Youth drinking "is National’s fault "
Press Release
For immediate release
Youth
drinking is National’s fault – road safety
expert
The government needs to take
responsibility for the rise in youth drinking, according to
a leading road safety expert.
Dog & Lemon Guide
editor Clive Matthew-Wilson, whose road safety research has
been awarded by the Australian Police Journal,
says:
“When the previous National government
lowered the legal drinking age, people like myself predicted
carnage. We were proved 100% right.”
“The rise
in youth drinking is largely the result of younger people
having increased access to alcohol. The only real way to
reverse youth drinking is to restrict young people’s
access to alcohol. It’s that simple.”
“Before
the drinking age was lowered we had 20-year-olds buying
alcohol for 18-year olds. Now we have 18-year-olds buying
alcohol for 15-year-olds, and the terrible results are there
for everyone to see.”
Alcohol is directly
implicated in around one quarter of road deaths and 35% of
all types of injury. A recent study of 12 -17-year-olds by
the Alcoholic Liquor Advisory Council showed that one
quarter of 14-17-year-olds drink heavily and
regularly.
Matthew-Wilson believes that alcohol
should be treated in the same way as tobacco - accepted but
discouraged.
“In the real world, the people most
likely to drink are the least likely to be able to control
the consequences. The people – especially MPs – who say
that drinking is a matter of personal responsibility are in
complete lack of contact with Planet Earth. The reality is
that people – especially young people – are not making
informed choices about drinking. Instead these drinkers are
making appallingly bad choices and wrecking countless lives
in the
process.”
ends