Richmond P. Hobson argues for prohibition
Richmond P. Hobson, a Representative from Alabama, voiced his
support for a prohibition amendment on the floor of the House
of Representatives on December 22, 1914. The proposed amendment
received a majority of votes, but not the necessary two-thirds
majority to proceed with the process. The following is scanned
from K. Austin Kerr, The Politics of Moral Behavior: Prohibition
and Drug Abuse (Reading, Mass.: Addison-Wesley, 1973): 97-102
[long out of print].
Hobson:
What is the object of this resolution? It is to destroy the agency
that debauches the youth of the land and thereby perpetuates its
hold upon the Nation. How does the resolution propose to destroy
this agent? In the simplest manner.... It does not coerce any
drinker. It simply says that barter and sale, matters that have
been a public function from the semicivilized days of society,
shall not continue the debauching of the youth. Now, the Liquor
Trust are wise enough to know that they can not perpetuate their
sway by depending on debauching grown people, so they go to an
organic method of teaching the young to drink. Now we apply exactly
the same method to destroy them. We do not try to force old drinkers
to stop drinking, but we do effectively put an end to the systematic,
organized debauching of our youth through thousands and tens of
thousands of agencies throughout the land. Men here may try to
escape the simplicity of this problem. They can not. Some are
trying to defend alcohol by saying that its abuse only is bad
and that its temperate use is all right. Science absolutely denies
it, and proclaims that drunkenness does not produce one-tenth
part of the harm to society that the widespread, temperate, moderate
drinking does. Some say it is adulteration that harms. Some are
trying to say that it is only distilled liquors that do harm.
Science comes in now and says that all alcohol does harm; that
the malt and fermented liquors produce vastly more harm than distilled
liquors, and that it is the general public use of such drinks
that has entailed the gradual decline and degeneracy of the nations
of the past.
[The wets] have no foundation in scientific truth to stand upon,
and so they resort to all kinds of devious methods.
Their favorite contention is that we can not reach the evil because
of our institutions. This assumes that here is something very
harmful and injurious to the public health and morals, that imperils
our very institutions themselves and the perpetuity of the Nation,
but the Nation has not within itself, because of its peculiar
organization, the power to bring about the public good and end
a great public wrong. They invoke the principle of State rights.
As a matter of fact, we are fighting more consistently for State
rights than they ever dreamed of. We know the States have the
right to settle this question, and furthermore our confidence
in three-quarters of all the States to act wisely does not lead
us to fear that if we submit the proposition to them they might
establish an imperialistic empire. We believe that three-quarters
of all the States have the wisdom as well as the right to settle
the national prohibition question for this country.
Neither can they take refuge about any assumed question of individual
liberty. We do not say that a man shall not drink. We ask for
no sumptuary action. We do not say that a man shall not have or
make liquor in his own home for his own use. Nothing of that sort
is involved in this resolution. We only touch the sale. A man
may feel he has a right to drink, but he certainly has no inherent
right to sell liquor. A man's liberties are absolutely secure
in this resolution. The liberties and sanctity of the home are
protected. The liberties of the community are secure, the liberties
of the county are secure, and the liberties of the State are secure.
Let no one imagine that a State to-day has the real power and
right to be wet of its own volition. Under the taxing power of
the Federal Government by act of Congress, Congress could make
every State in the country dry. They need not think it is an inherent
right for a State to be wet; it is not; but there is an inherent
right in every State and every county and every township to be
dry, and these rights are now trampled upon, and this monster
prides himself in trampling upon them.
Why, here to-day Member after Member has proclaimed that prohibition
does not prohibit, and I have heard them actually tell us that
prohibition could not prohibit. They tell us that this interstate
liquor power is greater than the National Government....
I say now, as I said before, I will meet this foe on a hundred
battlefields. If the Sixty-third Congress does not grant this
plain right of the people for this referendum to change their
organic law, to meet this mighty evil, the Sixty-fourth Congress
will be likewise invoked. I do not say that we are going to get
a two-thirds majority here tonight ... because we have not yet
had a chance to appeal to Caesar: but I do say that the day is
coming when we shall have that referendum sent to the States,
nor is that day as far distant as some may imagine. Unless this
question has been made a State matter, as we are asking now for
it to be so made by being removed from national politics, and
referred to the States-if this is not done by the intervening
Congresses, I here announce to you the determination of the great
moral, the great spiritual, the great temperance and prohibition
forces of this whole Nation to make this question the paramount
issue in 1916, not only to gain a two-thirds majority in the Houses
of Congress, but to have an administration that neither in the
open nor under cover will fight this reform, so that in the spring
of 1917 with an extraordinary session of the Sixty-fifth Congress
we will have a command from the * masters of men and of Congress
to grant this right to the people. My appeal is to each one of
you now, be a man when the vote is taken and do your duty. [Applause.]
A Habit-Forming Drug
Alcohol has the property of chloroform and ether of penetrating
actually into the nerve fibers themselves, putting the tissues
under an anesthetic which prevents pain at first, but when the
anesthetic effect is over discomfort follows throughout the tissues
of the whole body, particularly the nervous system, which causes
a craving for relief by recourse to the very substance that produced
the disturbance. This craving grows directly with the amount and
regularity of the drinking.
Undermines the Will Power
The poisoning attack of alcohol is specially severe in the cortex
cerebrum-the top part of the brain-where resides the center of
inhibition, or of will power, causing partial paralysis, which
liberates lower activities otherwise held in control, causing
a man to be more of a brute, but to imagine that he has been stimulated,
when he is really partially paralyzed. This center of inhibition
is the seat of the will power, which of necessity declines a little
in strength every time partial paralysis takes place.
Little Less of a Man After Each Drink
Thus a man is little less of a man after each drink he takes.
In this way continued drinking causes a progressive weakening
of the will and a progressive growing of the craving, so that
after a time, if persisted in, there must come a point where the
will power can not control the craving and the victim is in the
grip of the habit.
Slaves in Shackles
When the drinking begins young the power of the habit becomes
overwhelming, and the victim might as well have shackles. It is
estimated that there are 5,000,000 heavy drinkers and drunkards
in America, and these men might as well have a ball and chain
on their ankles, for they are more abject slaves than those black
men who were driven by slave drivers.
Present-day Slave Owners
These victims are driven imperatively to procure their liquor,
no matter at what cost. A few thousand brewers and distillers,
making up the organizations composing the great Liquor Trust,
have a monopoly of the supply, and they therefore own these 5,000,000
slaves and through them they are able to collect two and one-half
billions of dollars cash from the American people every year.
Liquor Degenerates the Character
The first finding of science that alcohol is a protoplasmic poison
and the second finding that it is an insidious, habit-forming
drug, though of great importance, are as unimportant when compared
with the third finding, that alcohol degenerates the character
of men and tears down their spiritual nature. Like the other members
of the group of oxide derivatives of hydrocarbons, alcohol is
not only a general poison, but it has a chemical affinity or deadly
appetite for certain particular tissues. Strychnine tears down
the spinal cord. Alcohol tears down the top part of the brain
in a man, attacks certain tissues in an animal, certain cells
in a flower. It has been established that whatever the line of
a creature's evolution alcohol will attack that line. Every type
and every species is evolving in building from generation to generation
along some particular line. Man is evolving in the top part of
the brain, the seat of the will power, the seat of the moral senses,
and of the spiritual nature, the recognition of right and wrong,
the consciousness of God and of duty and of brotherly love and
of self-sacrifice.
Reverses the Life Principle of the Universe
All life in the universe is founded upon the principle of evolution.
Alcohol directly reverses that principle. Man has risen from the
savage up through successive steps to the level of the semisavage,
the semicivilized, and the highly civilized.
Liquor and the Red Man
Liquor promptly degenerates the red man, throws him back into
savagery. It will promptly put a tribe on the war path.
Liquor and the Black Man
Liquor will actually make a brute out of a negro, causing him
to commit unnatural crimes.
Liquor and the White Man
The effect is the same on the white man, though the white man
being further evolved it takes longer time to reduce him to the
same level. Starting young, however, it does not take a very long
time to speedily cause a man in the forefront of civilization
to pass through the successive stages and become semicivilized,
semisavage, savage, and, at last, below the brute.
The Great Tragedy
The spiritual nature of man gives dignity to his life above the
life of the brute. It is this spiritual nature of man that makes
him in the image of his Maker, so that the Bible referred to man
as being a little lower than the angels. It is a tragedy to blight
the physical life. No measure can be made of blighting the spiritual
life.
The Blight Degeneracy
Nature does not tolerate reversing its evolutionary principle,
and proceeds automatically to exterminate any creature, any animal,
any race, any species that degenerates. Nature adopts two methods
of extermination-one to shorten the life, the other to blight
the offspring.
The Verdict
Science has thus demonstrated that alcohol is a protoplasmic poison,
poisoning all living things; that alcohol is a habit-forming drug
that shackles millions of our citizens and maintains slavery in
our midst; that it lowers in a fearful way the standard of efficiency
of the Nation, reducing enormously the national wealth, entailing
startling burdens of taxation, encumbering the public with the
care of crime, pauperism, and insanity; that it corrupts politics
and public servants, corrupts the Government, corrupts the public
morals, lowers terrifically the average standard of character
of the citizenship, and undermines the liberties and institutions
of the Nation; that it undermines and blights the home and the
family, checks education, attacks the young when they are entitled
to protection, undermines the public health, slaughtering, killing,
and wounding our citizens many fold times more than war, pestilence,
and famine combined; that it blights the progeny of the Nation,
flooding the land with a horde of degenerates; that it strikes
deadly blows at the life of the Nation itself and at the very
life of the race, reversing the great evolutionary principles
of nature and the purposes of the Almighty.
There can be but one verdict, and that is this great destroyer
must be destroyed. The time is ripe for fulfillment. The present
generation, the generation to which we belong, must cut this millstone
of degeneracy from the neck of humanity....
The Final Conclusion
To cure this organic disease we must have recourse to the organic
law. The people themselves must act upon this question. A generation
must be prevailed upon to place prohibition in their own constitutional
law, and such a generation could be counted upon to keep it in
the Constitution during its lifetime. The Liquor Trust of necessity
would disintegrate. The youth would grow up sober. The final,
scientific conclusion is that we must have constitutional prohibition,
prohibiting only the sale, the manufacture for sale, and everything
that pertains to the sale, and invoke the power of both Federal
and State Governments for enforcement. The resolution is drawn
to fill these requirements.
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