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U.S. govt. poisoned its
own citizens during Prohibition
In a dark but little-known chapter
of U.S. history, the federal government ordered the poisoning of alcohol
supplies to deter and punish those who sought to flout Prohibition-era
bans.
Starting in 1906, the United States began requiring manufacturers of
industrial ethanol to put the chemical through a process to distinguish it
from the identical substance found in alcoholic beverages. After the
manufacture, sale and transportation of alcohol was banned by the 18th
Amendment and the government cracked down on smuggling operations,
bootleggers turned to chemistry to keep their customers supplied. A simple
process was used to extract toxic chemicals from the industrial alcohol
used in paints, solvents, fuels and medicine, and this relatively clean
alcohol was then used to make beverages. By the mid-1920s, an estimated 60
million gallons of industrial alcohol were being stolen per year.
In response, the administration of President Calvin Coolidge ordered
industry to add higher levels of more difficult-to-remove poisons to their
alcohol, including acetone, benzene, cadmium, camphor, carbolic acid,
chloroform, ether, formaldehyde, gasoline, iodine, kerosene, methyl
alcohol, mercury salts, nicotine, quinine and zinc. Shortly after the
institution of this campaign, 31 people were poisoned to death over the
course of the Christmas holiday in New York City alone. Historians
estimate that a total of 10,000 people were killed by the program before
Prohibition ended in 1933.
The poisoning program was no secret, as the government hoped that
knowledge of it would deter people from drinking -- although consumption
of alcohol was not itself illegal.
"The government knows it is not stopping drinking by putting poison in
alcohol," said New York City medical examiner Charles Norris. "[Y]et it
continues its poisoning processes, heedless of the fact that people
determined to drink are daily absorbing that poison. Knowing this to be
true, the United States government must be charged with the moral
responsibility for the deaths that poisoned liquor causes."
Reference: Saturday, June 19, 2010 by:
David Gutierrez, staff writer NaturalNews.com
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