In reality, ALL OF Y'ALL (EDIT: except for wes - I missed a post) are missing the original point of the thread, as usual, just so you can whale on each other aimlessly.
The issue is not whether or not to allow alcohol in Alabama. That argument is done and over with. Alcohol is legal in Alabama (subject to certain community based restrictions, but for sake of argument, let's just say "Legal in Alabama). The issue now is whether or not to expand or re-interpret the current laws concerning alcohol to allow a business (current or future) to brew their own beer and sell it, either in their own establishment, or to bottle and sell to others.
Since the question of alcohol being legal is already settled, I do not see why this is such a big deal. How is allowing a bar to sell beer that is bottled elsewhere any different than allowing a bar to sell beer that it made on premise, as long as they render to Caesar that which is Caesar's?
This argument is more like why a company is not being allowed to open up a new Wendys, even though there is already a McDonalds and a Burger King, because fast food is bad for you. Or a convenience store not being allowed to sell Camel cigs, even though they already sell Kool and Marlboro, because cigs are bad for you. Most likely, McD and BK, and Kool and Marlboro are the ones supporting the prohibition on Wendy's and Camel in order to maintain their market share. Even though the odds are good that the Wendy's or the Camels will not draw off that much market share - people are pretty loyal to one brand or another, it seems. As niche market - not to mention expensive - as handcraft beers are, I doubt the major labels see much difference at all. Joe Six Pack is not going to spend the extra dough on "fan-cee" beer when he is just looking to get drunk. Natty Light will do him fine, thankee veruh much.
My husband and I frequent a brew pub near our home that sells handcrafted beers. It is a family friendly place - basically an Applebees-type place, except with handmade beer and excellent food, right down to the kid's menu. And even though this place sells its own beer, not everyone likes it. They still sell plenty of Shiner and Bud and the usual stuff. And I have yet to see anyone get hammered out of their mind at this place just because they sell high alcohol beer.
Religion or personal morals should not have a bearing on this. Allowing homemade beer does not increase or decrease the ability of the average redneck to get drunk. It just offers an alternative source - and not even really an ADDITIONAL source, since a beer drinker will drink whatever beer is available if he or she wants one. No one says "Oh, well... since you don't have handcrafted beer, I am not going to drink one at all!" Even my husband the beer snob will find SOMETHING on the list to drink if he can't get a handcrafted ale.
So K, getting on the "Alcohol is bad" pedestal, while absolutely your perogative, is not really relevant here, and kind of off topic. It would be appropriate if we were discussing whether or not a county should repeal its dry county status. But we aren't.