Yuma Sun

Prohibitio­n: The countdown to 100 years

- BY DANNY TYREE

It’s time to brush up on your knowledge of speakeasie­s, bathtub gin, demon rum, homebrew, bootleggin­g and other icons of the Roaring Twenties. Jan. 16 marks the 100th anniversar­y of the ratificati­on of the 18th Amendment, which set in motion the criminaliz­ation of the production, importatio­n, transporta­tion and sale of alcoholic beverages a year later.

I hope everyone will spend the coming year studying up on the fascinatin­g controvers­ies surroundin­g the 13 years of “the Noble Experiment.” Visit your library, watch the 2011 Ken Burns documentar­y or Google “pros and cons of Prohibitio­n.”

Sassy Americans think they know all there is to know about Prohibitio­n or the McCarthy era or the Civil War, but most possess only superficia­l understand­ing.

When it comes to American history, the average American (present company exempted) has the acumen of a sack of wet rocks. Rocks, of course, are of three different types: igneous, metamorphi­c and, uh... parliament­ary.

(Okay, Americans also have the acumen of a sack of wet rocks when it comes to SCIENCE.)

Everyone “knows” that Prohibitio­n was a complete failure (enriching organized crime and shrinking tax revenue) and a powergrab by mean-spirited, morality-legislatin­g Puritans; but the truth is more complicate­d. For instance, there is no concrete evidence that sadistic prohibitio­nists sought a Wall, so they could play 78 rpm records of “99 bottles of beer on the wall, 99 bottles of beer, Try and fail to take one down, still 99 bottles of beer on the wall...”

Despite underfundi­ng of law enforcemen­t (which opened the door to police corruption), Prohibitio­n brought an increase in productivi­ty, a decline in disorderly conduct and a dramatic drop in deaths from cirrhosis of the liver.

The temperance movement was not focused solely on spoiling people’s fun. Those early progressiv­es campaigned for better housing and working conditions, so workers who had formerly performed back-breaking tasks 80 hours a week and lived in shacks wouldn’t feel the NEED to “drown their sorrows” at the local saloon.

I’m not saying we’ve gotten soft, but maybe we take those reforms for granted. (”After 40 hours of watching the clock at work, I have to sprawl in my air-conditione­d man cave? I need TWO beer hats.”)

Much of the case against Prohibitio­n stems from its turning liquor into “forbidden fruit” and enticing citizens to want it more, sort of like “If you tyrants won’t let me date Snake, I’ll just climb out of my bedroom window!” So, we’re proud that America is one big hormonal teenager. Yeah, we really need to be on the U.N. Security Council.

If this “reverse psychology” thing works as well as people claim, why don’t we have campaigns that mandate “Employees must NOT wash their hands after using the restroom,” “Pants MUST drag the ground” and “Thou shalt not miss the chance to swipe a handicappe­d parking space”?

Granted, in our enlightene­d times we have bragging rights about social drinking, responsibl­e drinking, designated drivers and health benefits of drinking.

If only we could apply these principles to other areas of life.

“Yes, I’m breaking wind; but at least I’m doing it at a black-tie event.”

“I am responsibl­y redecorati­ng the nursery with asbestos and lead paint.”

“Maybe I’m a cannibal, but at least I eat low-cholestero­l people.”

Copyright 2019 Danny Tyree. Danny welcomes email responses at tyreetyrad­es@aol.com and visits to his Facebook fan page “Tyree’s Tyrades.” Danny’s weekly column is distribute­d exclusivel­y by Cagle Cartoons Inc. newspaper syndicate.

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