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Thread: 21 for O'Douls?

  1. Registered TeamPlayer BiscuitBoy's Avatar
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    21 for O'Douls? 21 for O'Douls? 21 for O'Douls? 21 for O'Douls? 21 for O'Douls? 21 for O'Douls?
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    Steam ID: biscuitboy1980 BiscuitBoy's Originid: BiscuitBoy1980
    #11

    Re: 21 for O'Douls?

    Found this....  Thre is less alcohol in a glass of OJ than there is in a neer beer.  It is just the man trying to keep you down.  Perhaps they think it is irresponsible to sell it to minors because they may then want to drink real beer.

    THE LAW
    Laws preventing the sale or distribution of alcoholic
    beverages don’t address non-alcoholic beer, and any state
    wishing to regulate its sale needs to enact separate laws.
    Pennsylvania has enacted a uniquely progressive piece
    of legislation: The Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes,
    Title 18, Chapter 63, state that it is illegal to furnish any
    “‘nonalcoholic beverage’ (any beverage intended to be
    marketed or sold as nonalcoholic beer, wine or liquor having
    some alcohol content but does not contain more than 0.5%
    alcohol by volume),” to anyone under the age of 21. While
    many stores prohibit the sale of non-alcoholic beer to minors,
    this is done on a voluntary basis.

    Under Indiana Law, anyone with a blood alcohol
    content (BAC) above .08% is considered to be
    intoxicated. According to lawyer John Roska of
    the Land of Lincoln Legal Assistance Foundation, “a
    150-pound person would apparently have to drink a
    whole case of non-alcoholic brew (24 bottles) in one
    hour to do that. But it wouldn’t necessarily take a
    lot... to produce something more than zero [on a breathalyzer
    test].”
    It is illegal for a minor in Indiana to operate a motor vehicle
    with BAC higher than .02% under the Zero Tolerance
    provision. Thus, the individual in the example above would
    only have to drink six bottles of a non-alcoholic beverage
    within an hour to be legally vulnerable behind the wheel.
    Additionally, according to a report published by Indiana
    University, a standard glass of orange juice contains between
    .2% and .5% alcohol. Six glasses of orange juice could
    theoretically create the same culpability in a minor as six
    bottles of non-alcoholic beer.

  2. Registered TeamPlayer ALPINESTAR's Avatar
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    #12

    Re: 21 for O'Douls?

    Quote Originally Posted by BigH?b
    An old drinking game we used to play was called "Edward 40 Hands"..

    This is not me nor my friends, just a good example:


    Duct tape a 40oz. Olde English to both of your hands - You can't take the bottle off your hands until both bottles are finished.

    So if you have to piss, you might want to ask preferably a girl (sometimes a buddy) who isn't playing to help you out.

    Ah, high school...


    I always piss myself when I play this..
    [quote author=...bigdog... link=topic=81507.msg1197022#msg1197022 date=1268327193]
    so tragic....

    digital......buy BC2, and stop playing WoW.
    [/quote]

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