The “Noble Experiment” of Prohibition:Creating a Positive Future for America

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Passed by Congress on December 18th, 1917 and ratified on January 16th, 1919, “the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereof from the United States and all territory subject to the jurisdiction there of beverage for purposes” was prohibited by Amendment XVIII of the United States Constitution. The ratification of this Amendment solidified a period in America’s history that would later be described as the “noble experiment” of prohibition and set historians, policy makers, and citizens alike on the great debate as to whether this experiment had created more harm than good. The standard view of national alcohol prohibition was that it was a failed social experiment. Support for this argument is generally backed by knowledge that by prohibiting alcoholic beverages in such a way created a black market for organized crime in the United States. In reality, the issue of prohibition was much more complex than the Amendment made it appear and encompassed many more issues than what standard accounts implied. Examining this expanded view of prohibition during the early 1900’s, this great “noble experiment” did, in fact, create more good than harm.
Contrary to popular belief, prohibition did not prohibit the consumption of alcohol. This singular and often misunderstood fact about this time period is one of the key elements in what helps to cast prohibition in a positive light. No part of this 18th Amendment expressly forbid individuals from imbibing in alcoholic beverages, it only forbade the manufacture, sale, or transportation of these types of drinks. This distinction in the law is crucial. By distinguishing the law in such a way, it can be see...

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...d its future impact on America’s policy making decisions in regards to hoping to reduce harm to the general population, Prohibition and the lessons it produced created far more good than bad.

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Freedom, The Charters of. The Constitution: Amendments 11-27. n.d. http://www.archives.gov/exhibits/charters/constitution_amendments_11-27.html (accessed January 24, 2014).
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