MICHAEL WALSH: To Save America, Repeal the 18th Amendment (Again).
This week, we come not only to bury the 18th amendment to the U.S. Constitution, known as Prohibition, but also to praise the 21st, which put a stake through the 18th’s nasty dark heart just 14 years after its passage in 1919. Prohibition was enforced by a singularly bad piece of legislation called the Volstead Act which, although vetoed by Woodrow Wilson, was nevertheless overridden by a Republican congress, and which thus put D.C. muscle behind the “Noble Experiment” (Herbert Hoover’s words) in bossing the American people around for their own good.
The 18th was the third of the four so-called “Progressive Era” amendments, which began in 1913 with the 16th (income tax) amendment and continued down its gruesome anti-freedom path that same year with the 17th amendment. As is typical of a Leftist policy mandate, the amendments purported to solve a relatively minor problem by creating an ongoing and very destructive large one.
After all, the country had managed very well during the first century of its existence by limiting the reach of the federal government into the states’ prerogatives and the citizens’ lives by restricting its access to revenue to excise duties and tariffs; similarly there was no urgent need to tinker with the Founders’ carefully wrought structure of the Senate by effectively nationalizing the upper chamber via popular election rather than appointment by the state legislatures. In a single year, the entire relationship of both the states and the citizenry vis-a-vis the federal government had changed utterly and irrevocably.
Pour yourself a cold one, and read the whole thing.
Related: Jon Gabriel interviews Walsh on “The Great Reset” in a Ricochet podcast.