Archive for the ‘Politics’ Category

Past, Present, Future

Sunday, April 18th, 2010

Today we took a very long walk, going all the way to the lake front and then down much of the Midway. The Museum of Science and Industry was one of the buildings of the Columbian Exposition of 1893; the Midway and Jackson Park were where exhibits, the Ferris wheel, and other attraction were. It felt like we had been to the Exposition as we walked along that route.

We stared from Valois, which is supposedly President Obama’s favorite restaurant. It is a cafeteria and it had a sign about President Obama’s favorite breakfasts. There were two: steak and eggs, hash browns and toast and the other: egg whites, bacon or sausage, hash browns and toast. I am guessing the steak is really his favorite and the egg whites are his healthy choice.

Along the midway, we also passed the Law School. When I think about Obama being president, it fills me with a certain delight because he will be a historical figure. Just as I visited Rutherford B. Hayes’ home last week, future generations will visit sites associated with Obama. That’s cool.

We tried to get as close as we could to his house but the security is intense. The guard said it was against the rules even to tell me which house was his. Since you can find out the address on the Internet, I don’t get that restriction.

Of course, I support keeping the President safe and understand why they do not want to let people get close. There is a synagogue right next to his house. It must be quite a hassle to attend services. Never mind being one of the neighbors.

We had a lovely day exploring both the past of Chicago and the present and future of our country.

Craft Brewers Conference – Chicago

Thursday, April 8th, 2010

The 2010 Craft Brewers Conference (CBC) and BrewExpo America started Tuesday and runs until April 10. I didn’t know that it was  in downtown Chicago until we got here. Rep. Pete DeFazio and Rep. Richie Neal (from Western Massachusetts) were the keynote speakers. They are both part of the Small Brewers Caucus which I discussed here.

The conference is primarily a trade meeting, but there are some events connected to it for the public. Tonight I could have gone and seen Fritz Maytag in another part of town but I didn’t. On Friday and Saturday Stone Brewing will be taking over eleven taps at a taqueria. I am going to try to go to that.

Day Two: Rutherford B. Hayes

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

Today we are in Fremont, Ohio. The Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Center is here. It is his family home, Spiegel Grove. There is also a museum and a library. I always think of Hayes as one of a fairly undistinguished group of presidents from the late nineteenth century. He became president following a disputed election. Once in office he ended Reconstruction and any federal support for Southern blacks.

His wife was Lucy Webb Hayes. She was the first presidential wife the press and others called “first lady”. She was also the first to have graduated from college. Like many other women  during the 1870s,  she was a temperance advocate. Her opponents called her “Lemonade Lucy”. President Hayes shared her temperance position; however his grandfather owned a tavern in  Vermont.

The house  and grounds were beautiful and the weather was warm but windy. It was nice to get out of the car and walk around. Tomorrow onto Chicago.

spiegel-grove-rutherford-b-hayes-home

This is What Change Looks Like

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010
House passes health care

House passes health care

About a half hour ago, I took part in an Organizing for America conference call. It was for people who had worked to get the health care bill passed.  I am very proud that I played a small part in reforming the health care system. I am also thrilled that I was on a phone call with President Obama.

President Obama said that he “hoped everyone on the phone is savoring this and that this is your victory. You did this despite being counted out time and time again. You were steadfast. You bucked up some weak knees. You made a difference. Stand strong. Enjoy the victory but our work is not done.”

He was asked what we have learned from this process. He replied, “We learned that the legislative process is painfully long and confusing. I wish I could change it – nothing is going to be as complicated as health care – went on forever. Because of filibuster, anything we do is going to go through some contortions. Important to remember this and be patient and don’t get discouraged.

If we just have persistence and don’t lose sight of ultimate goal, the daily twists and turns are not as important. It requires some fortitude.

He also said, “I learned that it is important to boil down message to two or three talking points.  I learned change is possible – if something is not exactly perfect, important to stay focused. In the big picture history of social change – if you get a basic framework then refinement will happen to move in the direction of progress.”

“Stay hopeful, positive, focused on big picture, stay with it, and be dogged. The reason I don’t quit is because you don’t quit. I draw inspiration from you.”

Forty-Eight Tweets and Counting

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

I have had twitter for a while and I have adjusted to using it. It seems good for things that I would not have felt could be a post as well as political alerts and short statements. Using it for politics is particularly good since that is not something I have done that much of on the blog. I have figured out how to use a # mark and I enjoyed being part of the conversation during President Obama’s health care summit last month. I tweeted three times that day which is my record.

In the beginning, I was worried about getting people to follow me but I have completely relaxed about that. Right now, I have seven followers, which is fine. Like most things on the Internet, building a following will take time.

Now that I am tweeting regularly, I have also realized that my blog posting and twitter are two separate activities. I do tweet whenever I have a new post but that is about it. I thought I wanted real integration of the two with tweets being automatically generated from posts and vice a versa. I have discovered I do not want that at all.

On my website, amymittelman.com, I have a pretty, blue bird with the Twitter symbol. I thought I wanted that on the blog also, but again I do not. Part of my reluctance to merge the two things is that my wordpress blog is quirky.

WordPress.com does not really recognize my blog. That was part of the explanation for why it took me so long to find out that there were site statistics for the blog. For a variety of reasons, I have to log in as “admin”. I certainly would not want posts that were authored by “admin”.

The low tech and separateness of my current practice for blogging and tweeting turns out to be just right.

Lower Taxes for Small Brewers Proposed

Monday, March 15th, 2010

Brookston Bulletin has a story about HR 4278 which is a bill in the House to reduce the small brewers excise tax differential as well as changing the definition and  levels for small brewers. Jay’s information is essentially the same as what is on the Brewers Association web site. Both Jay and the Brewers Association provide information about how to appeal to Congressmen to support the bill.  The Brewers Association represents 1,516 brewers which includes sixty-three brewing companies that produce  anywhere from 15,000 to 6 million barrels of beer per year. In Bev-AB brews over 100 million barrels a year domestically.

The bill is sponsored by Rep. Neal (MA). The co-sponsors include representatives from several strongholds of craft brewing including California, Washington, Oregon, Pennsylvania, and Vermont. The House also has a Small Brewers Caucus. This group has a varied membership including people in the news recently. Joe Sestak – running against Arlen Specter for a Pennsylvania Senate seat, Bart Stupak, Family member and potential health care reform destroyer and Joe Wilson of  “you lie” fame.

There are several other bills before Congress that deal with excise taxes on beer. S.1058. Brewers Excise and Economic Relief Act of 2009, seeks to roll back the $18 per barrel excise tax to its 1991 rate of $9 and provide further tax rate reductions for small brewers.

Since 1991, the brewing industry, particularly large brewers, has tried to roll back the tax. The Brewers Association supports this, but HR 4278 appears to be an attempt to place small brewers front and center. Since the efforts of A-B in 1991 were the main reason the rate was not higher, it may be short sighted for small brewers to set out on their own.

The small brewers’ differential tax rate dates from 1976 when there were fifty-three brewers and thirty-nine brewed less than 2 million barrels.  It was the culmination of many years of effort on the part of small and regional brewers and was the last time the whole brewing industry cooperated for many years.

The Brewers Association is arguing for tax reduction by focusing on job creation, but I still think that any effort to reduce excise taxes for beer is likely to fail. Although the government is seeking to create jobs, it is also facing huge deficits. Liquor and tobacco taxes have been a mainstay of the federal governments’ internal revenue for almost 150 years. It seems unlikely that they would not want to continues to rely on a proven source of revenue during troubled economic times.

Federal Beer Tax Decrease Unlikely

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

Every day I get Google alerts about the brewing industry. Today I got one that linked to a Northern Michigan TV news story about a possible decrease in federal beer taxes. Apparently the proposed legislation would cut the small brewers tax in half and reduce what large brewers pay by one-ninth.

The video showed an earnest craft brewer, at his plant, indicating how he could use the extra money to grow his business. It also showed an appealing pint of beer.

Craft Brewer

Craft Brewer

I thought I should see if anyone else was talking about this so I typed into Google “federal beer tax decrease.” Google responded, “Did you mean to search for: federal beer tax increase.”

I think that tells the whole story. It is very unlikely, in this economic climate, that beer taxes will go down. It remains more likely that beer and other “sin” taxes would go up to help finance health care reform and other projects of the Obama administration.

Disease?

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

Today I took an Amtrak train to New York City. I had to switch trains at New Haven and the train was very crowded. I started talking to the conductor about it and he said it was because of the attempted terrorist attack on Dec. 25. He said that,”Ninety percent of Muslims want to kill us. It is a disease and our government does not want to recognize it.”

I do not think it is a “disease”; unfortunately, thinking it is a disease excuses Americans from any responsibility. I never thought it was fair or appropriate to say that 9 11 was our own fault, but, both as individuals and as a nation, we have an obligation to behave appropriately. Eight years of George Bush and Dick Cheney are probably as much to blame for the hatred and wish to harm us that many people feel as any “disease.”

Downtowns

Sunday, December 6th, 2009

We have arrived in Raleigh, North Carolina after spending five days doing researching in Washington D.C. We stayed in Northern Virginia with relatives and just did our work, so no sightseeing. That was okay because I have been to Washington many times, mostly notably and recently for the Inauguration.

I was using the archive at Howard University, which is over 130 years old. There are some very nice buildings and the campus is huge but the library and the archive could use some updating.

We are staying near the downtown of Raleigh. We walked around the area that includes the capitol building, a state office complex, and some museums. The streets were basically empty around 5 p.m. on Sunday. Many of the restaurants seem to be open only during the week. When we were approaching Raleigh on the highway, there were strip malls on both side for several miles. My guess is that those areas have destroyed business downtown. It reminds me a lot of Springfield Massachusetts, which is the city near where I live.

Tomorrow we will be at North Carolina State University so I will see if that is any livelier. We did find an open, nice bar/restaurant near our motel, so not all was lost. Apparently, there is still smoking in restaurants. The one we ate at did not have a nonsmoking area, but come January that will be changing. I find that interesting since Raleigh is tobacco country.

Factions in The Beer Industry

Saturday, October 17th, 2009

Lager Heads, Jeremiah McWilliams blog on St. Louis Today.com, has an interesting story about a Marin Institute report on the mergers of Anheuser-Busch In Bev and Miller-Coors. The Institute is upset by Justice Department approval of these mergers and the potential negative effect this increased concentration and foreign ownership of the brewing industry will have on the three-tier distribution system.

The report is very negative about the country’s two largest brewers while being supportive of wholesale distributors. As McWilliams points out, some brewing analysts are seeing this as a “divide and conquer” strategy on the part of the Marin Institute. This approach has the potential to create division between the various aspects of the brewing industry.

Although wholesale distributors and the brewers have acted in concert when faced with potential tax increases, they do not have exactly the same interests. The NBWA is a larger and powerful lobby; there are more distributors in the country than brewers. The Marin Institute reports also proposed higher federal beer taxes so, in the end, the distributors and brewers may be on the same side in opposing this.