Beer lover living in Lancaster, PA. The Blog consists of a little of this and a little of that.
Thursday, October 30, 2008
Pub Crawl Plum Street Thanksgiving EVE Lancaster PA
BOLO BE ON THE LOOK OUT 11/04/08
*Poll Watchers will be challenging all new voters, especially people of color. All new voters must have ID. Greeters should be sure voters have acceptable ID. A voter card issued by your voter registration office is, in and of itself, enough to establish identity. Greeters need to be aware and advise voters of what is acceptable.
*Poll Watchers will be challenging all students. The same rule as above applies. At polling places where students vote, Greeters should ensure that students have acceptable ID - no drivers licenses with "home addresses" outside the district should be shown those working inside the polling places. Greeters need to be aware and advise voters of what is acceptable.
*Operatives have been/will be telling people they cannot vote if they did not vote in the Primary. This is false.
*Operatives have been/will be telling people that if they changed parties after the primary, they cannot vote. This is false.
*Operatives have been/will be telling people they cannot vote if they have outstanding parking tickets. This is false.
*Operatives have been/will be telling people they cannot vote if they are delinquent with child support payments. This is false.
*Operatives have been/will be telling people they cannot vote if they are in foreclosure. This is false. Even if a homeowner may have moved, they may be able to vote at their last polling place one last time.
*Beware of campaign literature that does not say who is responsible for its production or who paid for it. The Judge of Elections should have it removed from the polling place.
NONE OF THE ABOVE SHOULD BE TOLERATED. IF POLL WATCHERS CANNOT GET THE JUDGE OF ELECTIONS TO CONTROL THESE SITUATIONS, CALL THE OBAMA LEGAL TEAM. In Lancaster County, call 717-299-7374.
**Operatives may be going door to door in certain neighborhoods advising new voters that Democrats vote on Wednesday. Obviously, this is false.
**Operatives may be going door to door in certain neighborhoods and offering to take "absentee ballots" to the polling place. Mail your ballot or deliver it to the County Elections Office personally.
**Beware of statements made to discourage straight party voting statements like this have appeared in emails: "If you vote the straight party ticket, not all the votes will be counted." This has been proven un-true. It’s a scare tactic!
IF THERE IS EVIDENCE THESE ARE HAPPENING, CALL THE OBAMA LEGAL TEAM. In Lancaster County, call 717-299-7374.
Monday, October 27, 2008
Palin Wears DEM DONKEY SCARF TO RALLY
The donkey has become the established political symbol for the Democratic Party. Republicans are most commonly associated with the elephant.
Sen. McCain's running-mate was criticised last week after it was revealed the Republican Party splurged $150,000 on her wardrobe in September alone. Where did she get this scarf?
Condi Rice for 49ers President
*The 49ers have expressed interest in Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice as a possible candidate for team president, NFL.com reported.
*"If she's interested in talking to us, I'm interested in talking to her," one high-ranking 49ers official told NFL.com. Rice has expressed a desire to be an NFL team president as recently as last week, according to the report. Rice has already indicated that she will return to Stanford in January, a school where she served as provost from 1993-99, which would put her in the northern California area.
*Rice has a long and documented interest in football, and has often been asked football questions during otherwise political interviews. When asked what her dream job would be she always answers NFL commish!
Sunday, October 26, 2008
Hurry in to Iron Hill Brewery Lancaster, PA
Victory Hop Wallop
COMPOSITION: Malts: Imported German malts. Hops: American whole flowers. Alcohol by volume: 8.5%.
AVAILABILITY:Limited bottles and draft -beginning November 1, for a limited time.
Saturday, October 25, 2008
Fall Beers
Brooklyn Oktoberfest, Brooklyn, N.Y.5.5 percent alcohol/volume$1.99/bottle Review: Dressed up in a smart little blue, yellow and red label, this beer itself boasts a bold, deep amber color and isn’t coy in its flavor, either. Its malty, caramel smell is forthrightly matched by toasted, sweet flavors. We’re squirreling away a case or two for the winter.
Geo Washington quote
- George Washington
John "Jack" Cunningham http://www.capveterans.com/
Sussex, New Jersey
Monday, October 20, 2008
Congrats to Iron Hill @ GABF
Four Golds: Chris LaPierre, Saison de Hill (West Chester); Bob Barrar, Lambic de Hill(Media); Tim Stumpf, Roggenbier (Phoenixville); Justin Sproul, Vienna Red Lager (Newark); Silver: Larry Horwitz, Cherry Dubbel (North Wales); Bronze: Brian Finn, Cassis de Hill (Wilmington).
More on DFH Beers
Dogfish Head Brews
They make, bottle and keg most of their beer in a Milton, Delaware brewery but they also have a small brewery inside their Rehoboth Beach, Delaware brewpub. That's where they do the experimental batches - the funkiest of the funky!
A cross between a Scotch Ale, an I.P.A., and an American Brown, this beer is well-hopped and malty at the same time. It is brewed with Aromatic barley and caramelized brown sugar.
7.2% abv /50 ibu. Tasting Notes: Notes of molasses, coffee, ginger, raisinettes, chocolate.
Thursday, October 16, 2008
GABF Winners
I thought I would highlight some awards of note:
Category: 7 Specialty Beer - 21 Entries
Gold: Red & White, Dogfish Head Brewery, Milton, DE
Silver: Hazelnut Brown Nectar, Rogue Ales, Portland, OR
Bronze: Palo Santo Marron, Dogfish Head Brewery, Milton, DE
Large Brewpub and Large Brewpub Brewer of the Year
Sponsored by Brewers Supply Group
Rock Bottom Brewing
Rock Bottom Brewing Team
Category: 23 German-Style Pilsener - 44 Entries
Gold: Kaiser Pilsner, Pennsylvania Brewing Co., Pittsburgh, PA
Silver: Party Pants Pilsener, Pizza Port Carlsbad, Carlsbad, CA
Bronze: Prima Pils, Victory Brewing Co., Downingtown, PA
Category: 69 American-Style Stout - 23 Entries
Gold: Terminal Stout, Rock Bottom Brewing, Louisville, CO
Silver: Black Mocha Stout, Highland Brewing Co., Asheville, NC
Bronze: Troegs Dead Reckoning, Troegs Brewery, Harrisburg, PA
For more information check out the web site:http://www.beertown.org/events/gabf/
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
It's Time For the Great American Beer Fest
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
I've got the BLUES MS and Depression
Like any chronic illness, multiple sclerosis can cause depression. People who never thought they could be down in the dumps find themselves helpless against the despair that illness can bring. Chronic neurological illnesses, including MS, can have frightening symptoms, such as seizures, loss of motor functioning’s, fluctuating mental capacities, or odd sensory perceptions.
At the same time, studies have shown that depression can come from the disease itself. And what about interferon medications? Do they bring about the blues? With so many factors contributing to depression, it’s a big question whether MS depression specifically comes from the disease itself (organic), from the stress of being chronically ill, or even from one of the disease-modifying medications (situational.) And can the depression stem from a combination of these things?
Organic Depression
Doctors believe that multiple sclerosis depression can be caused by the illness itself. Apparently, inflammation and myelin scarring can form in areas of the brain that control emotions. Just like other symptoms that come and go at whim, depression can strike for no reason— a person may not be experiencing any other symptoms, an acute attack, or traumatic stress in his or her life. Many people with multiple sclerosis experience depression at some point during the disease. Lots of these people battle chronic depression. Chronic depression with MS can be the result of attacks that have caused inflammation and nerve damage, and this depression becomes a chronic symptom, much like tingling or numbness.
Situational Depression
On the other hand, MS depression can be caused by factors outside of the body. A typical factor of depression is dealing with the stress and uncertainty of chronic illness. People with multiple sclerosis must handle recurring symptoms such as fatigue, weakness, and/or pain. This interferes with jobs (for those who can work outside the home) and personal lives. Those unable to work outside the home deal with isolation. Then there’s the uncertainty of the future. Will there be more attacks? Will they be more severe? When will they strike? For all of these reasons, multiple sclerosis depression can set in and take hold.
Another situational depression factor is the use of some of the disease-modifying drugs. These include Avonex, Betaseron, and Rebif. All of these drugs are called interferons, and all have the capability of causing depression. The drugs can reduce seretonin levels in the brain, causing the blues. Not everyone experiences this side-effect, so it would be hard to say if a user’s depression definitely came from one of these drugs.
Conclusion
With several factors possibly contributing to depression, the source(s) cannot be 100% determined. Whatever the reason for multiple sclerosis depression, it is real and it can be treated. Whether organic or situational or a combination of the two, it can be helped in order to better cope with chronic illness. Taking the bull by the horns allows for a more fulfilling, happier life, despite having MS.
*article originally published by Jen at Suite101.com on October 5, 2006
Frequently Challenged Books at the library
The ALA Office for Intellectual Freedom received a total of 420 challenges last year. A challenge is defined as a formal, written complaint, filed with a library or school requesting that materials be removed because of content or appropriateness. According to Judith F. Krug, director of the Office for Intellectual Freedom, the number of challenges reflects only incidents reported, and for each reported, four or five remain unreported.
The 10 most challenged books of 2007 reflect a range of themes, and are:
- And Tango Makes Three, by Justin Richardson/Peter Parnell Reasons: Anti-Ethnic, Sexism, Homosexuality, Anti-Family, Religious Viewpoint, Unsuited to Age Group.
- The Chocolate War, by Robert Cormier Reasons: Sexually Explicit, Offensive Language, Violence.
- Olive’s Ocean, by Kevin Henkes Reasons: Sexually Explicit and Offensive Language.
- The Golden Compass, by Philip Pullman Reasons: Religious Viewpoint.
- The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, by Mark Twain Reasons: Racism.
- The Color Purple, by Alice Walker Reasons: Homosexuality, Sexually Explicit, Offensive Language.
- TTYL, by Lauren Myracle Reasons: Sexually Explicit, Offensive Language, Unsuited to Age Group .
- I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, by Maya Angelou Reasons: Sexually Explicit.
- It’s Perfectly Normal, by Robie Harris Reasons: Sex Education, Sexually Explicit.
- The Perks of Being A Wallflower, by Stephen Chbosky Reasons: Homosexuality, Sexually Explicit, Offensive Language, Unsuited to Age Group.
I missed Banned Book Week BBW 2008
I just found out that LAST WEEK was Banned Books Week: Celebrating the Freedom to Read
September 27–October 4, 2008. In light of that I thought I would post this information from the NATION from the October 20, 2008 issue.
WASILLA, FAHRENHEIT 451: As we commemorate Banned Books Week in early October, we are reminded of the many attempts to restrict our right to read. Nearly 400 challenges filed at schools and libraries were reported in 2007, most probably constituting a fraction of incidents nationwide. This year's banned-book focal point goes back to 1996 in Wasilla, Alaska, when the director of the local public library, Mary Ellen Emmons, received at least three requests from the newly elected mayor asking whether Emmons would object to censoring books. When the mayor raised the issue at a City Council meeting, town resident Anne Kilkenny told the Anchorage Daily News, Emmons responded, "The books in the Wasilla Library collection were selected on the basis of national selection criteria for libraries of this size, and I would absolutely resist all efforts to ban books."
Emmons was supported by a particularly strong library reconsideration policy that states, "This library holds censorship to be a purely individual matter and declares that--while anyone is free to reject for himself books and other materials of which he does not approve--he cannot exercise this right of censorship to restrict the freedom of others."
Fortunately, no titles were removed from the library, but shortly after the incident, the mayor sent a termination letter to Emmons and other city officials, charging them with failure to support the new mayor. In the public uproar that followed, citizens rallied around their popular librarian, resulting in her reinstatement. All this would now be forgotten, except that the mayor, Sarah Palin, is now a candidate for vice president of the United States.
Back in 1996, the local newspaper, the Mat-Su Valley Frontiersman, reported that Mayor Palin explained her inquiries as "rhetorical" and "simply part of a policy discussion with a department head 'about understanding and following administration agendas.'" Yet at about the same time, Palin's church, the Wasilla Assembly of God, pushed to remove the book Pastor, I Am Gay from local bookstores. Around the time of Palin's inquiries, school libraries in Alaska also received challenges to books like Go Ask Alice and Daddy's Roommate, a book that helps children understand homosexuality. When Laura Chase, Palin's first mayoral campaign manager, asked if she had read the book, Palin responded that "she didn't need to read that stuff." Chase now says she finds it "disturbing that someone would be willing to remove a book from the library and she didn't even read it." In the end, Palin did not succeed in her crusade.
When we observe Banned Books Week, we celebrate heroes like the former librarian of Wasilla, whose courage represents a measure of freedom. Fortunately, in public libraries across the country, books, hated by some but loved by others, remain on the shelves because of the dedication and commitment of librarians like Mary Ellen Emmons, who proudly uphold their principles even when called upon to stand up to those who bully and abuse power by NANCY KRANICH
For more information on BBW check out this ALA site:http://www.ala.org/ala/aboutala/offices/oif/bannedbooksweek/bannedbooksweek.cfm
Thursday, October 2, 2008
Sea Smurfs-USNORTHCOM- The October Surprise
It is not the first time an active-duty unit has been tapped to help at home. ...
But this new mission marks the first time an active unit has been given a dedicated assignment to NorthCom, a joint command established in 2002 to provide command and control for federal homeland defense efforts and coordinate defense support of civil authorities.
After 1st BCT finishes its dwell-time mission, expectations are that another, as yet unnamed, active-duty brigade will take over and that the mission will be a permanent one. The command is at Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado Springs, Colo., but the soldiers with 1st BCT, who returned in April after 15 months in Iraq, will operate out of their home post at Fort Stewart, Ga.,
...
The 1st of the 3rd is still scheduled to deploy to either Iraq or Afghanistan in early 2010, which means the soldiers will have been home a minimum of 20 months by the time they ship out.
In the meantime, they’ll learn new skills, use some of the ones they acquired in the war zone and more than likely will not be shot at while doing any of it. (ibid)
The BCT is an army combat unit designed to confront an enemy within a war theater.
With US forces overstretched in Iraq, why would the Pentagon decide to undertake this redeployment within the USA, barely one month before the presidential elections?
The new mission of the 1st Brigade on US soil is to participate in "defense" efforts as well as provide "support to civilian authorities".
What is significant in this redeployment of a US infantry unit is the presumption that North America could, in the case of a national emergency, constitute a "war theater" thereby justifying the deployment of combat units.
The new skills to be imparted consist in training 1st BCT in repressing civil unrest, a task normally assumed by civilian law enforcement.
What we are dealing with is a militarization of civilian police activities in derogation of the Posse Comitatus Act. The prevailing FEMA emergency procedures envisage the enactment of martial law in the case of a terrorist attack. The 1st BCT and other combat units would be called upon to perform specific military functions:
They may be called upon to help with civil unrest and crowd control or to deal with potentially horrific scenarios such as massive poisoning and chaos in response to a chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear or high-yield explosive, or CBRNE, attack.
Training for homeland scenarios has already begun at Fort Stewart and includes specialty tasks such as knowing how to use the “jaws of life” to extract a person from a mangled vehicle; extra medical training for a CBRNE incident; and working with U.S. Forestry Service experts on how to go in with chainsaws and cut and clear trees to clear a road or area.
The 1st BCT’s soldiers also will learn how to use “the first ever nonlethal package that the Army has fielded,” 1st BCT commander Col. Roger Cloutier said, referring to crowd and traffic control equipment and nonlethal weapons designed to subdue unruly or dangerous individuals without killing them.
“It’s a new modular package of nonlethal capabilities that they’re fielding. They’ve been using pieces of it in Iraq, but this is the first time that these modules were consolidated and this package fielded, and because of this mission we’re undertaking we were the first to get it.”
The package includes equipment to stand up a hasty road block; spike strips for slowing, stopping or controlling traffic; shields and batons; and, beanbag bullets.
Civil unrest resulting from from the financial meltdown is a distinct possibility, given the broad impacts of financial collapse on lifelong savings, pension funds, homeownership, etc.
The timing of this planned militarization is crucial: how will it affect the presidential elections scheduled for Tuesday November 4.
The brigade in its domestic homeland activities will be designated as the Consequence Management Response Force ( CCMRF) (pronounced “sea-smurf”).
What " Consequences" are being envisaged?
The deployment of an Army combat unit on US territory, with a mission to curb "social unrest" constitutes a dangerous historical precedent. It creates a new legitimacy, namely that combat units can integrate civilian law enforcement functions and that this comes to be accepted both by the US Congress and the American public. It should also be noted that the combat units repatriated from Iraq to "defend the Homeland" will be replaced by mercenary forces.
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&code=CHO20080926&articleId=10341
Lucinda Williams -Little Honey-It is almost Oct. 14th
The album features a duet with Elvis Costello "Jailhouse Tears" Other guest vocalists include Matthew Sweet, Susanna Hoffs, Jim Lauderdale, Tim Easton and Charlie Louvin.
Track Listings
1. Real Love
2. Circles And X's
3. Tears Of Joy
4. Little Rock Star
5. Honey Bee
6. Well Well Well
7. If Wishes Were Horses
8. Jailhouse Tears
9. Knowing
10. Heaven Blues
11. Rarity
12. Plan To Marry
13. It's A Long Way To The Top
TACT Campaign-Ticketing Aggressive Cars and Trucks in PA
During the month of October, extra State Troopers will be patrolling Commonwealth highways and will target unsafe or aggressive driving behaviors between cars and trucks. These behaviors may include, but are not limited to: unsafe lane changes, tailgating, failing to signal lane changes, failing to yield the right of way, speeding, and reckless driving.