The Oglala Sioux Tribe of South Dakota is suing five big companies that make beer, asking that they cough up half a billion dollars in compensation for the economic, social and health consequences of their products. As far as I’m concerned, it’s just a legal shakedown.
Alcohol is illegal on the tribe’s Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, but that doesn’t mean the Native Americans who live there don’t drink. There’s a tremendous alcohol problem there. So where do the people get their illegal booze? It mostly comes from a few tiny places such as Whiteclay, Neb., a town of 14 people, whose four beer stores sell an average of 11,000 cans of beer each day.
So legal stores are selling a legal product to people who are legally competent to buy it. So why is the tribe suing the beer companies instead of placing the blame on the people who choose to spend their lives this way? The lawsuit says that the stores sell the beer knowing that the purchasers must be intending to smuggle it onto the reservation, but I still can’t figure out how that makes it the stores’ fault — or the beer-makers’ fault.

Objective reality has now become offensive in dysfunctional culture
Pursuit of perfection leaves me feeling shame when I’m flawed
Of all the world’s contradictions, our own actions confuse us most
Even when we’re right, criticism stems from our own insecurities
Trump apologists hope you don’t even know about the golden calf
If you repress feelings long enough, depression attacks without warning
How to exploit school kids to get elected to almost any office
The things we regret the most show us what we really value