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The Social, Economic, And Social Effects Of Prohibition In The 1920s

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Prohibition in the United States was a constitutional ban on the manufacturing, transportation, and sale of alcoholic beverages. It was achieved by the ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment to the federal Constitution in 1919. Based on its social, economic, and political causes, Prohibition should not have been enacted in the 1920s and it negatively affected the United States of America. One reason why Prohibition was an amendment that should not have been enacted was its social aspect. An example of social effects is in A Son of the Bowery. Charles Stelzle is the author of this document and he states that “‘It was in the saloon that the working men in those days held their christening parties, their weddings, their dances, their rehearsals for their singing societies, and all other social functions’”(Doc 4). Saloons had other functions besides just being a bar to serve alcohol. With prohibition, people were not able to hold any important events at saloons, like weddings and dances. Also, in Should the United States Continue the Policy of Prohibition as Defined in the Eighteenth Amendment?, Clarence Darrow states, “‘The Anti-Saloon League...have an organization’ and… if a man were ‘dry’, even though he might be a thief, a crook, or the worst enemy the world ever had, every blooming fool fellow who belonged to that League would vote for him. If he were a statesman, a philosopher, a historian, a wise man, but took a drink, he would have to go’”(Doc 6). The point Clarence

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