12/24/2017
The Noble Experiment 2.0
What’s up everybody, I hope you came here on purpose. I want to introduce you to an innovative social experiment by ProperDose. In 1920 the Volstead Act was signed, and aptly named the Noble Experiment, American society chose a new path, and a majority with mostly female support lobbied Congress to enforce a ban on the sale & manufacturing of alcoholic beverages. In doing so the movement hoped to eradicate violence, crime, corruption, solve social issues, reduce prison populations and improve health and hygiene.
Our belief here is that the entire nation at one point believed that alcohol was a major influence on societal issues, to the extent that society wanted to give up alcohol completely. So we began investigating with one question in mind,” Does modern alcoholic beverage use data support these notions with evidence, facts, and statistics?” Here is some of the evidence that we found.
We found that a large percentage of US children live with a parent that has Alcohol Use Disorder. That is 7oz of liquor in women and 14oz in men per week. 97 thousand students between the ages 18 and 24 report experiencing alcohol-related sexual assault or alcohol-related date r**e. Roughly 20 percent of college students meet the criteria for Alcohol Use Disorders or worse.
40% of all violent crimes today occur with the victim having perceived the offender to have been drinking. Statistics related to alcohol use by violent offenders generally show that about half of all homicides and assaults are committed when the offender, victim, or both have been drinking.
Unfortunately, the Volstead Act of 1920 was overthrown by corrupt gangsters and politicians, and we believe the solution for the modern day is to create a completely voluntary system, within an accountable anonymous online digital community, and to also introduce a safe alternative. Something that we want to call the Noble Experiment 2.0
For more information check out our website and sign up for our email list.
www.properdosekit.com
NCADD link
https://www.ncadd.org/about-addiction/alcohol-drugs-and-crime
The use of alcohol and drugs can negatively affect all aspects of a person’s life, impact their family, friends and community, and place an enormous b...