
Originally Posted by
tomder55
prohibition may not have worked out well but it was not a gut reaction . There was a long temperance movement for many years ;and amending the Constitution is not an exercise that is done in haste.
Also I'd have to say that most of the Patriot Act has held up and the parts that didn't has been amended or scrapped.
I'd like to add to your list the National Recovey Act enacted and passed by that genious Frank Roosevelt who said "nothing to fear but fear itself" . If I am correct the whole damn act was overturned and Roosevelt tried to pack SCOTUS to get it back.
Got to disagree here - more than half of the country was "dry" prior to the ratification of the 18th Amendment - but the Federal Government (which I think we are talking about) took no action, other than discussions.
Then the US entered WW 1 (April 1917). Congress passed the 18th Amendment in December 1917. Advocates argued that breweries (specifically) were owned by "enemies of the Country" - meaning Germans - and that grain and grain products had to be reserved/preserved for the War effort.
The emphasis on War and enemies of this Country leads me to believe that no matter how long the subject - prohibition - had been discussed by the US Government, prohibition itself was a knee-jerk, quick reaction to a National crisis.
Under any other circumstances I don't believe the US would have gotten involved in prohibition - there was too much power/influence/money on both sides of the issue and nothing for the Government to gain.
The US declared war and the issue, which had been passed around for years, was passed by Congree in fewer than 8 months.
No problem being corrected if someone sees it another way - maybe the hang up is the word "emergency."
I never discuss politics - not here, not anywhere and am only entering this discussion from the angle of US history.