In the US, the reason for banning alcohol is to ban alcohol. Prohibition is the 18 th revision, also known as the Bolstead law. This bill came into force on midnight January 16th. This ban is thought to reduce the number of violent offenses in the United States and to raise its prosperity in the long term but was abolished in December 1933. There are many reasons for its abolition, including some general members and some supporters of it.
People recognized that abolition is necessary, but it was widely accepted in the late 1920s and early 1930s. However, in order to judge what is the most important reason for alcohol abolition, from the enactment it is necessary to review the entire duration of the ban, from the prohibition to a more detailed understanding of why the United States slowly opposed the cause There is. In rural environments people were sympathetic to alcohol bans, so the dramatic abolition of the ban was largely due to what happened in the American cities.
In the US, the reason for banning alcohol is to ban alcohol. Prohibition is the 18 th revision, also known as the Bolstead law. This bill came into force on midnight January 16th. This ban is thought to reduce the number of violent offenses in the United States and to raise its prosperity in the long term but was abolished in December 1933. - US ban on personal rights and state responsibility "The 18th amendment of the US Constitution prohibits the manufacture, sale, transportation, import or export of alcoholic beverages." This is known as "Alcohol Prohibition" The era of short-lived life is an example that is mentioned today. When people across the country tried to obtain alcohol illegally, the country got into confusion again.
On the day of 1933, the 21st revision of the US Constitution was passed and the ban was abolished. People across the country including President Franklin Delano Roosevelt celebrated the abolition of the day. But there is no reason for the group to celebrate. People prohibited by KKK are prosperous because they are trying to 'purify' the country. Historian Lisa McGirr said in an interview with Slate's Rebecca Onion that the resurgence of KKK in the 1920s is related to the enactment of the prohibition on alcoholic drinking in 1920. When I saw how hatred groups gather members, she said, "It's about banning banning, theft, cleaning the community, etc.," she said.