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Celebrating Sunday sales and Southern progress
by Ryan Watkins   
November 09, 2011 12:58
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Sunday alcohol sales measures pass across Georgia

I grew up in South Carolina. Known for its awesomely backwoods political mentality, South Carolina, at least in my lifetime, has always been an experiment in near-unchecked conservative-minded politics.

If you wonder where people like Tea Party favorite Michele Bachmann find support, you need look no further than my hometown and small towns like it across the Palmetto state.

Where I'm from, Democrats don't win elections. If you want to win, join the GOP, run in their primary, beat your opponents and run unopposed in November. It's how politics are played there, especially in local elections.

I grew up with Blue Laws, ordinances passed to keep businesses closed on Sundays to make sure the people attended their local church of choice. The only stores allowed to open on Sunday mornings were pharmacies, restaurants, gas stations and grocery stores. Wal-Mart – closed until 1:30 p.m. JC Penney, where I worked while I was in high school, didn't open its doors until 1:30 p.m. on Sundays. You get the idea.

When I finished school and moved to Atlanta in 2005, I had lived nearly my entire life under a Sunday alcohol sales ban. Not being able to buy booze here wasn't a shock, even in a large, metropolitan city.

Last night, Atlanta and cities across the state overwhelmingly approved measures to allow local municipalities to regulate alcohol sales on Sundays. Scanning over the numbers, the will of the people was obvious – voters wanted the option to buy booze on Sundays.

There was one exception, Palmetto. Its loss.

Progress can often be a slow, daunting challenge for Southern states. But yesterday, the will of the people was heard loud and clear.

It makes me wonder why it took so long for this referendum to be brought to voters. If a similar measure had been put to the public in 1992, I'm certain that cities across the state would have been allowed nearly 20 years of Sunday alcohol sales.

For many cities, the restriction won't be lifted until the new year. January 1st, New Year's Day, is the first Sunday of 2012. I know where I'll be that morning (stocking up on screwdriver supplies for the Macy's New Year's Day parade).

Thank you, Georgians, for giving me hope of progress, even here in the heart of the South.

 

Top photo: Sunday alcohol sales bans lifted across Georgia (Creative Commons via www.flickr.com/photos/greencolander)

Celebrating Sunday sales and Southern progress
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