Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:No. Many reasons. First, it's illegal.
Beyond that, this is not the 80's where everyone looks the other way (yes, my and friends' parents bought booze for our graduation parties at their homes). Off the top of my head, you could be liable criminally if your kid let's other drink your purchased booze at school. What if someone drinks, drives, and kills someone, and you provided the alcohol? Further, you could cause the dorm contract to be invalidated, based on the rules in the housing contract you agreed to if it's found in the dorm.
In the 80s (until 1985 in my state and many others) it was legal to drink at age 18. One high school tradition in the 70s and 80s was the 18 year old seniors cutting school early on friends' birthdays to go for a celebratory first drink, such as sharing a 6 pack from the liquor store in the school patking lot.
Have you ever watched "It's a Wonderful Life"? In the beginning when the high school son is getting ready to go to the high school dsnce, the mom warns him not to drink too much. 1930s.
Since it was legal in most states to drink at 18 for most of the 1980s and before, parents and people in general has a much more accepting attitude towards teens drinking, even after the drinking age moved to 21 in the mid 1980s. Parents would do things like buy the celebratory champagne for prom. Our high school tradition and many high school traditions was to give out a commemorative souvenir champagne glass with the prom logo on it to the seniors. I was on the prom committee back in the late 80s, and the high school spirit gear catalogues had pages and pages of themed champagne glasses, next to the pompoms, spirit banners, homecoming tiaras and balloons. These still were sold until at least the early 90s when my younger siblings graduated, nearly a decade after the drinking age was 21.
It was a very different time, and kids were not so bingy and sneaky about alcohol.
While I wouldn't condone my kid slamming down a brewsky on their senior picnic, it was a much more European approach to alcohol than the current model.
I would definitely not buy the booze for a minor now, even as a college dorm warming gift.
Drinking laws are so much stricter now than when we were teens.