117: The Lethal Cocktail: Prohibition and the Government's Poison Plot

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On the frost-kissed evening of December 24, 1926, when most awaited the arrival of a benevolent St. Nick, New York City witnessed a twisted holiday horror. The sanctuaries of familial warmth contrasted sharply with the chilling scenes at Bellevue Hospital, where medical staff were confronted with a deluge of patients tormented by toxic visions. This episode peers into the dark chapter of America's past when the government's efforts to enforce Prohibition led to a dire intersection of public policy and public health.

As Prohibition tightened its grip on the nation's throat, the federal government embarked on a deadly gambit, deliberately denaturing industrial alcohol to deter consumption. What unfolded was a tragic saga of unintended consequences, where the festive spirits of the Roaring Twenties turned literally poisonous, claiming lives and sewing panic in a macabre Christmas tragedy. This tale isn't merely about the victims of tainted booze; it's a larger story of how a policy meant to curb a societal ill instead spawned a public health disaster.

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118: Glint in the Stream: North Carolina's Forgotten Gold Fever

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116: Sweet Success: Milton S. Hershey's Legacy of Generosity