Alcoholism
By: Tasha • Essay • 278 Words • March 15, 2010 • 1,012 Views
Alcoholism
Alcoholism and its effects on the human body have an involved history. Although no one knows when and how alcohol was first created, it was prohibited in the U.S. in the 1920’s. It was prohibited when the legislature passed the 18th amendment in 1919; which stated that importation, exportation, transportation, and sale of any sort of alcoholic beverage was illegal. When the 1930’s came, the pressure of people’s protests of no more alcohol built up so much that both Democratic and Republican Parties advocated repeal on the amendment. In 1933, Franklin Roosevelt became president and made alcohol legal once again with the 21st amendment. Alcoholism is an addiction in which the brain is intoxicated and cannot make good decisions. First, alcohol affects the body by absorbing into the bloodstream, “about twenty percent of the alcohol is absorbed directly into the blood through the stomach walls and eighty percent is absorbed into the bloodstream through the small intestine.” By drinking alcohol on a full stomach it