Pubdate: Mon, 07 Dec 2009
Source: Summit Daily News (CO)
Copyright: 2009 Summit Daily News
Contact: http://apps.summitdaily.com/forms/letter/index.php
Website: http://www.summitdaily.com/home.php
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/587
Author: Anthony Gregory

ENDURING LEGACY OF PROHIBITION

Rarely in modern times does Washington withdraw from an area of 
domestic affairs. December 5 marks the seventy-sixth anniversary of 
the 21st Amendment, repealing alcohol prohibition.

One of the most energetic political causes in the late 19th and early 
20th century was the "temperance" movement, which aimed to ban 
liquor. The movement comprised religious conservatives, nativists who 
wanted to crack down on immigrants and minorities, and progressives, 
who defined their era by their dedication to preemptive justice and 
their ambitious goal to create a new, refined American man through 
the force of central planning and federal government power.

The progressive and prohibitionist movements culminated after World 
War I, when anti-German propaganda contributed to an American taboo 
against beer and when the spectacle of drunken debauchery of U.S. 
soldiers on military bases provided the last excuse needed to attempt 
the "Noble Experiment" of prohibition.

In 1919, the 18th Amendment and Volstead Act nationally outlawed 
alcohol, a drug used by civilizations for millennia. Liquor 
violations quickly dominated the criminal justice system. By 1924, 
the population of federal prisons had almost doubled. A 1923 
congressional study found that state attorneys spent about 44 percent 
of their time on prohibition cases. Corruption consumed the legal 
system. Prohibition chief Lincoln C. Andrews testified in 1926 that 
875 Prohibition Bureau officials had been dismissed for corruption, 
bribery and misconduct.

Criminal gangs controlled the illegal booze market. Five thousand 
speakeasies were operating in Chicago alone. Violent crime infested 
the cities. By the onset of the Great Depression the experiment had 
been such a failure that even many of its most vocal proponents had 
turned against it. When prohibition ended in 1933, the violent gangs 
closed their operations and, despite the increasing poverty of the 
Depression era, rates of homicide and other crimes plummeted.

Today, as tens of millions of Americans drink in moderation, we can 
hardly imagine that such behavior was federally verboten not too long 
ago. When we see the remaining problems associated with alcohol, we 
must fight the urge to relive the social experiment of prohibition 
that turned our institutions completely rotten and plagued our 
streets with bootleggers and shootouts.

Yet much of the prohibitionist legacy remains. Four years after the 
21st amendment, Franklin Roosevelt signed the Marihuana Tax Act into 
law, prohibiting the drug. Whereas politicians had once respected the 
Constitution enough to recognize that it must be legally amended to 
federally ban alcohol, the war on other drugs continues without any 
constitutional justification.

Today's drug war is much worse than alcohol prohibition was. We have 
half a million people in prison, an overwhelmed judicial system, 
militarized enforcement, assaults on civil liberties, a foreign 
policy distorted by drug-war goals and, according to many economists, 
about twice as many homicides as we would expect if drugs were legal.

All the problems with alcohol prohibition persist in relation to 
today's illicit drugs, except on a larger scale.

The puritanical mindset behind alcohol prohibition persists. Drinking 
ages, open-container laws, state-level alcohol distribution 
regulations and DUI laws have become ever more draconian, leading to 
overcrowding jails, erosion of individual liberties, cruel disruption 
of the lives of the peaceful, and dubious results in actually making 
our roads and cities safer. Alcoholic drinks with caffeine may soon 
be outlawed by the FDA. Meanwhile, cigarette smokers are being 
targeted on the margins. Politicians threaten legislation against 
transfats and other allegedly unhealthy foods.

It was a great day when alcohol prohibition was lifted and the 
liberty to drink was restored to the American republic. But the 
people never fully grasped the significance of prohibition as a 
governmental usurpation of individual choice and family and community 
life. Alcohol prohibition is over, thank goodness. But the 
heavy-handedness of the progressives' greatest social experiment 
continues today under the banner of other crusades - with the same 
predictable results.

Anthony Gregory is a research analyst at The Independent Institute, 
Oakland, Cal.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart