My point was that some people get addicted with a small amount that might not even get them fully drunk yet, and thus they wouldn't be able to stop no matter how "mature" they are. But, for that particular reason, I've never willfully had a sip in my life, so I'm not exactly an authority on this. I'm speaking not from my experience but from the experience of many people around me who drink, so you can have the last word on this topic due to your personal experience.
Which means we can return to the paragraph that spawned this discussion:
Renegade Turner wrote:Crill3, I don't break most laws because they're usually there for good reason and make sense. I overlook some like the legal drinking age, because in my opinion I'm mature enough by now to drink (I only have to wait 10 more months anyway). The whole drinking age thing, anyway, is there to try to make it so that people who aren't mature enough to take alcohol are kept from drinking. However, most of the people I see starting fights while drunk that I see when I'm out seem to be the ones who are actually well over 18. It's about mental maturity really more than physical maturity.
Hah, so you lied when you said you'd never committed a crime
ever!

Not that I care. It annoys me that you can join the army and get yourself stupidly killed while fighting for a stupid government that doesn't care about you at an earlier age than you can get drunk and get yourself stupidly killed while having fun.
Anywho. Laws are there for "good reason" from a
societal point of view. They're there to protect the many, not the individual. If you're an individual, laws are generally not beneficial from your point of view, so the reasons behind their creation should no longer be "good", correct?
Oh, by the way, national stereotypes aren't a problem if you're from Ireland yourself. Who better to know and dispel/verify the truth behind the fable? If you don't dispel it, then we're all forced to assume the stereotype is valid, and thus you've verified it, and now it is forevermore an accurate stereotype. Thanks.