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prohibitionism การใช้

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  • "We didn't want a spirit of prohibitionism, " Desiderio said.
  • Domestic consumption in France continues to shrink in the face of a growing neo-prohibitionism.
  • Prohibitionism and the temperance movement had always been at the center of Cotterill's morality.
  • As a home to saloons and breweries, Georgetown incorporated in 1904 largely as a defense against prohibitionism.
  • When asked about her critics and their charge of neo-prohibitionism, Hamilton shook her head in disgust.
  • Prohibitionism based laws have the added problem of calling attention to the behavior that they are attempting to prohibit.
  • The term has been used regarding prohibitionism of marijuana, with some commenters saying that " pens閑 unique " is a barrier to legalization.
  • Among the Radical Party's goals was also a struggle against authoritarianism and repression, the gay liberation and the anti-prohibitionism of drugs.
  • They may even value his goatishness as an antidote to all the prudery and prohibitionism that travels under the " family values " rhetoric of both parties.
  • As the movement began to face the limitations of this strategy in the late 19th century, its members turned to legal coercion, leading to the rise of prohibitionism.
  • Jerry D . Mead, a wine writer who long crusaded against neo-Prohibitionism, died on Wednesday at his home in Carson City, Nev . He was 61.
  • Heath has critiqued the viability of neo-prohibitionism as an effective approach to reducing alcohol abuse and consults on a diversity of issues with governments and scientific organizations around the world.
  • Other gains are due partly to the Farm Winery Act signed by Gov . Hugh Carey in 1976, which drove a wedge into the legacy of Prohibitionism and enabled farmers to set up their own wineries.
  • Dry laws were but one aspect of a pervasive prohibitionism that included laws against business or recreation on Sunday, as well as attacks on Catholics and immigrants ( often the same, as new immigrants came from Catholic countries ).
  • As a private club, the Rainier Club had been exempt from Seattle's and Washington's early experiments in Prohibitionism, but when Washington went dry on a statewide basis in 1916, the club could no longer serve liquor by the drink.
  • But in the same corridors and some of the same offices, the liquor and restaurant industries were out in force as well, issuing gloomy warnings about the fate of America's small businesses, the dawn of a new prohibitionism and a creeping big-brother mood in Washington.
  • "The gradually disappearing Prohibitionism in New York's alcoholic-beverage-control laws and an increasingly liberal State Liquor Authority have made wine buying more competitive and more interesting, " said Rory P . Callahan, president of Wine and Food Associates, marketing consultants in Manhattan.