《美国禁酒令的民史

M. L. Schrad
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引用次数: 0

摘要

第16章考察了寄生的镀金时代“酒托拉斯”的掠夺行为——类似于大型铁路、钢铁和金融托拉斯——包括美国酿酒商协会和酒经销商协会,它们腐蚀了执法部门和政府代表。与这些托拉斯不同,反沙龙联盟(ASL)不能收买政客,而是依靠鼓动和宣传——确保选民充分了解他们选出的代表在戒酒方面的投票记录。进步的禁酒主义者与Pussyfoot Johnson和Upton Sinclair等善治的“揭发丑闻者”达成了共识。这一章转向了州一级禁酒的浪潮,从1907年俄克拉何马州的禁酒州开始,借鉴了印第安人长期以来的禁酒主义。从那里开始,“禁酒浪潮”席卷了美国南部,那里的酒类交易更加分散,缺乏组织性,白人和黑人社区的禁酒情绪都很强烈。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A People’s History of American Prohibition
Chapter 16 examines the predations of the parasitic Gilded Age “liquor trusts”--akin to the big railroad, steel, and financial trusts--including the United States Brewers’ Association and the Liquor Dealers’ Association, which corrupted law enforcement and government representatives. Unlike these trusts, the Anti-Saloon League (ASL) could not buy off politicians, but relied on agitation and publicity—ensuring that constituents were fully informed as to their elected representatives’ voting records on temperance. Progressive prohibitionists made common cause with good-governance “muckrakers” like Pussyfoot Johnson and Upton Sinclair. The chapter turns to the wave of state-level prohibitions, beginning with the Oklahoma’s prohibition statehood in 1907, drawing on the long-standing prohibitionism of Native Americans. From there, the “dry wave” swept the American South, where the liquor traffic was more diffused and less organized, and temperance sentiment was strong among both white and black communities.
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