Saturday, November 21, 2009
Seasonal Beer Review: Isolation Ale
Seasonal Beer Review: 2 Below by New Belgium
Seasonal Beer Review: Avery Brewing Old Jubilation Ale
Friday, November 20, 2009
Seasonal Beer Review: Anchor Steam Special Ale
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Seasonal Beer Review: Boulevard Nutcracker Ale
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Beer Review: Powderhound Winter Ale
Unions and Unionization
Under a proposed law, the secret election is bypassed if more than 50% sign the card, with elections still held for signatures totalling 30 - 50%.
Opponents of the bill take the position that a secret ballot is necessary to prevent coercion by union organizers, while proponents claim that the current system allows for coercion by the employer, including mandatory anti-union meetings and firings of pro-union employees.
Many employers have already taken pro-active measures, prohibiting their employees from speaking to union organizers, claiming that any conversation could be interpreted as inviting union organizing and recruiting.
Personally I'm no fan of unions, but if the majority of employees want union representation, employers should be prevented from punishing them or putting up roadblocks in their way. I find it much more likely that employers rather than union organizers would employ scare tactics and put roadblocks in the way of unionization. After all, before a union is in existance, the employer has all the power as well as the means and motive to forcefully dissuade employees from organizing.
Bottom line: don't believe everything that you hear about this bill.
Monday, November 16, 2009
The Hovel (Nobody Would Ever Live In THAT Dump)
Here I am; it’s Friday night, sitting in my new apartment, one which I will later dub “The Hovel”. I’ve got my clothes hung in the closet, my mattress on the floor (I couldn’t squeeze the box spring up the stairs) and my one plate, one spoon, one knife, one fork, a pot & a pan and a handful of ceramic mugs (and tea, I’ve always got to make sure that I have a supply of tea) stored in the kitchen cupboards where I’m pretty sure that I saw mouse droppings. The guy who lives in the Porsche repair shop next door yelled at me earlier for blocking his driveway with my late 80’s Cavalier station wagon that has rusted spots in a far greater proportion of total surface area than the white paint that hangs on precariously, while I unloaded my meager furnishings without any help from anyone other than the meth-head single mom who lived one flight of rickety stairs festooned with bare wires below me on the ground floor. Darren, my new landlord, gave me a discount on the rent so that I could buy cleaning supplies, but I hadn’t gotten around to cleaning the greasy dust that looks like one of the aliens from the first season of Star Trek: Voyager off the overhead fans, the unidentified motile brown stuff from the top of the stove, or the sentient mold from the bathroom. I open the door to the oven and quickly shut it, horrified by the scene within, never opening it again. Not even once.
“The Hovel” is located on the corner of 17th & N Streets in downtown Lincoln: twelve one-bedroom apartments on three floors; once a hotel for railroaders, possibly built when the golden spike was being driven and great herds of buffalo still darkened the plains.
I’ve lived in
It’s pretty quiet here in The Hovel, since I have no radio, no television, no CD or tape player and no one to talk to. I’ve got a bunch of my books, but they don’t make much noise. There’s some activity outside, from the gay bar across N Street and the constant drone of traffic on the main drag,
So I wake up the next morning. Apparently I didn’t kill myself. If I was dead surely I wouldn’t be able to smell the, shall we say, unique aroma of The Hovel. Okay, change of plans: I’ll not kill myself and do something about that smell. That’s enough of a plan for now.
Before getting moved in the previous night I had stopped by my part-time job and found out that they were closing down. I still had my full-time job, assistant store director in a local grocery store chain, but I needed the income from the second job too. It would have been convenient to keep that second job. Two years pastward from the events of this paragraph I had sold my soul (cheap) and become a telemarketer. That’s right, I was the guy who, no matter what time you had dinner, called right as you sat down, the guy who was seemingly oblivious to your repeated assertion that you “didn’t want none”, the guy who apparently didn’t understand the meaning of the word “no”. I sold something called ASDC, which originally stood for Auto Savings Discount Club, but since it had nothing to do with autos, savings or discounts, and wasn’t at all a club, changed its name to American Savings Discount Club, (which made it all better, right?); but we just called it ASDC. We called people who for one reason or another couldn’t get a credit card, who had effectively killed their credit, who had credit scores that were expressed in fractions; we called them and sold them “The Plan”. “The Plan” consisted of a “line of credit”. For a nominal fee of $180 ASDC members could draw on a line of credit, instant cash that they could access at any time by calling the toll-free number. All that they had to do was give us their social security number, their bank account number, and be recorded giving us permission to draw out the $180 (
For two years and then some I labored on the phones peddling ASDC, sometimes doing political polling or surveys, but ASDC was our bread and butter, at which I was extremely good at peddling to the cerebrally deficient and congenitally desperate. During training they taught us that we were to stick strictly to the script. If someone offered an objection we were to reply using a list of predetermined answers. We were to talk to whoever answered the phone, whether it was our target or not, and try to sell them ASDC. There were several problems with that last part. No matter how carefully you explained that you understood that Mr. John Smith, the person that you asked for, was not home, and that you were now making this incredible offer to Mrs. Smith, or John’s brother Ray, or whoever, and that you were pitching directly to them and not merely leaving a message for Mr. John Smith, they would inevitably say, at the end of a long and complicated spiel “John’s not home”, so I stopped trying to sell to secondary residents. I stopped pushing for the sale to belligerent people and those who were plainly stringing me along. This meant that I was breaking the rules; it also meant that since I was eliminating a large percentage of almost-guaranteed rejections, my sales per hour went up and I was making a large amount of bonus money, despite only working part time. Every time they hired a new quality assurance monitor, I’d get written up for breaking the rules, until they figured out that I was making everyone a lot of money. Eventually they left me alone completely, and even stopped scheduling me, just letting me show up whenever I pleased.
It was a pretty good until some regulatory agency whose initials I forget shut down ASDC, and since ASDC was our biggest client, we were shut down too, just when I could really use the money. Crap.
So it’s back to The Hovel, since it’s a Saturday and I’m unlikely to find a job on the weekend. I still have to clean this place and it still smells pretty bad. Even though The Hovel was, well, a hovel, there were always an interesting cast of characters. Right across the hall was a meat cutter named Dennis, seemingly the only other person in the building who had a job. Dennis always had some down-on-his-luck guy sleeping on his floor, but he often was one of the few people who seemed reasonably sane. Although I suppose that there are different ways that you can define “sane”. After all, he was living in The Hovel too. In the first floor front apartment was Ba Nguyen Bao, a guy who had spent a lot of time in Vietnamese prisons and was somewhat nuts. Ba could often be found walking up and down
I lived in The Hovel for about two years. Most people were horrified by my living conditions. But it was cheap, it was close to the bars, and I was too lazy to move. Until one day the water was cut off. I came back late one Friday night, in dire need of a shower, and found that I had no water. The next morning there was still no water, so I bathed and shaved using some bottled water that I had in the fridge. After returning home from work the next day, and finding that the water was working, I went about my business, doing laundry, showering, using the toilet, and making tea. After about 45 minutes I heard a horrific screaming from one of the downstairs apartments, followed by its inhabitant, Leroy, running into the hall with murder in his eyes. Apparently a water main had cracked and every time someone flushed the toilet or the washing machine drained, it flowed into Leroy’s apartment, geysering soap and human waste up through his toilet. I can see why he’d be upset. Everyone in the building had been cautioned to not flush the toilets, not use the washing machine, and use water sparingly, everyone that is except for me. I persuaded Leroy to refrain from killing me and got the classifieds and started looking for an apartment.
Beer Review: Michelob Winter's Bourbon Cask Ale
Religion and Politics
Don't get me wrong, people can believe whatever they want, but do you really want to limit your friendships to people who are exactly like you?
Seasonal Beer Review: Schell Snowstorm
Seasonal Beer Review: Leinie's Fireside Nut Brown
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Beer Review: Sam Adams Longshot - Cranberry Wit
Monday, November 9, 2009
Beer Review: Sam Adams Cranberry Lambic
"Lambic" is a Belgian style of beer that uses wild yeast strains and a combination of about 70% barley malt & 30% wheat. Cranberry Lambic is part of the Winter Classics holiday variety pack. The appearance is cloudy and a reddish-yellow color, kind of like a hefeweizen or unfiltered wheat, with a thick cranberry-red head. The taste is very wheaty and the cranberries definitely dominate. It supposedly has some maple syrup mixed in, but I couldn't taste it myself. There's a slightly sour aftertaste that the Sam Adams website says is due to the wild yeast fermentation, but to me tastes similar to unsweetened fruit juice. I had this brew with chicken cooked in the crockpot and stuffing on the side and found it a perfect pairing. A fine beer to complement your Thanksgiving dinner.
Vacation!
Thursday, November 5, 2009
The Origins of Thanksgiving
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Beer Review: Empyrean FestivAle & Limited Offering "Bagget"
Monday, November 2, 2009
Sam Adams Winter Lager
Not much of a head, and what little there was dissipated quickly. The color is a coppery brown, there's a hint (but alas, no more than a hint) of cinnamon, and a bit more of a hint of orange. Malty taste similar to Octoberfest, no bitterness at all.
This is a lager that would be great on tap during the winter months.