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Feds spend $333,210 studying if there is 'more dancing, louder music' in Mexican border towns

Published in Uncategorized on May 18, 2018 by Article V Patriot

The National Institutes of Health is spending over $300,000 to study bars along the U.S.-Mexico border.

The Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation is heading the project. Among the study's aims are to examine whether bars in border towns like Mexicali have "more dancing" and "louder music."

The study, "Mexican American Drinking Contexts On and Away From the U.S.-Mexico Border," involves researchers going into bars for "unobtrusive systematic observations."

"The U.S./Mexico border is a unique macro context for drinking, with increased alcohol availability due to the lower minimum legal drinking age in Mexico of 18 years and an increased number of venues for on premise consumption of alcohol (bars, clubs, restaurants)," according to the grant for the project. "Previous research has shown that the border population is more at risk for unsafe drinking (binge) and drinking-related problems than the population off the border."

"Mexican Americans are uniquely exposed to this macro environment by virtue of their location in large numbers in cities on the U.S./Mexico border," the grant states.

Click here to read more from the Washington Free Beacon.

$300,000 is a drop in the federal budget, but if the feds are willing to spend money on something like this, what won't they waste our money on? It's time to put real restraints on federal spending with the kind of constitutional amendments that could be proposed at an Article V Convention of States.

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