By Kim Westerman, Contributor Some cities are known for the art they house, some for landscapes not approximated elsewhere, and some for their experimental restaurants. Denver’s identity is not yet clear. It’s the West, for sure, but more assimilated than the Wild West of Bozeman or Laramie. It’s a serious beer town, and a […]
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
Tag Archives: beer
Brew-haha in Russia: Where to buy beer?
A big question in Russia in 2013 may be “How do I get a beer around here?”
Under a law that took effect on New Year’s Day, selling beer at the ubiquitous kiosks that mushroomed along Russian sidewalks and roadsides after the collapse of the Soviet Union has been banned. Though the tiny makeshift shops lost their importance as conventional stores got more of a foothold, new laws could deal a finishing blow to a symbol of the country’s lively and disorderly post-communist free market.
In a measure meant to address Russia‘s high rate of problem drinking, beer now can be purchased only at restaurants, cafes and stores of at least 50 square meters (about 500 square feet).
The law also changes beer‘s classification from a food to an alcoholic beverage, meaning it can’t be sold in any store from 11 p.m. to 8 a.m. It also cracks down on casual consumption of alcohol, forbidding it in public spaces.
With the growing presence of supermarkets and sizable neighborhood food stores, the ban on beer sales at kiosks may mean no more than a couple blocks’ extra walking for someone seized by a sudden thirst. But it may harshly dry up income for kiosk operators.
Experts estimate that beer accounted for about 40 percent of the revenue of kiosks that sold it, according to the Interfax news agency.
“It appears that all this volume will be nicely absorbed by stores. I think that more than a third of the small retail establishments in Russia unequivocally will close,” Vadim Drobiz, director of the Research Center for Federal and?Regional Alcohol Markets, was quoted as saying by the news.mail.ru news website.
More trouble for kiosk operators appears to be on the way. The lower house of parliament has given preliminary approval to a bill that would ban the sale of cigarettes at kiosks and small stands.
If the cigarette sales ban comes into effect on top of the beer sales prohibition, about 175,000 kiosks across the country could be forced to close, at the cost of some 500,000 jobs, the Ministry for Economic Development estimates, according to Interfax.
Heavy drinking and smoking are cited as two of the main factors in Russia‘s high mortality rate — average life expectancy for males born in 2006 was 60-61, according to a UN Development Program report.
Russia has already banned smoking in most enclosed public spaces and the government has increased the minimum prices for vodka.
On New Year’s Day, the bottom price for a half-liter of vodka was raised by 36 percent, to 170 rubles ($5.50).
Source: Fox World News
Beer Now Officially 'Alcohol' in Russia
By Kate Seamons Things just got a lot tougher for any Russian who selected “drink less alcohol” as his New Year‘s resolution: As of today, beer is officially classified as alcohol there. The Telegraph reports that the beverage, equated with soft drinks by many Russians and previously categorized as a foodstuff, will now…
Source: Newser – Home
Rescue teams search for boaters missing in Florida lake
OVIEDO, Fla. — Authorities in central Florida are continuing their search for two fishermen who may have been ejected from their boat on Lake Jesup.
The Orlando Sentinel reports rescue teams spent much of Sunday searching for 26-year-old Charlie Jackson and 30-year-old Jason Cobb. Family members told the newspaper the men had gone to a bachelor party on Friday night and set out onto the lake just after midnight Saturday.
Crews planned to return to the lake early Monday to search again.
Jackson’s 15-foot boat was found Saturday in some cattails north of their camp after relatives reported the men missing.
Authorities believe the men may have been ejected from the boat. It contained two life jackets, two paddles and eight unopened cans of beer.
Click for more from MyFoxOrlando.com.
Source: Fox US News
General's battle with PTSD leads him to the brink
In the exploding hell of battle, a single hand poked through the earth.
John Cantwell could see the ridges and calluses of the skin, and the pile of desert sand that had swallowed the rest of the Iraqi soldier. The troops Cantwell was fighting alongside in the Gulf War had used bulldozing tanks to bury the man alive.
This hand — so jarringly human amid the cold mechanics of bombs and anonymous enemies — was about to wedge itself, the Australian man would write decades later, “like a splinter under the skin of my soul.” It would lead, along with other battlefield horrors, to the splintering of his mind and to a locked psychiatric ward. And it would lead to the abrupt end of a 38-year military career that saw him ascend to remarkable heights as the commander of Australia‘s 1,500 troops in Afghanistan.
In the process, Maj. Gen. Cantwell would become two people: a competent warrior on the outside. A cowering wreck on the inside.
He hid his agony to survive, to protect his loved ones and — he admits it — to pursue professional glory. But in the end, the man with two selves found he had lost himself completely.
A disheartening number of veterans suffer post-traumatic stress disorder. What made Cantwell so extraordinary was his ability to hide his escalating pain for so long, while simultaneously soaring through the military’s ranks — eventually taking charge of an entire nation’s troops in a war zone.
But the higher he climbed, the farther he fell into the abyss of mental illness.
“I became an excellent actor,” he says, 20 years into his battle with PTSD and going public for the first time with the release of his autobiography, “Exit Wounds.”
“It did, though, come at a price. It was like pressure building in a hose and you finally release the tap.”
And when that tap was opened, Cantwell nearly drowned.
___
IRAQ
He had practically begged his way onto the battlefield.
In 1974, he joined Australia‘s Army as a 17-year-old private, after a childhood spent worshipping Vietnam veterans and poring over military-themed comic books. He ended up on exchange with the British Army, and two years later, the Gulf War erupted. Cantwell hounded his superiors for his first chance at combat. “Be careful what you wish for, John,” one warned him. But on Dec. 17, 1990, he said goodbye to his wife and two sons and headed to the Persian Gulf.
It was exciting at first — the strategizing, the explosions, the sense of being part of something big. He whooped with victory alongside his comrades when bombs blew apart Iraqi artillery.
Then came the hand.
Cantwell stared at it as his tank rolled past. He had been unnerved by the plan for American troops to bulldoze over a network of trenches hiding Iraqi soldiers, but had said nothing. Now he wondered: Had the soldier been reaching for help when he was entombed?
The U.S. Defense Department would later defend the operation as a necessity of war, arguing that the Iraqis who were killed had chosen to stay in the trenches and fight. The Defense Department‘s former spokesman, Pete Williams, told reporters at the time: “There is no nice way to kill somebody in war. War is hell.”
On the battlefield, there was no time to process it. Cantwell was a warrior, and this was war. He pushed forward.
The horrors piled up. He saw the twisted, charred remains of men. He fought to stay calm when several small bombs exploded under his vehicle. Inside a blood-and-excrement-smeared torture chamber in a former Iraqi headquarters, he saw a drill, hammers, pliers and rope. He imagined the screams of the victims.
Through it all, he knew he must remain focused. That was what he had been trained to do, and he did. But there were moments when he felt something gnawing at him.
He was looking for survivors near a blown-out truck when he spotted the first head lying in the sand. A second head lay nearby, one eye staring back at him, a scarf still wrapped around the remains of the neck.
Cantwell felt an overwhelming compulsion to put the men back together.
With sweaty hands, he lifted the second head by the scarf and carried it over to its former body. He grabbed the other head by the hair and placed it alongside the shoulders to which it had once been attached.
Then he climbed into his tank, and got back to the business of war.
___
AUSTRALIA
Cantwell was falling apart.
The nightmares arrived swift and brutal upon his return to Australia. In them, the hand summons him. He falls to his knees, helpless as the hand yanks him into the ground toward certain death.
He awoke to his own screams.
The nightly torment was relentless. He dreamed of being blown apart by land mines, of the decapitated heads. Mornings brought exhaustion and flashbacks. In public, he scanned crowded areas for exits, convinced an attack was imminent. Lightning made him jump.
The nightmares grew worse. One night, he shoved his wife Jane out of bed, pinned her against the wall and held his arm across her throat. Jane was terrified. When her husband woke up, so was he. What if he had hurt her?
He suffered alone. At the time, Australia hadn’t experienced battle since Vietnam, so he was an anomaly. He hid it from his sons, wanting to protect them. He confided in Jane, but only to an extent. He worried his fear would contaminate her.
He began to live behind a mask. Every morning, he dragged himself out of bed and ruthlessly quarantined his fear into a tiny box inside his mind. He showered, shaved, slapped on a smile and adopted a confident tone: This is the John Cantwell the rest of the world will see.
The double life was exhausting. He consulted a psychiatrist, who offered a cold dismissal: Get on with your job and your life. Stop fixating on bad memories.
He slid further into depression. A year later, a psychologist diagnosed him with PTSD. Cantwell took sleeping pills at night to try and find peace.
It never came.
___
IRAQ
It was 2006, and the Iraq war was raging when Cantwell landed in Baghdad. Australia had sent 2,000 troops to support the U.S. and the British, and Cantwell, by then a brigadier, was deployed to coordinate operations across the country.
Despite his PTSD, he’d lobbied hard for this job. Maybe he could help, he told himself. And maybe if he returned to the place where his torture began, he could find a way to move on.
This time, though, his decisions determined whether his soldiers lived or died.
One day, he had to choose which of two groups of soldiers would travel with the only available explosives-clearing team. The group he sent out with the team had no trouble. The group he sent out alone hit a roadside bomb.
Three soldiers died. Cantwell wanted to vomit.
The violence left him in despair. He was visiting a neighborhood when a car bomb exploded. Cantwell stared at brain matter and blood sprayed across a wall. Two tiny pink sandals lay on the ground below the stain. One floated in a pool of blood, the wind turning it in a circle.
Cantwell knew the dead child’s sandals would join the hand in his nightmares.
He grew bitter and disillusioned. The job left little time for sleep. When he did, the nightmares were grislier than ever.
An officer asked one morning if he was OK. Cantwell assured him: “I’m fine.”
He wasn’t. But before he left Baghdad, he was promoted to major general and appointed Deputy Chief of the Australian Army.
___
AUSTRALIA
Jane was stricken by her husband’s appearance when he returned home. He was exhausted and sick.
The guilt of the soldiers’ deaths from the roadside bomb was eating at him. Jane tried to assure him he was not responsible. He ignored her. In his mind, it would always be his fault.
He quietly visited another psychiatrist who put him on medication. It did little to help.
The pressure of pretending was almost unbearable.
___
AFGHANISTAN
Cantwell stared at the two flag-draped caskets before him. Inside lay the first Australians to die in Afghanistan since Cantwell had taken command of Australia‘s forces in the Middle East.
They had been his responsibility. Now they were dead, torn apart in an explosion.
At their memorial, he spoke of bravery and sacrifice. Many in the audience cried. He strangled his own misery into silence.
After the service, he climbed on board the plane bound for the morgue and sat next to the caskets, thinking about the men inside. His warrior self tried to reject the nagging feeling that they had died because of him. He tried to think rationally: He had done his best.
But the line between his two selves was disintegrating. He began to cry. A friend on board asked if he was OK.
Cantwell could not answer.
___
AUSTRALIA
He wondered if all the bloodshed was worth it.
He was at the beach on vacation with Jane. But he was detached from everyone and everything.
There were rumors he was up for a promotion to Chief of the Army when he was summoned to the nation’s capital to give his debrief on Afghanistan.
He donned the warrior mask one last time. He appeared calm, made jokes.
When it was over, his superior asked him how he was really doing.
Cantwell surrendered. He said: I am not OK. I am not sleeping. I am not who you think I am. Please tell the chief of the defense force.
Cantwell told the chief himself that he could not take the job. The chief understood.
His truth exposed, Cantwell hoped the worst was over. It was not. On a train, he was so startled by the conductor calling out for tickets that he shouted in terror. The other passengers laughed. He cried.
A psychiatrist finally asked: Had he thought of suicide?
He answered: Yes.
The pressure that had been building for 20 years was at bursting point.
Cantwell let go.
___
A pajama-clad woman in the psychiatric ward asked the general why he was there.
He wondered, too.
He had checked himself into this hospital, knowing he was broken. Still, he argued with himself: What is a major general doing here?
The doctors changed his medication, and he attended regular counseling sessions. One night, he only had one horrible dream — an improvement.
He left after a week of intense treatment. A few months later, he retired. He and Jane moved to a peaceful coastal community, where he continues his therapy.
He doesn’t regret his career. Australia‘s Defense Chief Gen. David Hurley said Cantwell’s courageous decision to go public has already encouraged other members of the military to come forward with their own struggles.
But speaking out isn’t easy. Military personnel often fear the stigma of mental illness will ruin their careers, and they worry that people will think they are not fit to lead, says Matthew Friedman, executive director of the U.S. Department of Veteran’s Affairs National Center for PTSD.
To Cantwell, soldiers are simply not conditioned to expose their pain.
“We’ve instilled in them this idea of physical and mental toughness — that’s how they win battle, that’s how we win wars,” Cantwell says. “We expect that same person with the self-image of a warrior — someone who is tough and imperturbable and able to shrug off pain and difficult environments and horror and get on with their job — suddenly we expect them to turn around and open up? It just doesn’t work.”
He sits at his computer and reaches for the mouse. There is a click as a button attached to the bracelet he wears hits the table. He wove it out of parachute cord as a reminder of the 10 men who died under his command in Afghanistan.
He insists the bracelet is not a punishment but a mark of respect.
Maybe it is both.
___
How are you feeling today, John?
His answer is now honest: Not good.
His sleep has been tormented by the usual nightmares. Upon waking, he sees the headline that another Australian soldier has died in Afghanistan.
His stomach drops. He knows these feelings may never go away. He hopes he can eventually forgive himself for the men who died under his command. But he never wants to forget.
“One day I’m hoping to be able to touch on these emotions, experience them and yet not let them get their hooks into me,” he says. “That’ll come one day. One day.”
Until then, he will focus on rebuilding himself — his real self. He wants to learn to sail and scuba dive. He wants to write and paint and draw (“something a bit creative rather than destructive,” he says with a chuckle.) Maybe he’ll work with veterans, or become a mental health advocate.
Not long ago, he turned 56. He wanted to celebrate with a trip to the beach, but driving a car brings flashbacks of car bombers in Iraq. So he and Jane hopped on his motorcycle and roared down the road. At a surf club, they grabbed seats on the deck. The general clutched a cold beer.
“Life is pretty good,” he thought, watching the waves roll in. “Despite everything — life is pretty good.”
Source: Fox World News
Idaho's Crapo had image as Mormon teetotaler
When U.S. Sen. Mike Crapo (KRAY’-poh) sponsored a 2010 bill to cut taxes on small brewers, he said he did so for pro-business, not pro-beer reasons.
A Mormon, the Idaho Republican told The Associated Press at the time that he abstains from alcohol, and he pledged to have a root beer to celebrate if the bill passed.
Crapo’s arrest Sunday in a Washington, D.C., suburb on suspicion of drunken driving contradicts his public persona as a teetotaling member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The church bar members from using alcohol, as well as coffee, tea and some other substances.
In a statement, Crapo has taken responsibility and pledged to ensure “this circumstance is never repeated.”
Colleagues say they’re surprised the three-term Republican is in this situation. But Idaho’s junior U.S. Sen. Jim Risch offered his support, saying Crapo made a mistake and has apologized.
Source: Fox US News
Police search for 2 Maine boat-building students who vanished after party
Officials on Sunday continued searching for two young men who attended a Maine boat-building school and disappeared without a clue after a small party at one of their houses.
Police said 21-year-old Zachary Wells of Burlington, Vt., and 23-year-old Prescott Wright of Barnstable, Mass., were last seen drinking beer with a small group of friends at Wells’ Mills Road residence. Wells and Wright are students at The Landing School, a boat-building and yacht design school in Arundel.
Witnesses told police the men were intoxicated, Police Chief Craig Sanford said. They weren’t in the home when another resident went downstairs to turn off a radio at 4 a.m. Thursday, and they didn’t show up for classes Thursday or Friday.
Nothing indicates foul play, Sanford said, and searches of ocean waters, roadsides and marshy areas have failed to turn up any clues.
On Sunday, the search continued with a Warden Service airplane searching from the air and the Maine Marine Patrol and members of Well’s and Wright’s families searching on the ground, Sanford said.
“There’s no one area to pinpoint because we don’t know where they might have gone,” he said.
The chief said the disappearance is one of the strangest cases he’s seen.
Source: Fox US News
Century-old fight for Budweiser name hits new snag
They’ve been arguing about a name for 106 years. A small brewer in the Czech Republic and the world’s biggest beer maker have been suing each other over the right to put the word Budweiser on their bottles in what has become a David versus Goliath corporate saga.
A deal, it seems, will have to wait a bit longer because settlement talks between state-owned Budejovicky Budvar and Anheuser-Busch, a U.S. company now part of AB InBev, have collapsed, according to Budvar’s director general, Jiri Bocek.
The dispute is over exclusive rights — when only one of the companies is allowed to use the Budweiser name in any given country. As a larger company, AB InBev is particularly keen to expand its exports and market its beers under the Budweiser brand. But Budvar says that giving up its exclusive rights to the name would threaten to wipe out its own brand from the market.
Budvar recently rejected a proposal for a global settlement by AB InBev, which in turn refused a counteroffer. Bocek said negotiations on these proposals, details of which he could not provide, were over.
“Any new deal proposed by Anheuser-Busch wouldn’t be working for us,” he told the Associated Press in a rare interview with a major foreign news organization. AB InBev declined to comment on the details of the talks.
The brewers last agreed on a global settlement in 1939 in a pact that gave Anheuser-Busch sole rights to the name Budweiser in all American territories north of Panama. But the peace did not last long as the two companies expanded exports to new markets.
Though AB InBev is far larger than Budvar — it produces 270 times more beer — the Czech company has been punching above its weight in the legal arena. It won 88 of 124 disputes between 2000 and 2011 and holds exclusive rights in 68 countries, mostly in Europe, preventing AB Inbev from entering some key markets such is Germany with the Budweiser brand.
When the companies do not have exclusive right to the Budweiser brand in a country, they resort to using slightly altered names. AB Inbev sells its Budweiser as Bud in many European countries. Budvar sells its lager as Czechvar in the U.S.
One of the issues, Bocek said, is that AB Inbev is not satisfied with sharing the brand name.
“Their goal is to gain exclusivity for their Budweiser all around the world,” said Bocek, who as head of Budvar for the past 21 years has raised the heat on the larger rival.
Co-existence is possible, however. In fact, the two companies already share the Budweiser name in one country, Britain.
Both brewers were granted the right to use the name in 2000 after a British court ruled that drinkers were aware of the difference between the two beers. An appeals court this summer rejected AB InBev’s request to have Budvar’s trademark declared invalid.
AB InBev is not happy with the situation.
“Our concern is that coexistence on the U.K. market with the Budweiser brand will lead to consumer confusion,” said Karen Couck, the spokeswoman for AB Inbev. “We want to make sure that when our customers order a Budweiser that they receive the clean, crisp taste of the global brand we have created.”
But most beer drinkers would easily spot the difference, says Iain Loe, former research manager for Britain’s Campaign for Real Ale, a consumer rights organization.
Budvar has “a full bodied taste” while “AB’s Budweiser has little taste, or in the words of AB InBev, a clean taste,” said Loe. “Customers know which beer is which.”
The companies’ claims to the Budweiser name are built on two main arguments — geography and history.
Budejovicky Budvar was founded in 1895 in the southern city of Ceske Budejovice — called Budweis at the time by the German-speaking people who formed about 40 percent of the area’s population. Beer has been brewed here since 1265 and has been known for centuries as Budweiser.
Budvar argues that only beer that is brewed in this corner of the Czech Republic can be called Budweiser.
The founders of Anheuser-Busch in St. Louis used the name for their product because it was so well-known. The brewer, founded in 1852, began producing Budweiser, America’s first national beer brand, in 1876 — 19 years before Budvar was founded.
The two companies have been in a legal battle since 1906. Today, the dispute is being waged through 61 suits in 11 countries.
Budvar has some leverage in the dispute in that AB InBev may be missing out on a larger bulk of sales until a settlement is found, since its operations are so much bigger. It brewed 349.8 million hectoliters last year compared with Budvar’s 1.32 million hectoliters. That’s the equivalent of 73.9 billion pints against 279 million pints.
“Budvar blocks the markets where AB InBev, due to its trading power, marketing and distribution potential, would likely gain significantly more,” said Karel Potmesil an analyst at stock brokerage Cyrrus AS. “The dispute limits the development of the brands that the company considers the most valuable in the industry.”
If the issue is frustrating AB InBev, the company is not showing it.
“The dispute has not hindered our global expansion,” said Couck, the spokeswoman.
She cited figures showing AB InBev’s global sales were up 3.1 percent in 2011 and 6.2 percent in the first nine months of 2012. The U.S. Budweiser is brewed in more than 15 countries and sold in more than 80 others. Its key markets are the United States, China, Canada and Britain.
Budvar holds rights for Germany and other European markets as well as 11 Asian countries, including Japan, Korea, China and Vietnam.
“It’s certainly quite unpleasant for AB InBev that it cannot sell the well-known brand it has developed on some key markets, especially in Germany, which is the most important market for Budvar,” said Potmesil.
Budvar is also being hurt by the legal standoff: because of the legal issues, it takes seven to ten years for the company to enter a new market.
But Potmesil noted Budvar does not gain much by entering new markets. It has a smaller marketing budget and its beer typically costs more, which hurts sales in lower-income countries like China.
In the end, the dispute mainly provides Budvar with protection against competition from AB InBev. Against such a large rival, Bocek said, it is essential that Budvar use all the legal leverage it can. “We have a right to exist,” he said.
Source: Fox World News
James Gifford: Why I Moved From Dropbox To Ubuntu One For Note Taking
So, for those of you who know me, I’m pretty picky
about what I use for my syncing. And I have to be –
this is one of the more difficult parts of my electronic life,
and its even more difficult now.
Let’s start with my requirements.
free as in beer if at all possible. Hey, I’m cheap.
clients for the following OS‘s:
Ubuntu
Windows
iOS
Android. (I know, I need to clean up my operating system variety)
Some sort of folder structure, at least for the desktop.
Markdown is nice, but not required.
Before I added Android to the mix, I had been using
PlainText and Dropbox. Worked wonderfully.
Now that I have an android device,
I’m moving to Ubuntu One notes, aka tomboy. Seems to work pretty well.
For Windows and Ubuntu clients, I’m using Tomboy.
For Android, I’m using Tomdroid,
and for iOS, I’m using a new one that doesn’t work on iOS6 (yet!),
but should get fixed soon, called
webNotes (powered by Ubuntu One). All the platforms covered yay!
To get setup, I just installed Tomboy on my Ubuntu
and Windows computers.
I then installed the beta version of Tomdroid,
and connected everything to my Ubuntu One account.
Took about 20 minutes to do the switch, and was very painless!
So far, I’ve been using Ubuntu One in this fashion for about three months,
and it’s going pretty well so far.
The ability to have my notes anywhere is great – and the fact it
integrates with a product made by one of my favorite companies (Canonical)
is even better!
Source: Planet Ubuntu
Beer Lovers, Rejoice: Monks Export Rare Brew
By Neal ColgrassBeer fans, meet the monks of St. Sixtus Abbey. The Belgian monks are finally exporting some of their world-famous brew, Westvleteren 12, to pay for a pricey renovation, NPR reports. The monks lead such a spartan, devout life that they lack cash reserves, so they’re selling the beer at select…
Source: Newser – Home
Weekly News & Politics Digest, December 14, 2012
- What’s On Your Mind • FINALLY SOMEONE ASKED “HIM” THE QUESTION
Congress and President not going to be under the new Health Care Laws…..They have their own system….of course!!
FINALLY SOMEONE ASKED HIM THE QUESTION!
ON “ABC-TV” DURING THE “NETWORK SPECIAL ON HEALTH CARE”…. OBAMA WAS ASKED:
abc-tv_asked_the_question.jpeg“MR. PRESIDENT WILL YOU AND YOUR FAMILY GIVE UP YOUR CURRENT HEALTH CARE PROGRAM AND JOIN THE NEW ‘UNIVERSAL HEALTH CARE PROGRAM’ THAT THE REST OF US WILL BE ON?”
THERE WAS A STONEY SILENCE AS OBAMA IGNORED THE QUESTION AND CHOSE NOT TO ANSWER IT!
IN ADDITION, A NUMBER OF SENATORS WERE ASKED THE SAME QUESTION AND THEIR RESPONSE WAS. “WE WILL THINK ABOUT IT.” AND THEY DID. IT WAS ANNOUNCED TODAY ON THE NEWS THAT THE “KENNEDY HEALTH CARE BILL” WAS WRITTEN INTO THE NEW HEALTH CARE REFORM INITIATIVE ENSURING THAT CONGRESS WILL BE 100% EXEMPT !
SO, THIS GREAT NEW HEALTH CARE PLAN THAT IS GOOD FOR YOU AND I… IS NOT GOOD ENOUGH FOR OBAMA, HIS FAMILY OR CONGRESS…??
WE (THE AMERICAN PUBLIC) NEED TO STOP THIS PROPOSED DEBACLE ASAP! THIS IS TOTALLY WRONG! PERSONALLY, I CAN ONLY ACCEPT A UNIVERSAL HEALTH CARE OVERHAUL THAT EXTENDS TO EVERYONE… NOT JUST US LOWLY CITIZENS…. WHILE THE WASHINGTON “ELITE” KEEP RIGHT ON WITH THEIR GOLD-PLATED HEALTH CARE COVERAGE’S.
If you don’t pass this around, may you enjoy his Plan!
WHAT? The Republic has a CONSTITUTION?
Amendment 28Congress shall make no law that applies to the citizens of the United States that does not apply equally to the Senators or Representatives, and Congress shall make no law that applies to the Senators or Representatives that does not apply equally to the citizens of the United States .
Imagine what we could do if everybody passed this around
“The problems we face today exist because the people who work for a living are outnumbered by those who vote for a living.”
Statistics: Posted by carl — Thu Dec 13, 2012 1:41 am
- What’s On Your Mind • A letter from Starner Jones, MD to President Obama
Dear Mr. President:
During my shift in the Emergency Room last night, I had the pleasure of evaluating a patient whose smile revealed an expensive Shiny gold tooth, whose body was adorned with a wide assortment of elaborate and costly tatt
oos, who wore a very expensive
Brand of tennis shoes and who chatted on a new cellular telephone equipped with a popular R&B ringtone.While glancing over her Patient chart, I happened to notice that her payer status was listed as “Medicaid”! During my examination of her, the patient informed me that she smokes more than one costly pack of cigarettes every day and somehow still has money to buy pretzels and beer.
And, you and our Congress expect me to pay for this woman’s health care?
I contend that our nation’s “health care crisis” is not the result of a shortage of quality hospitals, doctors or nurses. Rather, it is the result of a “crisis of culture”, a culture in which it is perfectly acceptable to spend money on luxuries and vices while refusing to take care of one’s self or, heaven forbid, purchase health insurance.
It is a culture based on the irresponsible credo that “I can do whatever I want to because someone else will always take care of me”. Once you fix this “culture crisis” that rewards irresponsibility and dependency, you’ll be amazed at how quickly our nation’s health care difficulties will disappear.
Respectfully,
STARNER JONES, MDStatistics: Posted by Frank Jenkins — Mon Dec 10, 2012 10:22 pm
- Hanover • Re: Hanover Approves 38 Percent Property-Tax Hike
Can I further suggest that, in addition to proposing more responsible legislation and more realistic budgetary restraint under this poor economy, the people gather together their pitchforks and torches for their (symbolic) march on City Hall? In other words, the enthusiasm, passion, and yes, anger that the citizenry feels should be shown publicly.
Statistics: Posted by mreill01 — Mon Dec 10, 2012 5:14 pm
- Hanover • Simply, Tax Rates Increase ONLY Due to NEW SPENDING
There is no matter if speaking of local, state or federal governments… tax RATES only have a need to increase when there is new spending.
In particular, a local government depends greatly on revenue from taxes received from real estate. Real estate values follow directly with economic health and cost of living factors. In fact, when the economy is healthy and a clear parcel of land valued at $50,000 is improved by a new home or business, that same parcel is now worth $50,000 plus the value of the improvements. Therefore, real estate tax income will always increase while tax rates remain the same. Actually, over the course of time, tax rates should decrease as land values increase. In reality, a local government‘s budget, without new spending, should have a greater and greater surplus. This derived income will always pay a local government‘s operational expenses throughout time unless new services or operations are incorporated into a budget.
This is really simple math. For a local government to take simplicity and convert it into complication and confusion over a need to increase tax rates and blame it on the need to pay for police and fire is insulting to anyone with intelligence and a small knowledge of economics. There is little more that needs to be said.
Since the local government body has displayed their inability to manage, yet has grown larger and has become unresponsive to the citizens that hired them to represent their interests, it seems time for the people to act.
I recommend the people create and propose legislation and force it to law through referendum. The tools are here on this site to do just that, but requires citizens to be active and involved in the process.
Hanover, Pennsylvania
Statistics: Posted by Gary Triplett — Mon Dec 10, 2012 11:10 am
How Beer Works
Despite beer’s bad reputation, it actually has a number of natural antioxidants and vitamins that can help prevent heart disease and even rebuild muscle. It also has one of the highest energy contents of any food or drink. Of course, this means you need to set limits – one beer gets you going, four makes you fat.
If you’re worried about dehydration, keep in mind that beer is 93 percent water. Also, according to a Spanish study, beer may actually provide better hydration than H2O alone when you’re sweating it out under the sun.
A good choice is microbrews, which are healthier than mass-produced cans, because they have more hops. Hops contain polyphenols, which help lower cholesterol, fight cancer and kill viruses.
All of this health stuff is great, but there are other great benefits…
- How Beer Works
Benefits?
I’m sure you can think of many more!
Last dry county in Alabama votes to keep no-alcohol rule
Clay County is the only county left in Alabama where there isn’t a single place that you can’t buy a beer legally. And there are plenty of people there happy to keep it that way.
Source: Fox News – Politics
