it would doubtless take more law-enforcement personnel, which means higher taxes. What form would a new law take? The only effective one that comes to mind is making it a felony to be in the same room where a minor drinks alcohol, and thus require everyone to check every ID, just to be on the safe side. However, it is hard to imagine even our legislature passing something like that, and even if that were the law, there is always the problem of the fake ID. During my college days, I sometimes checked IDs at the door of a 3.2 joint (back then, 18-year-olds could drink 3.2 beer in Colorado, a practice that ended a few years ago when our legislature bent over for the federal government). Since the Weld County Sheriff's Department was always looking for an excuse to close these dens of iniquity and rock 'n' roll, I was quite conscientious. Once you passed the ID test and paid the cover charge, your hand was stamped so that you could come and go. Sometimes a person would get stamped, then go outside and give his ID to someone who resembled him, who would then come through. One night, after a name started to get too familiar, I got to the microphone just before the band resumed after a break, and asked, "Will the real Gloria Gonzales please stand up?" Three young women headed for the door. As the failure of Prohibition demonstrated, not even amending the U.S. Constitution, let alone passing a mere state law, will keep people from drinking alcohol if they chose to do so. There remains, however, the question of individual responsibility. In the two recent Colorado cases, one had been participating in a fraternity initiation, and the other was party-hopping. Both are voluntary activities. Now we encounter a logical problem. If we assume that 18-year-olds are of sufficient intelligence to know when they are drinking too much, then it follows that they are old enough to drink. If we assume that 18-year-olds lack that knowledge, then it follows that neither student is responsible, and we should find some other party to blame - i.e., beer ads, the fraternity system (both were found dead in frat houses), a "party school" social environment, aggressive marketing by retail liquor merchants, to name a few that I have seen recently. Logic demands one or the other. Logic, however, has nothing to do with how America runs, especially in this regard. According to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, about 350 Americans die every year from accidental alcohol poisoning. In all of recorded history, not one person has ever died of a marijuana overdose. So guess which substance is illegal. That begs the question, though, since the law already forbids minors from drinking themselves to death. Perhaps we need a new attitude. Drunken driving decreased as a result of social pressure from slogans like "Friends don't let friends drive drunk." And perhaps, around America's fraternity houses, where young people are supposed to learn to care of one another, they could post slogans like "Friends don't let friends pass out and die." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake