• @[email protected]
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    408 months ago

    Down to prohibition. For a time you couldn’t legally sell alcohol so apple juice was sold under the name cider. Sometimes with handy instructions on how not to store it to avoid it fermenting into alcohol. Then, by the time restrictions were lifted, cider just meant apple juice as far as America was concerned.

    (Allegedly)

    • LazaroFilm
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      118 months ago

      Yep. Prohibition was also the reason for Americans to be so into fast cars.

      • radix
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        28 months ago

        Huh, how is that connected? I don’t remember that in high school history.

        • Captain Aggravated
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          58 months ago

          How do you think bootleg whiskey got from a backwoods still in Porksister, West Virginia to a speakeasy on the North side of Chicago? Some good ol’ boys loaded it up in a souped up Model A that looked outwardly like any other ordinary car, but was capable of outrunning the cops for hundreds of miles on end. Some of these bootleggers got so into building and driving these cars that they made their own sport of it: long distance, high speed endurance racing of ordinary factory built automobiles, or “stock cars.” They even organized a league called the National Association of Stock Car Auto Racing. NASCAR for short.

          • radix
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            18 months ago

            That’s interesting! Thanks for sharing!