Prohibition
Approval Rate: 48%
Reviews 20
by jester002
Sun May 30 2010Winston Churchill replying to Bessie Braddock who told him he was drunk. "And you, madam, are ugly….But I shall be sober in the morning." And… "First of all, if it wasn’t for beer there would be at least two persons who probably wouldn’t even be married…me and Lisa Marie Presley.” (Al Bundy)
by jaywilton
Sun May 30 2010I'm happy that there are people who don't drink at all,particularly when I'm driving;but with this,I'm for some moderate sense of "vice'....fast forward..Prohibition is okay with me compared to the idiocy of treating smokers like war criminals in the age of Global Warming(or is it the other way around?)
by irishgit
Thu Apr 17 2008Here's a good idea, let's make mobsters rich and powerful. Governments are slow to learn that legislating morality is a chancy business, and the narrow minded don't learn that lesson at all.
by fitman
Fri Nov 16 2007If you want good roads leading out of your town vote it wet and the surrounding towns will fix up your roads. - Will Rogers
by edt4226d
Mon Sep 10 2007When, oh when, will we ever learn that you can't legislate morality? The Temperance Movement was with us since the dawn of this nation's history, but really gathered steam during the early part of the 20th Century, as more and more Catholic (and Jewish, although they weren't as culturally identified with drinking) immigrants entered the country. An increasingly feverish xenophobia began to take hold, and led to such events as the Palmer Raids, rampant anti-German (especially during World War I) and anti-Italian prejudice, crack-downs on "anarchists" (the Sacco and Vanzetti debacle was a tragic result of this) and other "anti-American types", and prohibition. Prohibition...which led, of course, to the empowerment of organized crime, the wholesale corruption of politicians, law enforcement, and Coast Guard personnel, an overall lessening of respect for Government and the law...led to everything, in fact, except a lessening in the American thirst for and consumption of alcohol. As Will Ro... Read more
by canadasucks
Mon Sep 10 2007Clearly we learned nothing from that war on that drug. . .
by decalod85
Mon Mar 05 2007Prohibition=War on Drugs. Two bad ideas separated by 50 years.
by airmaxxxer
Sun Feb 06 2005bad idea surely. but with not as many bad consequences like contracts, wars, ideologies. crime and mafia didnt need the prohibition to be founded. the list here seems to compare pretty different subjects.
by djahuti
Sat Nov 20 2004Since people will find a way to drink,come hell or high water-passing laws against it only made Gangsters Rich and diverted police from protecting citizens from real crime.How many people died in shootouts that were totally un-necessary? Meanwhile,bootleggers made millions of dollars.
by numbah16tdhaha
Fri Oct 08 2004Bad Idea. (hiccup)
by scarletfeather
Fri Oct 08 2004Didn't seem to work well. They weren't called the Roaring 20's for nothing.
by sundiszno
Fri Apr 09 2004Although it probably was well-intnetioned by those who enacted it, it was a dumb idea, as events proved. It turned out to be pretty much of a farce. In a certain sense, it seems to have boosted alcoholic consumption because of the element of excitement and danger involved with finding a speakeasy, knowing where to go to evade the law, etc. Amusingly, Prohibition was responsible (at least according to a couple of accounts I've read and seen on TV) for the huge rise in popularity of Italian restaurants. Apparently, you could get wine in Italian restaurants without any problem, so people got their alcohol that way, and got exposed and accustomed to Italian food as well. How's that for serendipity?
by forgotten_hero
Fri Jan 16 2004This was the start of the mafia and organized crime. How can anyone in this enlightened time possibly think this was a good idea?
by abichara
Fri Jan 09 2004Prohibition actually decreased public drunkenness, but of course that was only a temporary drop in the early 1920's after the Volstead Act was put into effect. Afterwards it became a complete farce. Organized crime and other groups took advantage of the pent up demand in alcohol. You can't force down someone's throat a certain version of morality. Alcohol isn't necessarily bad when consumed in moderate amounts. Really what it comes down is free choice. As long as you don't do harm to other people, you should be free to do whatever you want. Prohibition didn't work because alcohol consumption wasn't the evil that its proponents claimed it to be. Of course, common sense laws against public drunkenness and DUI are necessary, but banning alcohol isn't going to stop these actions.
by ladyshark4534
Thu Dec 25 2003Prohibition spawned Al Capone.
by enkidu
Wed Nov 12 2003Another characteristic invention of the Land of the Free. Legislation of morality has always been popular here--the impulse that created Prohibition is alive and well in the U.S. It's a shame you can't legislate against ignorance and stupidity.
by classictvfan47
Wed Oct 01 2003Come again? No, seriously, this needs to come back again. Alcohol is nothing but trouble, and it should be illegal again. And, with all of our advanced technologies today, this could actually work! (This item is rated low because I don't think its a bad idea.)
by castlebee
Thu Sep 18 2003Though a civilized society has to have laws in place concerning rape, murder and thievery I don't think you can really legislate most other types of morality. It always seems to come down to personal choice. In the long run that makes the most sense. I think that's the main reason God granted us free will...so the results would be honest.
by reenyf4b
Mon Sep 15 2003A bad idea that did not work obviously. I am glad they repealed it.
by kamylienne
Sun Sep 14 2003(5=bad) Not only did the idea fail miserably, but it gave birth to Organized Crime. (Saw a great special on it on the History Channel, though I think it dealt mostly with moonshiners).