You don't have to be drunk to be interesting.
I must have missed the part where we were talking about teenagers getting wasted and driving tractor trailers. Would that change the "level" of behavior? I won't speak for anyone else, but I wasn't talking about "safety" at all. I was talking about a kid rebelling against his or her parents occasionally. That could be one beer or it could be twenty. But let's not automatically assume that drinking leads to manslaughter.Whoa, whoa, whoa, now we're talking about having a few beers. The OP is talking about being outright drunk. You can't just change the level of what we're discussing and not tell us.
I must have missed the part where we were talking about teenagers getting wasted and driving tractor trailers. Would that change the "level" of behavior? I won't speak for anyone else, but I wasn't talking about "safety" at all. I was talking about a kid rebelling against his or her parents occasionally. That could be one beer or it could be twenty. But let's not automatically assume that drinking leads to manslaughter.
You've been drinking with the wrong people.You can be fun while drunk but you can't be interesting.![]()
You've been drinking with the wrong people.![]()
I have no idea what sort of discussion was going on before that. I agreed with this so I said so. Perhaps that clarifies matters.I do think high schoolers are less independent than previous generations and I tend to think of that as sad. But I have a romantic notion attached to rebellion and being a rebel. Drinking and doing drugs doesn't have to be part of this, but listening to your parents when they tell you not to drink just isn't cool. If you're going to be sober, don't be sober because you're pressured into it.
^Then you shouldn't speak of things you know nothing about.![]()
This is the statement that I was replying to in the first place.
I have no idea what sort of discussion was going on before that. I agreed with this so I said so. Perhaps that clarifies matters.I do think high schoolers are less independent than previous generations and I tend to think of that as sad. But I have a romantic notion attached to rebellion and being a rebel. Drinking and doing drugs doesn't have to be part of this, but listening to your parents when they tell you not to drink just isn't cool. If you're going to be sober, don't be sober because you're pressured into it.
^my apologies if I touched on a sore spot.
I don't like obedience to authority. It reminds me too much of a Brave New World.
But a little rebellion from authority isn't a bad thing, imo.
I'm sorry, but this entire thing is dumb.
My parents told me to look both ways before crossing the street. But according to you guys I should have closed my eyes and blindly run across the street from time to time?
And the fact that I didn't makes you guys sad?
This has everything to do with safety as opposed to rebellion. Teenagers have no idea how to handle alcohol and the stats show it. We have huge amounts of teens with alcohol poisoning and the number of drunk driving incidents is massive. You want to rebel? Stay out later or something. But encouraging teens (who are now drinking as young as 14) is not just dumb but plain dangerous.
I never said do the opposite of what your parents tell you. I said make up your own mind.
One shouldn't blindly follow anyone, simple as that.
I think a certain amount of rebellious behaviour is normal and healthy during adolescence, provided one still maintains a smidgen of self-control... and therein lies the problem for a lot of teenagers: they overdo it and abandon their common sense and self-control.
One shouldn't blindly follow anyone, simple as that.
Except one's parents. They've earned the right.
Oh, what utter screaming bullshit.
Parents teach their children horrible things all the time, from bigotry and violence to ignorance of reality to greed and small-mindedness to hatred of self. No one should ever, EVER blindly do or think what anyone tells them to because regardless of if they raised you, rule you, or sign your paycheck they might be wrong. If you want to live exactly the life your parents tell you to, then great, but I pity you because you're living their life, not your's.
Well, no. I said make up your own mind. By the time you're a teenager, you can hopefully know from common sense that crossing the street without looking is something you want to do in life and your parents don't have to tell you.
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