When they ask you why I  am for prohibition, you tell them because I have the courage of my convictions;  because I am against intemperance; because I do not straddle a fundamental  principle; because I will not be a hypocrite; because I love my fellow man; because  I believe the time has come for the Government to get out of the liquor  business; because I want no man to enslave himself, to shackle his friends, to  widow his wife, and to bring sorrow to the homes of his fellow man; because I  want no friend of mine to make his children dotards, and the children of his  associates tearstained orphans; because I am opposed to any man picking his own  pocket and doubling his taxes; because I know from experience that a dollar  saved is a dollar made; and, finally, because I want to do my share, in my day  and generation, to lessen the woes and the wants of humanity; to end the crimes  and the criminals of society; and to decrease the poorhouses and the  penitentiaries of the country.  
       When  they ask you why I am for prohibition you tell them that I am for prohibition  because I want our men and women to come out of the swales of drunkenness up to  the heights of soberness and get the perspective of the promised land; because  I know from facts that those who earn their wage in the sweat of their face and  spend it for strong drink are fooling themselves and robbing their families;  because I know from statistics, medical and physiological, that the use of  alcoholic drinks is death to brain and brawn, and fetters to hope and ambition;  because I know from an economic standpoint, to say nothing about its moral and  its physical aspects, that the prohibition of the manufacture and the sale of  alcoholic liquors, for beverage purposes, will be one of the greatest boons  that ever blessed humanity—a tremendous factor for good to every man, woman,  and child on earth— a harbinger to all mankind in the struggle for success; and  one of the most potent agencies in the world to increase the material wealth of  America in the onward and upward march of civilization.  
       When  they ask you why I am for prohibition you tell them because I want to make the  hearthside happy; because I want to make mankind free; because I want to make  the State sober; and because I know the home cannot be happy while the people  are rioting in alcoholic drunkenness.  
       Tell  them that I say no State, and no country, can long endure half wet and half  dry, half drunk and half sober, and that all friends of good government should  be with us in the fight to make the State sober, and to banish forever the  saloons from our country.   
       Tell  them that we boast that we are the greatest and richest country in the world;  that we have a population of more than 100,000,000 people; that its estimated  wealth is more than $200,000,000,000; that its annual revenue from the liquor  traffic is about $200,000,000; that the people spend every year for alcoholic  liquors more than $2,000,000,000 — just about ten times as much as the  Government derives from the revenue, a sum of money that staggers the finite  mind; that most of the money comes from the poor, and if it were deposited in  savings banks to the credit of the toilers we would have a Government without a  pauper, and the richest people per capita since the dawn of time in any land or  in any clime.   
       Tell  them that you know, and I know, that for every dollar the Government gets from  its association with the liquor business it costs the taxpayers at least $20 to  support courts and juries, hospitals and asylums, paupers and prisoners^,  poorhouses and penitentiaries. Tell them that the use of alcoholic stimulants  is blighting the hope of our womanhood, debauching the flower of our manhood —  morally, mentally, and physically — and devastating, degenerating, and  decimating the human race.  
       Tell  them that if I were asked to sum up in a single word the cause on earth of more  than seven-tenths of all the woes and all the wants; of all the fears and all  the tears; of all the trials and all the troubles; of all the ghouls and all  the ghosts; of all the crimes and all the criminals; of all the groans of  helpless men, and all the griefs of weeping women, and all the heart pangs of  sad-faced children, I should sum it all up in that short word— R-U-M.    RUM— which menaces the progress of the race, and challenges the. advance  of civilization.  
       --  Source:  Life & Speeches of William Sulzer, p41  
--  Located by Jonathan Makeley       
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