What Is Prohibition Responsible For A Failure In America

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Prohibition was responsible for a wide array of changes which is why it was a huge national debate that has never been proven a failure or a success. The goal of Prohibition was to change the country, this was supposed to be for the better. It was intended to change the habits of people in a way that the nation would benefit (J.C. Burnham). Instead it changed the nation in a negative way. “Not only did it greatly enrich urban gangsters, inspire a widespread loosening of morals, and lead to a general rise in crime, it was also responsible for the FDR-led party realignment, feminism, and increasing prominence of identity and class-based politics, jazz modernism, and a distribution and renegotiation of the parameters and norms of acceptable bourgeois …show more content…

Most importantly of all, it was also directly responsible for the vast expansion of the federal government and its powers” (Fred Schwarz). Clearly there was some change for the better, but over all this was a vital lesson learned (J.C. Burnham). It was directly responsible for a much needed expansion of the government. It also increased their power, by people treating the amendment like it was nothing; in a way this helped the government learn how to properly enforce an amendment (J.C. Burnham). “Prohibition in America clearly shows what becomes a fetish rather than an elastic instrument of national policy capable of being easily and quickly adapted to national necessities” (John J. Horgan 236). Prohibition turned out to be a very important lesson learned that is still looked at today; a model for what an outcome of a law can look like whether or not it

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