Crime and Forensic Technology

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Our modern world is riddled with crime. But with the most recent revolutions in forensic technology, organized crime has been on its way down. However, another danger has risen in popularity over the last few centuries; alcohol. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration 10,288 people died from crashes caused by a drunk driver in 2010 alone. Drunkenness is also one of the highest contributors to rape in the United States, since rape/sexual assault requires that the victim does not give consent OR that the victim is unable to give consent, and being intoxicated by alcohol is classified as unable to give consent due to alcohol’s ability to impair one’s judgement. (Al Capone: A Biography). With these facts lined up like this, one would ask themselves why we haven’t banned the stuff yet. The answer lies in the “roaring twenties,” when banning alcohol didn’t turn out too well. The Eighteenth Amendment was put into effect to prohibit the manufacture, sale and transportation of all intoxicating liquors. Shortly afterward, the Volstead Act, named for author Andrew J. Volstead, was put into effect. This complimentary law determined intoxicating liquor as anything having an alcohol content of more than 0.5 percent, omitting alcohol used for medicinal and sacramental purposes; this act set up guidelines for enforcement as well. Prohibition was meant to reduce the consumption of alcohol, and thereby reduce crime, poverty, death rates, and improve the economy and general quality of life. This, however, was undoubtedly to no avail. (Prohibiton, Jeff Hill). After the Volstead Act was put into place to determine precise laws and methods of enforcement, the Federal Prohibition Bureau was developed in order to see that the Vo... ... middle of paper ... ...s to abolish the Eighteenth Amendment throughout his campaign. He kept his word and nine months after his inauguration, Prohibition ended with the ratification of the twenty-first amendment. (The Roaring Twenties Biographies). Clearly, Prohibition did not do that which it was meant to do. It didn’t solve any problems: crime didn’t drop, the economy didn’t rise, and alcohol consumption didn’t decline. In fact, on all three counts, the exact opposite occurred. The only ponderance though, is why it took so long before Americans realized that they’d made a mistake. Canada instated a Prohibition law in 1917 and dropped it two years later, but the stubborn Americans took over thirteen years to swallow their pride and pass the 21st Amendment, whose sole purpose was to repeal the 18th. (Prohibition, Jeff Hill). It leaves one to wonder; are we better with or without alcohol?

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