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SAC's first thread in a year: Study linking dry counties to number of meth labs

Super Amputee Cat

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As a child, when we camped in certain parts of the south in the late 1970s, dry counties were a constant thorn in my dad's side. We either had to make sure we were camped in a wet county, or buy alcohol in a wet county before sneaking it in to a dry county where the campground was located. I still remember him drinking his Reingold disguised in a fake Pepsi can shell.

My dad was not an alcoholic. He just loved sitting around the campground, relaxing with a beer or two. I didn't get it at the time, but as I got older, I realized his being relegated like that was the direct result, at least in part, from deep religious hypocrisy and the resulting effort to legislate morality: Restrictive laws, based on deep seated religions convictions, whose enactment began in earnest at the end of prohibition and continues to this very day. Other's, while not necessarity religious, were two-faced in condemning the legal sale of alcohol, yet having illegal moonshine stills in the backwoods of Virginia, Kentucky and West Virginia. Or perhaps it was a little of both, with many residents looking the other way when their backwoods relatives were setting up stills, yet not allowing the regulated sale of alcohol within their borders.

Flash forward almost ten years later to 1987. I was in a dry county in Kentucky (Grant) myself and some of the young people I met vowed that they would make Grant county wet once enough of them reached voting age. Yet almost thirty years on, there appears to have been only limited success in Grant County, because only the communities of Dry Ridge and two others are now "wet" but the rest of the county is still dry. And this allowance is limited to only certain restaurants, not groceries stores, beverage centers, etc.

Other counties in Kentucky only allow consumption at golf courses, wineries, etc, Or a town within a county may be completely wet but the rest of the county is dry. Such counties are known as "moist counties" which is better than being completely dry, but still restrictive. Carter County, in the northeast part of the state only allows alcohol consumption at a local winery. When I was there in 1986, I was at a pool hall in Grayson where a couple of players hid their beers inside an empty Mountain Dew carton. At first, I thought it was because they weren't old enough to drink, but now that I think about it, its because Carter County was dry. And how could a bunch of young 20s-somethings ever afford to go to the golf course or winery?

Concerning the continued existence Grant County's dryness, what one has to wonder, is that once they did reach drinking age, why wasn't any thing really done? As the article states, almost half of Kentucky's counties still have some kind of restriction on alcohol, with 31 of them still completely dry. In the end did they really want to change things after all or, perhaps due to religious intolerance, just continue on with the status quo?

Most of these people I met way back in the 1980s would now be in their mid 40s or older, and a whole generation of new voters could have come along in the late 1980s and 1990s and vowed to put and end to the intolerance and hypocrisy of their parents' and grandparents' laws once and for all. Furthermore, a lot of the old fogies and religious hypocrites would have died off during that time, thereby turning the tide even more. Yet none of this came to fruition.

So prohibition lives on in many parts Kentucky and other parts of the of the south, much to the delight of the local meth dealers and the violent cartels. The young people I met so long ago, appear to have acquired their parent's intolerance and ability to except change, and now with a meth-habit to boot.

What experiences have you had in a dry county?


Economist%201a.jpg

-The Economist, October 3-9, 2015
 
Where I am at in WV, meth isn't really under cartel distribution, more user supplied. They use the shake and bake method. That is why I am a little skeptical of the Economist article and using DEA as a source. A Gatorade bottle can be a meth lab, as can one hundred bottles found in the trunk of a car, it is very subjective. The cartels around here are more involved with prostitution and heroin and cocaine distribution, and even then, most of these groups are just extended familial or kin relations. Their violence is more business oriented than towards society at large.

If you look at research involving substance abuse in Appalachia and tribal lands, you'll see fatalism and hopelessness affect use rates. That may also explain the lack of political change that occurs in those areas. The individual has no incentive to invest in a political process that doesn't benefit them. In the dry counties/areas that I have seen flip, it wasn't due to citizen organization and participation, it was business/economic development oriented. Applebee's equals jobs, kinda stuff.
 
Kansas seems to be going the shake and bake method as well. Human trafficking also seems to be a problem.

I've never lived in a dry county, but I remember my time in Charleston when there was no sales on Sunday. I would walk from the ship to the theater and pass the base liquor store (it was actually off base). There was always someone outside willing to give me a few bucks to buy a case of beer for them since the base store was federal, but you had to be military to use it. It paid for my movies every week.
 
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