Many of the
great 19th-century women leaders in the U.S. were against what they
considered three great evils: slavery, discrimination against women (including
no voting rights), and alcohol. The first two evils have largely been
eradicated. But not the third.
Jane Addams, the
subject of my 9/5/15 blog article, was active in the temperance movement, as was
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, the main subject of my 11/10/15 article, and her close friend Susan B. Anthony.
One of the main 19th
century opponents of alcohol was Frances Willard. She is best known as the
first national president of the Women’s Christian Temperance League, serving in
that position from 1879 until her death in 1898.
In addition,
Willard was a strong advocate of women’s suffrage, and her vision
included federal aid to education, free school lunches, unions for workers, the
eight-hour workday, work relief for the poor, municipal sanitation and boards
of health, national transportation, strong anti-rape laws, protections against
child abuse, etc.
Willard was a
strong suffragette partly because she thought it would take women’s votes to
pass laws against liquor. Consequently, fear that alcohol would become illegal
was one of the reasons for much male opposition to giving women the right to
vote.
In spite of
women not being able to vote nationally, though, the Eighteenth Amendment
prohibiting the production, transport, and sale of alcohol was ratified in January
1919 and went into effect a year later.
Interestingly, the Nineteenth Amendment giving women the
right to vote was ratified 19 months later.
Last Dec. 22,
2015, the Washington Post published an article titled “Americans are drinking themselves to death at record
rates.” According to that article, in 2014 “more than 30,700 Americans died
from alcohol-induced causes,” a 35-year high.
Moreover, that number “excludes deaths from drunk
driving, other accidents, and homicides committed under the influence of
alcohol. If those numbers were included the annual toll of deaths directly or
indirectly caused by alcohol would be closer to 90,000.”
From that and many other sources, it seems indisputable
that the consumption of alcohol has a direct causal relationship to health
problems, fatal and disabling accidents, homicides, domestic violence, rapes,
and other negative issues, such as financial problems for those with limited
means.
Of course, some will quickly say, “But that is only when
alcohol is drunk excessively or irresponsibility.” While that is probably true,
who ever starts drinking with the intention of doing so excessively (except
maybe temporarily) or irresponsibly?
Proponents of stricter gun control repeatedly point out
that guns cause some 33,000 deaths each year in this country. But if the figure
of 90,000 deaths caused by alcohol is correct, guns are not nearly as much of a
problem as alcohol is. Moreover, alcohol is a worldwide program.
Even though I am a strong advocate of greater gun control, perhaps the NRA and its friends are correct: it is not guns that kill people, it is people who kill people. Is that really any different from saying that alcohol does not cause problems, it is the people who use alcohol excessively or irresponsibly who cause problems?
Even though I am a strong advocate of greater gun control, perhaps the NRA and its friends are correct: it is not guns that kill people, it is people who kill people. Is that really any different from saying that alcohol does not cause problems, it is the people who use alcohol excessively or irresponsibly who cause problems?
What is the
solution to the alcohol problem? Probably not more laws. But maybe a long-term
educational program such as there has been against tobacco. The detrimental effects of tobacco has been widely disseminated, including in public schools. As a result, smoking in this
country has decreased drastically.
No doubt the
nineteenth-century women who were opposed to the three big problems of slavery,
discrimination against women, and “demon rum” would be pleased if society now
took the latter problem much more seriously.