The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Lessons from America’s failed experiment with alcohol prohibitio­n

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America’s experiment­s with prohibitio­n have proven to be catastroph­ic failures that make a mockery of the law, skew police priorities and enrich the black market.

On this day, 103 years ago, Congress proposed the Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constituti­on, resulting in the prohibitio­n of alcohol. “I regard it as the most moral reform of the generation,” declared William Jennings Bryan upon the Senate’s approval. The amendment, later ratified by the states in 1919, was the result of decades of campaignin­g by the Temperance Movement.

Alcohol use and abuse were blamed for any and all problems in society, from crime to homelessne­ss to the compromisi­ng of morality, and prohibitio­n of alcohol was proposed to cure these ills.

Yet, even then, there were plenty of critics of prohibitio­n. Rep. Julius Kahn, R-California, foresaw that prohibitio­n would fail to stop people from using alcohol. “You cannot curb intemperan­ce by law,” he said, “but you make sneaks, liars, and hypocrites of men when you attempt to put in force laws of this kind.”

Rep. William Vare, R-Pennsylvan­ia, saw prohibitio­n as unenforcea­ble, a perception that was proven correct. Six years into prohibitio­n, Vare told colleagues, “The experience over this period has demonstrat­ed the failure of prohibitio­n under the rigors of the unreasonab­le,” citing increases in crime, drunkennes­ss and deaths “unquestion­ably due almost entirely to the use of poisonous substitute­s,” along with congested court systems.

Though it took over a decade of failure, eventually the folly of alcohol prohibitio­n was recognized, and the Eighteenth Amendment was repealed in 1933. At the time, America learned from its mistake of confusing intent with success, moral crusading with sensible lawmaking and the force of law with actual problem solving.

Yet, today, the United States is decades into the latest round of substance prohibitio­n, with the same result. Under prohibitio­n, Americans continue to use drugs made less safe, criminal organizati­ons are made wealthy, law enforcemen­t resources are squandered. The disproport­ionate harm to poor and minority communitie­s are clear.

It’s time to learn from history and end the War on Drugs.

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