Prohibition was a period in time where people were not allowed to have or consume drinking alcohol. A number of states thought drinking was one of the number one problems in America that needed to be handled. The Volstead Act was the act that made it illegal to drink alcohol any alcoholic drink with 1% of alcohol was considered intoxicating. America changed its mind on Prohibition for hypocrisy, crime and financial stability. One big reason Prohibition was repealed was because even people who were making the laws were breaking them. In document D a U.S attorney general stated “The very men who made the prohibition law are violating it. How can you have the heart to prosecute a bootlegger, send a man to jail for six months”. She was bringing light that it made no sense to pass a law that the people who are supposed to enforce it don't follow it either. It's not fair that the people who are supposed to enforce no drinking laws are breaking the law and locking people up for doing the same thing you're doing. It didn't lower the rate of drinking and it didn't enforce or stop people from doing it. And what would be the point of making a law for everybody to follow if …show more content…
Everybody but bootleggers and criminals made money off of illegally selling alcohol. So instead of banning alcohol the government can make money by selling and taxing it. In document E it was stated “if the liquor now sold by bootleggers were legally sold, regulated and taxed the tax income would pay the interest on the entire local and national debt”. Since alcohol was desired so much and so wide spread it would make sense to sell it instead of making it illegal. And it's smart because the money the government gets back in taxes could have been used to pay off mortgages or help needy teens. The Prohibition was repealed because selling alcohol was another way to fix the