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Before 1980:
After 1988:
| Child* | WTF | Adult |
| 0-17 | 18-20 | 21+ |
How prohibition ruined your social life, turned millions of adults into children & enticed a generation of sexual predation.
Before 1980 there was a clear line between children and adults in two-thirds of the United States. The line was drawn in 1971 when the
26th Amendment set the voting age at 18. The states also lowered the "drinking age" to 18 and effectively granted millions of young people full access to traditional adult society. The line between children and adults began to blur around 1980-1984 when a movement against "drunk drivers" succeeded in revoking the right to access adult culture from over 13 million young Americans regardless of their
alcohol consumption.
When the age was raised to 19 in a few states those at 18 were locked out of adult culture venues and socially stranded. Instead of meeting 19, 20 and 21+ year old peers under adult social conditions they were pushed back towards more intimate contact with teens at 17, 16 and 15. Once the age was raised to 21 in all states the former adults at 18, 19 and 20 felt this backward social pressure toward interacting with and as teens or children instead of mature young adults.
The results were equally tragic for an adult society that lost access to a constant stream of vibrant newcomers eagerly seeking mates. Most people at that time were married and many would have children by their early 20s. All of that seeking and finding of mates happened under completely public adult social conditions with no guilt or deception about age. That was over by 1988 as every state conformed to the National Minimum Drinking Age Act.
Other coincidental features of this lost world include:
- Those under 18 were not "charged as an adult" for serious crimes.*
- School shootings were very rare and somewhat less violent.
- Child sexual predators were practically unheard of, but did exist.
"The National Minimum Drinking Age was a key defeat, both for state's rights and for youth rights. A massive public relations battle was fought by MADD and opponents had no time to prepare before this battle was won. This legislation affects millions of people everyday, and has since it was passed in 1984."
Legislative Analysis of the National Minimum Drinking Age Act