Happy New Year, everyone! What will 2024 bring in regards to youth rights and drug and alcohol policy? 2023 was generally not great in that regard, especially in the Anglosphere overall, although New Zealand surprisingly seems to have wised up a bit in regards to tobacco policy. What do you think will happen in 2024, everyone?
Saturday, January 6, 2024
Tuesday, December 26, 2023
Science Finally Shows When (Cognitive) Adulthood Begins
No, this is NOT the usual "teen brain" junk science that we have quite frankly gotten tired of debunking. This is the real deal, so listen up and pay very close attention.
Researchers at the University of Pittsburgh recently published a new, large, and groundbreaking study in Nature Communications that examined nearly two dozen laboratory measures of "executive function" of a whopping 10,000 participants (ages 8 through 35) across four different datasets. And the results dovetail nicely with what we at Twenty-One Debunked have been generally saying all along, and we quote (emphasis added):
"The resulting analysis showed a common dynamic of executive function maturation that was shared between both sexes: a rapid burst of executive function development in late childhood to mid-adolescence (10-15 years old), followed by small but significant changes through mid-adolescence (15-18) that stabilized to adult-level performance by late adolescence (18-20)."
"Other important behavioral factors that complement executive function, such as the ability to control one's own emotions, can change with age. The ability to use executive function reliably improves with age and, at least in a laboratory setting, matures by 18 years of age."
In other words, 18-20 year olds are in fact adults, not only biologically, but also neurologically and cognitively as well. And the data show that even 15-17 year olds are actually pretty darn close as well. Thus, there is really no scientific reason to set the age of majority (or any related age limit for that matter) any higher than 18, period. In fact, one can even justify setting some age limits a bit lower than that based on this research (after all, it's not binary like flicking a light switch, but rather a gradual process).
So why have so many other, flashier studies seemed to have suggested otherwise? Well, the brain technically does continue developing to some extent well beyond 18, of course, but that apparent development has been known for over a decade now to continue well into the 30s, 40s, and likely even beyond that as well. Clearly, any development that does occur from 18 to 21 or 25 is on the very same spectrum as the development that continues beyond that as well. A brain that continues to change and develop throughout life does not lend itself to simplistic explanations of a magical age of neurological adulthood based on its superficial appearance on a brain scan. Rather, the real question becomes when the brain is no longer developing on a critical or fundamental level, and when one can achieve an adult level cognitive capacity and performance. And the University of Pittsburgh study above answers that question far better than just about any other study has so far to date.
So basically, we as a society have three choices on what to do given these findings: 1) radically redefine adulthood, 2) radically redefine adolescence, or 3) simply accept 18-20 year olds as adults, in every way, period. Occam's Razor would clearly agree with the third option, as would any serious consideration of liberty and justice for all.
To argue otherwise is, at this point, nothing short of warmed-over phrenology at best, if not full-blown political Lysenkoism that will ultimately go down in history as the epitome of bigoted crank science.
UPDATE: Much to the chagrin of some purists, this study is also the strongest hard evidence to date that adolescence does in fact exist as a distinct life stage that is not entirely socially constructed. Adolescence appears to be no more socially constructed than adulthood is, in fact. And to that we say, so what? Glibly denying all group differences and/or attempting to erase adolescence entirely does not do young people any favors either, and it plays right into the hands of the biological determinist bigots and cranks. That said, the study finds no scientific support for the specious idea of "emerging adulthood" as a life stage somehow distinct from young adulthood, and we really should simply jettison the term "emerging adulthood" from our collective vocabulary.
In any case, there is nothing magical about turning 21, 25, or any other age north of 18 for that matter. And while even 18 is hardly magical either, it is arguably the least arbitrary place to draw the default line where once you are an adult, you are an adult, period.
Monday, December 18, 2023
Have A Safe And Happy Holiday Season
(This is a public service announcement)
It is that time of year again when the holidays are upon us, and many of us Americans (and around the world) will be celebrating with alcohol and/or other substances, pretty much back to normal now. We at Twenty-One Debunked would like to remind everyone to be safe and celebrate responsibly. There is absolutely no excuse for drunk driving at any age, period. We cannot stress this enough. It's very simple--if you plan to drive, don't drink, and if you plan to drink, don't drive. It's really not rocket science, folks. And there are numerous ways to avoid mixing the two. Designate a sober driver, take a cab, use public transportation, crash on the couch, or even walk if you have to. Or stay home and celebrate there. Or simply don't drink--nobody's got a gun to your head. Seriously, don't be stupid about it! And the same goes for other psychoactive substances as well, and a fortiori when combined with alcohol.ARRIVE ALIVE, DON'T DRINK AND DRIVE!!! If you plan to drink, don't forget to think! The life you save may very well be your own.
Thursday, December 7, 2023
Why Banning Tobacco Is A Dumb Idea
The stupid literally burns like, well, cigarettes. It's apparently hard to keep a bad idea down. While New Zealand's new government is backing off from the previous government's phased tobacco ban and plans to reverse it, as Malaysia already did as well, the UK government under Rishi Sunak now wants to implement such a phased ban for anyone born after 2008. Even Bhutan lifted their tobacco ban in 2021, as it was such a massive failure due to the massive black market it created. (Hey, somebody answer the Clue Phone, as it is ringing loud and clear now!) So should they go through with it, the UK now stands alone in the modern (or even semi-modern) world, leaving them in the good company of...wait for it...the Taliban and ISIL in that regard. Only difference being that the UK is simply taking the scenic route there instead of simply making a beeline for it. Gee, how very enlightened and progressive of them.
Hey, don't go getting any ideas, California, or any other state for that matter! Seriously.
Smoking tobacco, especially in this day and age, is dumb, but banning it is even dumber. People who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it. Prohibition didn't work then, and it doesn't work now.
Friday, November 24, 2023
Safety Third
We live in a culture where "Safety First" is increasingly taken for granted, and has been since roughly the mid-1980s following a series of moral panics and zealotry in general. While it is generally a good thing that safety has largely improved since then (prior to that, Americans were really quite cavalier overall, and it really showed in the statistics across multiple domains), there can also be too much of a good thing as well.
Most people at least intuitively know this on some level, and that's why even the most die-hard safety zealots seldom (if ever) practice what they preach in all areas of life all of the time, at least not for very long. Even they still conveniently carve out selective and arbitrary exceptions for themselves and their own chosen "guilty" pleasures and activites.
From the abomination that is the 21 drinking age to the War on (people who use a few particular) Drugs to increasingly stringent rules and heavy monitoring of youth to lack of free play among children to prison-like schools to actual mass incarceration to the sexual counterrevolution dressed up as "culture wars" to the ever-encroaching nanny state to finally the ultimate culmination of safety zealotry, the pandemic lockdowns and related restrictions, we have clearly been sold a bill of goods in that regard. And yet paradoxically, actual health safety statistics from life expectancy to violent deaths to traffic casualties have in the USA actually lagged behind peer nations, often well behind. Thus, it's long past time to take a fresh approach.
We call that approach "Safety Third". And it's really not an entirely novel idea, having been promoted in some form by diverse folks from "Dirty Jobs" pundit Mike Rowe (largely right-wing) all the way to contemporary philosopher Charles Eisenstein (largely left-wing). That does NOT at all mean that safety is trivial or should be disregarded as such, far from it. We do value safety as important, of course, but not THE most important thing, let alone the ultimate end-all-be-all of human flourishing.
So if safety is third on the list of priorities, what are first and second then? For example, Charles Eisenstein says "giving and receiving", not necessarily in that order. That makes sense, if a bit vague perhaps, but we at the TSAP and Twenty-One Debunked would alternatively answer, "liberty and justice for all", not necessarily in that order. Anything short of that is un-American.
It was indeed one of our Founding Fathers, Benjamin Franklin, who said, "Whoever gives up essential liberty for a little temporary safety, deserves neither and loses both." After all, safety is a great servant, but a terrible master. We would be wise to recognize that, in all areas of life.
Sunday, November 12, 2023
Should The Drinking Age Be Abolished?
Saturday, November 11, 2023
The Abysmal Failure of "Peer Review"
There is an excellent Substack article by Adam Mastroianni, that dives fairly deep into why "peer review" in science is not only useless, but often worse than useless. Continuing in the tradition of the legendary John Ioannidis, he notes how this process, which should really be called "pal review" or "gatekeeping", not only does NOT keep even glaring junk science findings from published, but actually ends up rigging the game in favor of the rich and powerful, and propping up mainstream narratives above the truth. Peer review as we know it is really only about six decades old, and it can be considered a failed experiment. The scientific method has clearly NOT improved since then, to say the very least.
Woe, you mean that turning science into little more than a popularity contest at best, and a pay-to-play at worst, has not made science objectively any better, and likely made it worse? Gee, I'm shocked, I tell you, shocked! Who could have seen that coming?
And while he doesn't discuss the utter abomination that passes for research on the 21 drinking age, we at Twenty-One Debunked note that this is probably the most salient example of the failure of peer review. The pro-21 crowd basically has their own "citation mill" of the same old MADD affiliates and fellow travelers to prop up their faulty narrative, constantly moving the goalposts when eventually debunked, while anything that contradicts their narrative is censored or delayed for publication in mainstream journals. It was truly a miracle that Miron and Tetelbaum (2009), Asch and Levy (1987 and 1990), Mike Males (1986 and 2008), and literally anything by Darren Grant ever even got published at all, and Dee and Evans (2001) probably only got published by "nerfing" their findings a bit first. And forget most meta-analysis and reviews, as those (except for Darren Grant in 2011) have been hopelessly rigged, padded, and cherry-picked beyond all recognition.
And then they have the GALL to call the anti-21 researchers "merchants of doubt" or (usually falsely) claim that they are funded by Big Alcohol. Riiiiight.
It's time to end this utterly failed experiment.
Saturday, October 28, 2023
New Study Finds That Legalizing Weed Does NOT Increase Traffic Fatalities
Yet another new study finds that cannabis legalization did NOT increase traffic fatalities in the years 2016 through 2019 compared to states that did not. Previous studies have generally agreed with their conclusion, though the evidence has been mixed overall. And now we have the final nail in the coffin against one of the prohibitionists' most salient bits of fearmongering, which as we see, is not robust.
When including the, ahem, outlier years of 2020 and 2021, it appeared at first glance that the legalization states did worse than the control states, but removing those two pandemic years yielded the opposition conclusion. This shows that outlier data can easily yield misleading and often spurious inferences.
This dovetails nicely with another recent study that found no evidence of a link between cannabis legalization and traffic fatalities in the USA or Canada.
2024 UPDATE: Yet another study dovetails with these findings, again.
Wednesday, October 25, 2023
Does Lowering BAC Limit To 0.05% Actually Save Lives? (Part Deux)
Friday, October 6, 2023
Boris Johnson Talks Some Sense For Once
Here's a good one from across the pond:
Former Prime Minister of the UK, Boris Johnson, recently wrote an good article in the Daily Mail in which he actually talks sense for once. Or at least, for the very first time since before that fateful day on March 22, 2020. In his article, he strongly and very rightly criticizes the government's proposal to implement a New Zealand style generational smoking ban (that is, a lifetime smoking ban on anyone born after some arbitrary point in time). He goes right to the heart of just how ridiculous the whole thing is. And of course, we at Twenty-One Debunked also strongly oppose such an idea, not least because it is essentially the most extreme version of the very sort of fundamentally ageist policies that we despise.
It basically raises the age limit (currently 18 in the UK) by a year every year, and of course we oppose 100% any attempt to set the age limit higher than 18. While Twenty-One Debunked does not recommend that anyone of any age take up smoking or otherwise using tobacco, as it is a very foolish and dangerous habit with practically no objective benefits, we still believe that legal adults should have the right to do what they will with their own bodies and minds.
Of course, the proposed ban's defenders would likely claim that Johnson is being hyperbolic in his criticism. Truly, no one is calling for the newly disenfranchised smokers themselves to be arrested or otherwise punished for smoking, right? It's only the sellers of tobacco to people born after that arbitrary date who will actually be on the hook, right? Well, as history has infamously shown with less extreme age limits for other substances and/or in other places, there is absolutely no guarantee of that, especially when the measure isn't nearly as quick or effective as initially hoped for, and the zealots inevitably begin to get impatient. And even if penalties are limited to sellers, it's still utterly ridiculous at best, and an unjust infringement of civil rights at worst.
Perhaps old Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson is at least somewhat redeemable after all?