worst... best...PLAYER57832 wrote:This, is of course, the worst ...Timminz wrote:rock and roll, etc...
perspective is everything.
Moderator: Community Team
worst... best...PLAYER57832 wrote:This, is of course, the worst ...Timminz wrote:rock and roll, etc...
It does seem to be, yes.PLAYER57832 wrote: I think the biggest indicator of how someone will deal with alchohol is how they are taught to deal with it and life in general, not the law.
And we're back to the subject of Texas...Timminz wrote:worst... best...PLAYER57832 wrote:This, is of course, the worst ...Timminz wrote:rock and roll, etc...
perspective is everything.
Texas is pretty flat. You get much more perspective when you can climb a real mountain.Woodruff wrote:And we're back to the subject of Texas...Timminz wrote:worst... best...PLAYER57832 wrote:This, is of course, the worst ...Timminz wrote:rock and roll, etc...
perspective is everything.
When will you begin?Snorri1234 wrote:I've been legally drinking since I was 16. I think one of the best advantages of that has been that I know how much alcohol affects your skill so I will never drive drunk. I basically experienced shit situations with alcohol before I had to deal with being responsible.
Woodruff wrote:The military USED to do this, but they do not any longer. If you're not 21, you're out of luck on a military base. In fact to throw out an example...in Germany, you can legally drink off-base under 21, but not on-base (so you better be taking that taxi back to the base...).PLAYER57832 wrote: Some colleges have tried lowering the age limit on college. The problems are legal. Some military bases have done the same. Again, the problem is legal. However, typically you can get reactions along the lines of "you got a uniform.. that's an ID to me! you are obviously over 21!" However, officially, the law is the law.. everywhere.