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I think you are looking for the word 'bootlegging' or 'moonshining'
Alcohol was illegal during a period called prohibition. It went from the 1920s to the early 1930s. Many American farmers made a good living making moonshine (illegal alcohol) during that period.
Nope..
Al Capone's mother job was selling and making illegal alcohol.
The Navigation Acts encouraged smuggling because there was no method of controlling it. The Dutch offered a much better deal to the colonists, thus making smuggling in Dutch imports and smuggling out exports to the Dutch very worthwhile.
It softens the cover making the ball break more. Careful! Too soft a cover is illegal
no it still contains small amounts of alcohol therefore making it still illegal.
Mixology is the art of making drinks by mixing alcohol. A person who practices this art would be called a mixologist. Mixologists tend to create more exotic drinks than the average bartender.
You could look at this with respect to health risks, making high alcohol liquor is far more likely to result in death due to lack of knowledge, often people make mistakes and end up drinking 100% alcohol, causing blindness, death, brain damage. Home brewing beer, this is not a risk as the alcohol created is natural. It's the distilling process that's illegal. However, you could also argue tax related reasons.
Making a fake ID is illegal. If anyone tries to use a fake ID in a place that serves alcohol, they risk getting arrested.
Piracy.Added: Copyright Infringement - Theft of Intellectual Property
The heat on the outside of the thermometer transfers to the glass which transfers to the alcohol making the alcohol expand making it rise