Religion tries to bring back prohibition in Alabama

by Gopher 26 Replies latest social current

  • Gopher
    Gopher

    This is unbelievable. What century are we in?

    The upstanding moral Christian folks are praying and fasting in advance of a vote to ban liquor sales in Athens, a city in northern Alabama with a population of about 21,000.

    Yes God will honor and bless their city if they vote the Christian way on this.

    LINK HERE

    Ala. city considers end to alcohol sales

    ATHENS, Ala. - Voters have a chance on Tuesday to return this northern Alabama city to the days of Prohibition.

    A measure to end the sale of alcohol in Athens is up for a citywide vote, a rare instance where voters could overturn a previous vote to allow sales. Business interests are against repeal, but church leaders who helped organize the petition drive that got the measure on the ballot are asking members to pray and fast in support of a ban.

    Christians who oppose drinking on moral grounds believe they have a chance to win, however small.

    "If it can be voted out anywhere, it will be here because so many Christians are against it," said Teresa Thomas, who works in a Christian book store.

    Business leaders argue that ending the sale of beer, wine and liquor would hurt tax revenues and send the message that Athens is backward.

    "Economic impact is really the big issue," said Carl Hunt, an organizer of the pro-alcohol sale Citizens for Economic Progress.

    The United States went dry in 1920 after the 18th Amendment outlawed the production, transportation and sale of alcohol. Prohibition was repealed in 1933.

    Now, less than four years after they first voted to legalize alcohol sales, the nearly 22,000 residents of Athens will decide whether to prohibit alcohol sales within the city, located about 95 miles north of Birmingham . Possession and consumption would remain legal.

    Such "wet-to-dry" votes aren't unheard of, but they're rare, said Jim Mosher of the Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, which tracks public policy issues including alcohol laws.

    "In Barrow, Alaska , when they legalized alcohol sales, problems went through the roof," Mosher said. "Then, when they banned it again, it improved."

    Twenty-six of Alabama's 67 counties, including Limestome, where Athens is located, don't allow alcohol sales. Besides the Athens vote, residents of the southern Alabama town of Thomasville were to cast their ballots Tuesday on whether to legalize alcohol sales.

    Regardless of whether Athens winds up wet or dry, a leader of the 138-year-old National Prohibition Party is glad voters have a chance to decide. Such issues rarely make it to the ballot any more, said attorney Howard Lydick, a member of the party's executive committee.

    "The beer and wine industry has very good PR," Lydick said. "Those pushing (prohibition) have been pushed aside."

    The Rev. Eddie Gooch feels good about the chances of ending alcohol sales in Athens, but he isn't taking any chances.

    A leader of the petition drive, Gooch urged members of his United Methodist Church to pray and fast on election day and the two days leading up to it. Church volunteers have sent thousands of letters and made phone calls encouraging people to vote "dry."

    Mayor Dan Williams said the city government is making nearly $250,000 in extra sales taxes directly tied to alcohol, and the city's schools get the same amount.

    Besides that money, he said, overall tax revenues have grown since alcohol sales were legalized in January 2004 — an increase he attributes partly to alcohol sales.

    An upscale Italian restaurant recently moved to Athens from the nearby dry city of Hartselle in order to sell alcohol, and Williams said other restaurants have arrived since it went wet.

    "It's a big deal for a small town to get a new restaurant," he said.

    Gooch isn't worried about the city losing businesses or tax revenues if alcohol sales are banned. Normal economic growth and God will make up any difference if residents dump the bottle, he said. "We believe that God will honor and bless our city," Gooch said.

  • Junction-Guy
    Junction-Guy

    Good for them, Johnson County Kentucky has been dry since 1946 and I pray they stay that way. They have tried numerous times over the years to legalize alcohol, the last time in 2002 I believe. I walked around the apple day festival with a sign that said "vote no".

    So many Kentucky counties have been lost to the alcohol forces. You used be able to drive 100 miles to find alcohol, now you are seldom over 50 miles away from a beer joint.

    I hope Athens reverts back to dry, and save O'charleys and Ruby Tuesdays for the "big cities".

  • PEC
    PEC

    JG, I don't get it, why do you feel the need to control, other peoples private lives?

    Philip

  • snowbird
    snowbird
    residents of the southern Alabama town of Thomasville were to cast their ballots Tuesday on whether to legalize alcohol sales.

    Interesting. Thomasville, located in Clarke County, is right across the Alabama River from my county of Wilcox. The people of Thomasville come across the river to buy alcohol and return home to drink it. What's the difference?

    Our county was "dry" until 1970. We used to go to Dallas County; buy our beer and wine; return to Wilcox County and have a blast! No one can or should legislate other people's behavior.

    Snowbird

  • drew sagan
    drew sagan
    why do you feel the need to control, other peoples private lives?

    There really is nothing to shocking here. There are many dry counties & municipalities, especially in the south. In addition to wanting an area dry for religious reasons, there are others. Some places view it as a way to help lower crime and drunk driving.

    In my mind there really is no 'correct' view on this matter. Restrict alcohol and you may suppress many of the ill effects caused by its misuse. On the other hand restrictions will lead to other illegal activity and can simply just move problems to the county or municipality next door, not to mention the fact that all of the people who use it responsibly are punished because of the abusers.

  • eclipse
    eclipse

    Banning anything does not stop it from being used or made illegally.

    It does not solve the problem.

    The problem of the abuse of alcohol is people who either get addicted to it easily, (and there has been evidence to show it is a genetic factor),

    or it is because those addicted people do not have the coping mechanisms to solve their life problems using tools that work;

    ie. therapy, social networking, good friends, goals, education, hobbies that bring enjoyment, regular health practicioner visits, etc.,

    instead they turn to alcohol/drugs. Many people who turn to alcohol are intelligent people that are just hurting inside, that they use it to numb the pain. I have close friends who are alcoholics. Alcohol isn't the problem. It is how they deal with their pain that is the problem.

    Making alcohol illegal only serves to make it difficult for those who do drink responsibly to buy it legally.

    People who are addicted to alcohol WILL get it illegally, that is why they make moonshine, and that is more potent/toxic than what you can buy.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moonshine

    Do you, JG, believe that banning any substance makes it harder for the addict to get it?

    All prohibition is: is needless control over normal people's lives

    that enjoy having wine/alcohol with their meal, cook with alcohol, a nice tall cold one after a long hot day, etc.

    Or do you not believe that most people use alcohol responsibly and for enjoyment?

  • Junction-Guy
    Junction-Guy

    I see it as democracy in action. They have votes on whether to smoke or not in restaurants.

    I grew up with an alcoholic stepdad, I watched him beat my mom and him pull guns on us and threaten to blow our brains out.

    I watched my dad and stepmom chug beer and wine, and then preach to us kids about the "evils" of soft drinks.

    I watched the elders drink like fish, then tell me I should be shunning my mom because she smoked and was disfellowshipped.

    I have seen numerous marriages destroyed due to alcohol.


    But what gripes me most of all is certain areas have their own culture, and then some outsiders come in and try to change things.


    I remember one time we were coming back from Ohio to Mississippi, we stopped in Kentucky to see our family. My stepfather was dying for some beer. He drove 120 miles looking for beer and everywhere he stopped they said "sorry, dry county" In my mind I was like "thank God for the citizens of Kentucky". I know he would have been driving drunk if he could have gotten his hands on it.

    I will vote against alcohol every chance I get, however there isnt much opportunity for that here in Knoxville.

  • Honesty
    Honesty

    The incidents of alcohol related traffic fatalities in the county I live in is unprecedented during the past 5 years.

    I don't know if prohibiting the sale of alcohol would curtail the number or not.

    5 years ago liquor sales were prohibited in this county until a referendum allowing liquor sales was placed on the ballot.

    The people spoke and got what they wished for, liquor by the bottle.

  • Junction-Guy
    Junction-Guy

    Also we live in an alcohol oriented society, children are bombarded with alcohol ads that encourage drinking, every show you see on TV shows somebody drinking. I think they ought to ban alcohol advertising, and yank all alcohol sponsorship from sporting events.

  • eclipse
    eclipse

    JG, I'm so sorry that you grew up like that.

    I empathize with you and understand why you would want to ban it.

    It's a shame that people turn to alcohol abuse when it can be used responsibly.

    If you had non-alcoholic parents, and grew up in a stable environment with love and security,

    I would bet that you feel differently about banning alcohol...just a thought.

    My heart goes out to you and your painful past.

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