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Prohibition1

to buy less strong liquor. When caught bootlegging liquor you would be issued a fine, this made things alright because everyone was happy, the laws were so hard to enforce that the government was just happy collecting fine money and the bootleggers were happy cause it was a small price to pay for the amount of money they were making. The most ironic thing about prohibition is that it is the major bases for what we call organized crime. When prohibition was first being, talked about in the 1840's and the 1850's this was the beginning of the subject prohibition In 1864 the Dunken Act was passed and this left the local people to declare if their counties should be dry. This act fell apart when confederation came about in Canada but, it came back about 14 years later but it was called The Canadian Temperance Act (The Scott Act) this act was an act of trying to control liquor. In 1886 Nova Scotia had its own Temperance Act, they wanted to tighten up liquor regulations. Schools at the time had mandatory Temperance education that was made to be taught. This was the start of prohibition in Canada. It took quite a few years to get off the ground and get peoples attention. Prohibition actually did not get popular until after World War One because the focus of the people of Canada was the issue of warfare. Some of the arguments by prohibitionists were that drinking led to crimes and abnormal and obscene behavior but when alcohol was banned the actual crime rate increased substantially. Alcohol was also linked to other occurrences such as insanity, wife and child abuse, destruction, poverty and economic inefficiency and medical issues like heart failure, flabby muscles, trouble breathing etc. It is known today that alcohol is not a direct cause of any of these medical situations. Alcohol was also said to be poisonous by prohibitionists. It was believed by prohibitionists that prohibition would be better for the economy as a whole and also im...

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