The Backlash of Prohibition

807 Words2 Pages

Although the temperance movement was concerned with the habitual drunk, its primary goal was total abstinence and the elimination of liquor. With the ratification of the 18th Amendment to the Constitution, the well-organized and powerful political organizations, utilizing no holds barred political tactics, successfully accomplished their goal. Prohibition became the law of the land on January 16, 1920; the manufacturing, importation, and sale of alcohol was no longer legal in the United States. Through prohibition, America embarked on what became labeled “the Nobel Experiment.” However, instead of having social redeeming values as ordained, prohibition had the opposite effect of its intended purpose, becoming a catastrophic failure. Once people wanted a drink, nothing stopped them. Subsequently, prohibition sparked American ingenuity to step to the forefront. A black market emerged, as brewing beer making wine, and distilling whiskey, became a national past time. Enterprising home brewers could make enough Home brew, Dago Red, Bathtub Gin or Moonshine to quench their thirst and to sell as well. Therefore, stills begin popping up in basements, barns, backrooms, and the deep woods. Both Canada and Mexico were wet, and their border towns offered many opportunities for thirsty Americans to quench their thirst. Ships anchored outside the three-mile limit on both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, loaded with alcohol becoming floating bars and nightclubs. Additional ships offered cases of alcohol spirits only to the professional rumrunners. Illegal liquor grew to such an extent that enforcement became virtually impossible. Prohibition not only failed in its promise to curb the social problem created by alcohol. It actually promoted s... ... middle of paper ... ...ment. In addition, the government lost the tax revenue generated from these business enterprises as well as from the sale of alcohol. The revenue generated from alcohol had amounted to one-third of the yearly tax revenue collected prior to prohibition. Actually, it is a fallacy that drinking increased during prohibition, though the middle class exposure to drinking did increase. The major argument to prohibition was the power it created for organized crime and the need for tax revenue in the throes of the Great Depression. With the country in dire need of revenue, in 1932 politicians supported a platform calling for the repeal of the act. The anti-prohibition platform became the death knell for prohibition. (Two changes needed in this sentence.) In1933 the 21st amendment to the Constitution was ratified, which repealed the 18th amendment and the end of prohibition.

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