Blue law is not so awful

There’s something almost distinctly Connecticut about not being able to purchase alcohol on a Sunday, or after 9 p.m. on other days. It’s a situation we’ve all lived with for our entire lives, yet every so often we hear someone from out of state complaining about our antiquated, pious liquor laws, which prevent us from engaging in retail purchases of booze on the Sabbath.

Sure, this is yet another example of the myth that there is actual separation of church and state in our country and yes, the law seems outdated, but there are some of us who have grown accustomed to it, and, we dare say, even like it.

Anyone who has lived through the transition from underage to drinking age can recall the days when we were always traveling at light speed, trying to make it to the local “packey� to grab a case of cold ones. As we grew older, we learned how to schedule our time more appropriately and plan for long weekends, stocking up on brewskis for Sunday football games and such. If we forgot to buy enough, we went to the bar for cheeseburgers, chicken wings and draft beer.

Connecticut’s strict liquor laws became part of our heritage. We grew up knowing that we had to be somewhat responsible if we were going to purchase liquor, and if we wanted a bottle of Jack Daniel’s at 1 in the morning, we were thankfully out of luck. There is a certain health factor involved here, not the least of which is the avoidance of a hangover Monday morning when you have to go to work.

People can complain all they want about our Puritanical blue laws and how they restrict our freedoms, but a lack of access to over-the-counter liquid depressants one day a week isn’t the worst thing that can happen to us. If anything, we should institute the same rule for cigarettes and make some people go without them for short periods of time. They say it’s the best way to ultimately quit.

By the way, it was once thought that blue laws were named for the color of the paper upon which they were originally printed. This is apparently false. According to The Columbia Encyclopedia, the word “blue� was commonly used in the 18th century as a disparaging reference to rigid moral codes and those who observed them (e.g., “bluenoses,� blue movies). The Reverend Samuel Peters is credited with first using the term in his 1781 book, “General History of Connecticut.�

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