Prohibition Research Paper

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Prohibition: Rise of Gangsters Alcohol Prohibition was supposed to improve the country’s social problems but it only led to the rise of powerful criminals. Prohibition was the first of the many culture wars that would divide the United States in the twentieth century. For centuries alcohol has been part of the American life; the prevalence of alcohol in daily life was plainly visible. According to Lerner, “the Americans can fix nothing, without a drink. If you meet, you drink; if you part, you drink; if you make acquaintance, you drink … you start it early in life, and you continue it, until you soon drop into the grave” (1). As the consumption rate of distilled spirits increased, American’s love for drinks caused problems: domestic violence, crime, neglected families, economic ruin, disease, and death. It was these combined effects that led reformers to warn against alcohol. Waves of temperance reformers, and temperance groups like the Washingtonians had tried to change drinkers through voluntary abstinence, but those who believed that moral courage and personal resolve could conquer alcoholism were quickly disappointed (Lerner 2). Despite many attempts to ban, the Anti-Saloon League was the first to introduce the Eighteenth Amendment and the Volstead Act. According to Burns and Novick, the Prohibition experiment was not the product of a sudden, naïve push for a ban on alcohol in the 1920s, but was rooted in a much longer debate over alcohol and social behavior extending back to the early nineteenth century (2). Yang 2 The Anti-Saloon League’s objective was to have a law in every state banning the manufacture and sales of alcohol. Formed in Oberlin, Ohio, in 1893, the Anti-Saloon League was the single-... ... middle of paper ... ...repeal of the 18th Amendment. As income tax revenues crash along with incomes, the government was going bankrupt. Sadly during the prohibition, while billions of gallons of liquors were being sold illegally, the bootleggers did not pay, nor did the government collect, a single of penny of tax. Franklin Roosevelt said during his 1932 campaign, the federal treasury would be enriched by hundreds of millions of dollars (Okrent 15). The Prohibition lasted from 1920 until 1933 when it was repealed by the 21st Amendment, being the first constitutional amendment to have ever been repealed. Despite all the efforts put into the prohibition of alcohol, the law failed miserably due to lack of enforcements and the disrespect for the law by criminals. The prohibition was supposed to improve the country’s social problems but it only led to the rise of powerful criminals.

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