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Missouri law recognizes two types of alcoholic beverage: liquor, which is any beverage containing more than 0.5% alcohol except "non-intoxicating beer"; and "non-intoxicating beer", [93] which is beer containing between 0.5% and 3.2% alcohol. Liquor laws [94] apply to all liquor, and special laws apply to "non-intoxicating beer". [93]
In Russia, advertising alcohol products is banned from almost all media (including television and billboards) since January 2013. [42] Before that, alcohol advertising was restricted from using images of people drinking since the mid-2000s. In Sweden, since 2010 advertisements are legal for wine and beer, but not on television and radio.
Alcohol laws can restrict those who can produce alcohol, those who can buy it (often with minimum age restrictions and laws against selling to an already intoxicated person), when one can buy it (with hours of serving and/or days of selling set out), labelling and advertising, the types of alcoholic beverage that can be sold (e.g., some stores ...
Democratic Gov. Tony Evers signed a massive overhaul of state alcohol regulations into law Wednesday, but beer, wine and spirits consumers might not feel many of the changes to the inner workings ...
Pages in category "Alcohol law in the United States by state" The following 25 pages are in this category, out of 25 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The red dots date back to just after World War II and came from the Palmetto State’s unique liquor laws, ... regulations on alcohol advertising in South Carolina, which permitted only the words ...
Nonetheless, arguments and controversies still exist in America when the issue pertains to intoxicating liquors. Some are enthusiastically for intoxicating liquors, and some are adamantly against ...
Federal law defines an alcoholic beverage as any beverage that contains 0.05% or more of alcohol, and federal law prohibits driving with a blood alcohol content of 0.08% or higher. [12] Manufacture and sale of alcohol was illegal in the United States during the Prohibition between 1920 and 1933.