Prohibition Banning alcohol was a bad idea... Rod Phillips

On January 17, 1920, six armed men
robbed a Chicago freight train.

But it wasn’t money they were after.

Less than one hour after spirits
had become illegal

throughout the United States,

the robbers made off with thousands
of dollars worth of whiskey.

It was a first taste of the unintended
consequences of Prohibition.

The nationwide ban on the production
and sale of alcohol in the United States

came on the heels
of a similar ban in Russia

that started as a wartime measure
during World War I.

But the view in the Western world
of alcohol

as a primary cause of social ills
was much older.

It first gained traction
during the Industrial Revolution

as new populations of workers
poured into cities

and men gathered in saloons to drink.

By the 19th century, anti-drinking groups
called temperance movements

began to appear in the United States
and parts of Europe.

Temperance groups believed
that alcohol was the fundamental driver

behind problems like poverty
and domestic violence,

and set out to convince
governments of this.

While some simply advocated
moderate drinking,

many believed alcohol
should be banned entirely.

These movements drew support
from broad sectors of society.

Women’s organizations were active
participants from the beginning,

arguing that alcohol made men neglect
their families and abuse their wives.

Religious authorities,
especially Protestants,

denounced alcohol
as leading to temptation and sin.

Progressive labor activists
believed alcohol consumption

harmed workers’ ability to organize.

Governments weren’t strangers
to the idea of prohibition, either.

In the United States and Canada,
white settlers introduced hard liquors

like rum to Native communities,

then blamed alcohol for disrupting
these communities—

though there were many other
destructive aspects of their interactions.

The American and Canadian governments
banned the sale of alcohol

to Native populations
and on reservation land.

American temperance movements gained
their first victories

at the state and local levels,

with Maine and several other states
banning the sale and production of liquor

in the 1850s.

In 1919 the 18th Amendment
to the US Constitution

banned the manufacture, sale,
and transportation

of all alcoholic beverages.

The amendment took effect a year later
under the Volstead Act.

Since the act did not ban
personal consumption,

wealthy people took the opportunity
to stock up while restaurants and bars

rushed to sell their remaining supply.

Workers lost their jobs as distilleries,
breweries, and wineries closed down.

Meanwhile, organized crime groups
rushed to meet the demand for alcohol,

establishing a lucrative black market
in producing, smuggling,

and selling illicit liquor.

Often they worked side-by side
with corrupt policemen

and government officials,

even bombing the 1928 primary election
for Illinois state attorney

in support of a particular
political faction.

Tens of thousands of illegal bars,
known as “speakeasies,”

began serving alcohol.

They ranged from dingy basement bars
to elaborate dance-halls.

People could also make alcohol
at home for their own consumption,

or obtain it legally with a doctor’s
prescription or for religious purposes.

To prevent industrial alcohol
from being consumed,

the government required manufacturers
to add harmful chemicals,

leading to thousands of poisoning deaths.

We don’t know exactly how much people
were drinking during Prohibition

because illegal alcohol
wasn’t regulated or taxed.

But by the late 1920s,

it was clear that Prohibition
had not brought the social improvements

it had promised.

Instead it contributed to political
corruption and organized crime

and was flouted by millions of citizens.

At one raid on an Detroit beer hall,
the local sheriff, mayor and a congressman

were arrested for drinking.

With the start of the Great
Depression in 1929,

the government sorely needed the tax
revenue from alcohol sales,

and believed that lifting Prohibition
would stimulate the economy.

In 1933, Congress passed the 21st
Amendment repealing the 18th—

the only amendment to be fully repealed.

Members of the temperance movements

believed that alcohol
was the root of society’s problems,

but the reality is more complicated.

And while banning it completely
didn’t work,

the health and social impacts
of alcohol remain concerns today.

1920 年 1 月 17 日,六名武装人员
抢劫了芝加哥的货运列车。

但他们追求的不是钱。

在烈酒在整个美国成为非法之后不到一小时

,劫匪就抢走了
价值数千美元的威士忌。

这是第一次尝到禁酒令的意外
后果。

美国在全国范围内禁止生产
和销售酒精,

紧随
俄罗斯的一项类似禁令之后,该禁令在第一次世界大战期间

作为战时措施开始

但西方
世界认为酒精

是导致社会问题的主要原因 疾病
要大得多。


在工业革命期间首次受到关注,

因为新的工人
涌入城市

,人们聚集在沙龙里喝酒。

到了 19 世纪,
被称为节制运动的反饮酒团体

开始在美国
和欧洲部分地区出现。

禁酒组织
认为酒精是

贫困
和家庭暴力等问题背后的根本驱动力,

并着手说服
政府相信这一点。

虽然有些人只是提倡
适度饮酒,但

许多人认为
应该完全禁止饮酒。

这些运动得到
了社会各界的支持。

妇女组织
从一开始就是积极的参与者,

他们认为酒精会使男人忽视
他们的家庭并虐待他们的妻子。

宗教权威,
尤其是新教徒,

谴责酒精
会导致诱惑和犯罪。

进步的劳工活动人士
认为,饮酒会

损害工人的组织能力。

政府
对禁令的概念也不陌生。

在美国和加拿大,
白人定居者将

朗姆酒等烈性酒引入土著社区,

然后指责酒精扰乱了
这些社区——

尽管
他们之间的互动还有许多其他破坏性方面。

美国和加拿大政府
禁止

向土著居民
和保留地出售酒类。

美国的禁酒运动在州和地方层面取得
了第一次胜利

,缅因州和其他几个州在 1850 年代
禁止销售和生产酒类

1919 年,美国宪法第 18 条修正案

禁止生产、销售

运输所有酒精饮料。

一年后,该修正案
根据沃尔斯特德法案生效。

由于该法案没有禁止
个人消费,

富人
趁机囤货,而餐馆和酒吧则

争先恐后地出售剩余的供应。

随着酿酒厂、
啤酒厂和酿酒厂的关闭,工人们失去了工作。

与此同时,有组织的犯罪集团
争先恐后地满足对酒精的需求,

在生产、走私

和销售非法酒类方面建立了一个利润丰厚的黑市。

他们经常
与腐败的警察

和政府官员并肩工作,

甚至轰炸 1928 年
伊利诺伊州检察官的初选,

以支持特定的
政治派别。

数以万计的
被称为“speakeasies”的非法酒吧

开始提供酒精饮料。

它们的范围从肮脏的地下室酒吧
到精致的舞厅。

人们还可以
在家中制作酒精供自己消费,

或者通过医生的
处方或出于宗教目的合法获取。

为了防止工业
酒精被消耗

,政府要求制造
商添加有害化学物质,

导致数千人中毒死亡。

我们不知道
禁酒令期间到底有多少人喝了酒,

因为非法
酒精没有受到监管或征税。

但到了 1920 年代后期,

很明显禁酒令
并没有带来它所承诺的社会进步

相反,它助长了政治
腐败和有组织犯罪,

并遭到数百万公民的蔑视。

在对底特律啤酒馆的一次突袭中
,当地警长、市长和一名国会议员

因饮酒被捕。

随着
1929 年大萧条的开始

,政府急需
从酒类销售中获得税收,

并认为解除禁酒令
会刺激经济。

1933 年,国会通过了
废除第 18 条的第 21 条修正案——

唯一被完全废除的修正案。

禁酒运动的成员

认为酒精
是社会问题的根源,

但现实更为复杂。

虽然完全禁止它
没有奏效,

但酒精对健康和社会的
影响今天仍然令人担忧。