Roaring Twenties Pros And Cons

707 Words2 Pages

Ariel Davis
Mr. David Kibler
HIS 232.01
November 28th 2014
The Roaring Twenties and Today The Roaring Twenties, Jazz Age, Prohibition Era or rather the Noble Experiment was a very radical period in history, full of change and innovation. With higher wages and shorter working hours, there was more time and money on workers hands; they turned into consumers, and focused on their families which caused an increase in the production of consumer goods. This decade saw the advancement of modern medicine with the creation of insulin and penicillin. Inventions we take for granted today came around at this point in time that make home life better like the refrigerator, dishwasher, pop up toaster and air conditioner. The automobile and radio became …show more content…

Instead, it was a major monetary loss for the government and made the crime rate rise exponentially, it also caused organized crime and corruption to form in law abiding citizens like the police to accept lucrative bribes. It was thought to bring up sales in other businesses like restaurants and theaters but alcohol was a major sale in both of these areas. It turned out to be a negative effect on the economy as it removed jobs in breweries, distilleries and saloons. The government lost money on this move whereas alcohol would bring in eleven billion dollars in tax revenues. While losing this extra income, it also cost 300 million dollars to enforce the eighteenth amendment. This made me think of the great debate to legalize marijuana in our time, surely legalizing the use of marijuana could lead to creating more jobs and lower crime rates. I do agree on the statement from one of my college professors that legalizing all narcotics would most likely be the best thing to do, if only to lower the appeal of possessing a substance that is not allowed to be …show more content…

Women finally had the right to vote, many were making their own income by working and some were exercising their freedoms by being “Flappers”; females wearing short skirts, drinking and smoking and freely talking of sex without restraint. Adventuresome females shocked their elders when they sported the new one-piece bathing suits. An organized birth-control movement, led by feminist Margaret Sanger, openly championed the use of contraceptives and Alice Paul’s National Woman’s party campaigned for Equal Rights. The twenties was a time of excess and self-centeredness. The twenties were what today is now; living in a "me" society filled with material obsession, a time of technological advancement and revolution. The women's movement made a significant change in history with suffrage groups, the first woman to run for president and vice president was six years ago. The Harlem renaissance of the twenties could also be compared to today as the first colored president has also made history and paved the way for blacks to rise up against discrimination. The youth of the roaring twenties are very much like the youth today; seeking independence and their own identity, challenging old family and societal traditions. The automobile was an escape as well as an intimate setting for the youth of America, as it has remained in our modern times. A notable writer of this period is F. Scott Fitzgerald who perfectly

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