Showing posts with label drugs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drugs. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

what's the Patriot Act all about?

in my last post i gave an example of how the state "exploit[s] fear to increase the power of the state at the expense of personal liberty, and then immediately use[s] that increased power in ways other than how it was originally justified." for another especially vivid example see this graph.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

eurotrip 2011: drugs

Belgian Beer

Belgium and the US have the best beer scenes in the world as far as I'm concerned. Below is a list of the beers I took notes on, which is most of the beers I tried. I've put stars next to those I strongly recommend, and alcohol by volume in parentheses. Some notes or stories included as well.

Belgoo (6.6%) - quaffable and crisp, slightly appley.

Boon Lambic Marriage Parfait (9.9%) - smooth, sour and dry. kind of like a sherry. citrus and floral notes on the nose.

Brugge Zot - a locally brewed blonde. good, but nothing spectacular.

Cuvee de l'Ermitage (7.5%) - light and smooth, dry, fizzy. citrus, floral, pepper.

Duchesse de Bourgogne (6.2%) - like a sparkling red wine, sweet and sour, fizzy.

Gueuze Girardin 1882* - a funky delight, sour and tart. very dry.

Gueuze Tilquin (4.8%) - crisp, smooth, and tart. sour cherry.

Kasteel Rouge - cherry bomb in taste and smell. deep red colour with a pink head.

Noir de Dottignies (9%) - bitter, coffee/toasty, lightly floral. a bit watery.

Rochefort 6 - don't bother with this dubbel, just get the quad.

Rochefort 10* (11.3%) - thick and oily mouthfeel, caramel and fig taste. amazing stuff.

Timmermans Kriek (4%) - another cherry bomb.

Troubadour Magma* (9%) - outstanding Belgian IPA, on tap with a nice patio. spicy, sourdough, orangey.

Westmalle Tripel (9.5%) - smells include honey, bread, lemon and apricot. tastes like a dry white wine, peppery and bitter.

Westvleteren 12* (10.2%)- Smells of caramel, cherry, and raisins. Tastes similar, very smooth, sweet, toasty, and not very boozy. I'd been lusting after the #1 beer on beeradvocate.com's rankings for years. The Trappist monks who brew it don't do any marketing, so the only way to buy it from them is to arrange an appointment to drive to the brewery and pick up a maximum of 2 cases. So it is very rare and expensive (which probably influences the rankings). I splurged and spent 12 euros on a 330ml bottle. It was definitely outstanding, but probably not worth the cost of three bottles of the fairly similar Rochefort 10.

French Wine

I actually don't have much to say about the wine. There was lots of it, it all tasted good, and it wasn't very expensive. But I'm much pickier about beer than wine.

Dutch Drugs

At first it was weird walking through a city street and seeing and smelling lots of marijuana, but I got used to it pretty quickly. That's how the rest of the world should be. You can walk into coffeeshops all over town and order pre-rolled joints (3.5 to 8 euros, from what I saw). You can sit down in the shop to smoke, or just take them to go and smoke on the street. Mushrooms were also widely available.

Sunday, October 04, 2009

responsibly avoiding responsibility

Nina Alexander, the prosecutor who went after a grandmother who bought more cold medicine for her 3 grandchildren than the law allows one person to buy within a week, says basically: "I am incapable of distinguishing law from morality, and thus am absolved of any responsibility for anything I do that follows the letter of the law. I am a robot, programmed by the state. You wouldn't get mad at a robot, would you!?"

My favorite part was her demented nanny-state logic whereby a law that results in chaining, caging, and fining the poor old lady trying to care for her sick grandkids must be "a good law because it has had the desired effect, i.e. a reduction in meth manufacturing and meth use." By Nina's logic, a law that says anyone suspected of using meth must immediately be shot would be a good law.

As always, the lesson is that the state poses more danger to you than it prevents. A secondary lesson is that law is a religion, and a particularly pathetic one.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

burn one down

This is nice and all, but the point of drug criminalization is not to decrease dangerous drug use or protect the sweet innocent children or whatever the fuck the idiots yap about.  It has been obvious for many years that prohibition is a miserable failure at those stated goals, ergo cogito, the stated goals aren't the real ones.  They're diversions, conjured for public consumption, in service of narrow sectors of interests, force-fed by a complicit media.  

A prominent story about how one nation's decriminalization of drugs led to decreased drug abuse across the board is only relevant in The Greatest And Best Nation On The Face Of Jesus Christ's Sweet Earth to the extent that it helps the unwashed masses (1) see through the charade and (2) fight against it.  In other words, it doesn't matter.  The Portuguese are just a bunch of Euro-fags.