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Description

In the early 1900s, temperance promised to rescue society from the bottle’s grip. Instead, it sparked America’s first culture war, a battle waged in pulpits, parliaments, and saloons. We follow how good intentions met incentives: bans gave rise to black markets, moral campaigns birthed organized crime, and laws meant to heal communities often punished them. Prohibition’s collapse revealed more than policy failure; it showed how deeply entwined intoxicants were with culture, commerce, and control. The lesson endures: bans without systems create shadows darker than the problem they sought to solve.

By Niklas S. Osterman BHPRN, MA Addiction Specialist