Why We Can't Have Nice Things: Bootleggers, Baptists, and Ballots
"You need an argument for why this is good for society. That's important, but you also need money."

Arkansas has some of the strangest liquor laws in the country—or at least the most politically contentious.
Unlike a lot of other places, the state allows counties to hold referendums to decide whether they will allow the retail sale of alcohol. That is, whether they will be "wet" or "dry." And when those elections take place, it's often existing liquor stores—the very businesses that earn money by selling booze—that campaign the hardest to keep county-level prohibition going.
And they often have a powerful, but unexpected ally: churches.
In the fourth episode of Why We Can't Have Nice Things, a new podcast series from Reason, we take a deep dive into the political dynamics that drive Arkansas' local alcohol legalization elections. Jeremy Horpedahl, an economist at the University of Central Arkansas, says public choice theory explains why special interests that might have very little in common sometimes team up to push protectionist regulations.
"What's especially powerful about this coalition is that you have the liquor stores which can provide the money to prevent legalization of alcohol sales," he says, "and the churches, which can provide the moral argument the public face of the campaign to keep these things, keep the rules, how they are."
Chris Swonger, CEO of the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States, says that arguments about morality are often used as cover when one faction or another wants regulations to boost their own competitive interests.
Once you know what to look for, there are "bootleggers" and "baptists" to be found just about everywhere.
Further reading for this week's episode:
"Bootleggers and Baptists: The Education of a Regulatory Economist," by Bruce Yandle
"Bootleggers, Baptists, and Ballots: Coalitions in Arkansas' Alcohol-Legalization Elections," by Jeremy Horpedahl
Check out the full range of the "Bootleggers and Baptists" phenomenon at Reason.com.
Find out which states allow spirits to be shipped directly to consumers' homes at ShipMySpirits.org, a project of the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States.
Written by Eric Boehm; produced and edited by Hunt Beaty; mixing by Ian Keyser; fact checking by Katherine Sypher
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Bootleggers and Baptists is the classic example of opposites engaged in mutual genital entanglement for political purposes. But so surprising that hardly anyone seems aware of it. Certainly no one in the pundit sphere.
Another example: Left Feminists and Religious Right Evangelicals against porn.
Again: Anti-Growth Left and Developers united to keep housing supply low and prices high. Also throw existing homeowners into the mix.
Why We Can't Have Nice Things: Bootleggers, Baptists, and Ballots
"Bigot!"
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So what did I say that was factually a mistake? This is all you guys to a 'T.'
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The demons headed for your door will make all this silly debate meaningles, and soon
UNDER BIDEN, 7 African countries have had a coup. Just in the past couple days, Pres. stupid and lazy warned Gabon. they will yawn and we await country #8. BTW , we send billions to those countries.
But then he childishly moved to
President Joe Biden said climate risk is an “existential threat” and that it posed a greater risk than nuclear war.
Why we can't have nice things?
The government and taxes.
But Mr Boehm, let's get basic. Why is this a concern of yours? or mine? You can't trot out that hacknayed states-as-"laboratories of democracy" thing but then go snoopin in other states' garbage
I literally don't care what Arkansas does. I don't live there. It isn't immoral or hateful, even if it might be stupid. I don't like much of what is on the radio playlists but I just don't buy it or listen to it.
As the Nazis are knocking down my door and yours, you'll be enjoying better liquor laws. great. Drink up.
But YOU don't lieve in Arkansas, so why the nose in others' business and the laziness about what IS your business?
Isn't this just your way of calling all Arkansans stupid ! They have what they have. So what.
I am not taking a side here, just wandering why no one sees the relevance of this:
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Let's have legislators that deal with real issues and businesses doing business. THis is another super-stupid Biden attemtp based on laziness and stupidity. No person in America who is not an expert will know any of the specifics of this
What does 'reason' care about alcohol? You're all about the smokes, right?