Prohibition In The Late 1800s

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Prohibition Prohibition is the constitutional ban of selling, making, importing, and transporting alcohol. This ban was placed under the 18th amendment of the constitution on December 18th 1917. This was in large part due to Protestants, the Anti-Saloon League, and the Woman's Christian Temperance Union. They all believed that drinking was bad and that it poisoned the mind of even the smartest people, and made them act foolish.
Prohibition is the reason for bootlegging, which is the illegal production and selling of alcohol. The actual term bootlegging came from the fact that they would sneak beer around by putting the bottles inside their boots. Bootlegging has been around since the time the eighteenth amendment was established. Bootlegging eventually lead to the organized crime business, which some people blame the Mafia on. Their favorite place to import alcohol from was the Bahamas and Cuba.
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The biggest difference was they had to be careful when they did in public. The demand for alcohol grew very strong during the Great Depression between the years of 1929-1933. The biggest problem with prohibition was that no one really to enforce it. Even the officials who signed off on it would have a drink. Blind eyes were turned to those who were law-abiding citizens before it all began. Which means they could now get away with