Thursday, June 30, 2011

Russian River Wins Again!

The American Homebrewers Association has released their ninth annual list of Top 50 Beers In America.

For the third year in a row, Pliny the Elder by Russian River tops the list of mostly hop-centric American brews.

Photo by Beer Drinker Rob at DailyBeerReview.com.
http://www.dailybeerreview.com/2011/03/pliny-elder.html

The AHA are clearly hopheads! For comparison, I grabbed the top 10 US-only beers from BeerPal.com.

AHA Top 10
1. Russian River Pliny the Elder
2. Bell’s Two Hearted Ale
3 (tie). Dogfish Head 90 Minute IPA
3 (tie). Founders Kentucky Breakfast Stout
5. Bell’s Hopslam
6. Stone Arrogant Bastard
7. Sierra Nevada Celebration
8 (tie). Sierra Nevada Torpedo
8 (tie). Stone Ruination
10. Sierra Nevada Pale Ale


BeerPal Top 10 (US only)
3. AleSmith Speedway Stout
6. Goose Island Bourbon County Stout
9. Stone Double Bastard
10. Dogfish Head World Wide Stout
13. Three Floyds Dreadnaught Imperial IPA
16. Stone Imperial Russian Stout
17. AleSmith YuleSmith - Summer
18. New Glarus Belgian Red
21. Bells Hopslam
22. Bells Expedition Stout


Results are here: AHA Top 50 American Beers

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Twitter Digest No. 1

A compilation of today's favorite Tweets


 Robert Scoble 

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Elvis Costello at Wolf Trap



Elvis Costello & The Imposters
Wolf Trap, Vienna
June 15th, 2011 


Living vicariously through Luise, YouTube, and Elvis Costello.com
Song-by-song recap is here: the spectacular spinning songbook the results - Yellow Press - Elvis Costello

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

236th Army Birthday


Today, June 14th, 2011, is the Army's 236th birthday. It's also the commemoration of 234 years of Old Glory. Happy birthday, Army!  And happy Flag Day, America!

The Army's present to me: ditching the black beret in favor of the patrol cap. I am so glad to be out from under that black wool sweater on a hot and humid DC summer day!

Soon, Army Staff Officers will be switching to the Army Service Uniform (ASU) from the Army Combat Uniform (ACU) as the uniform of the day in the Pentagon.

I suppose it's about time for these changes.

The black beret was created in 2001 as a symbol of the Army's planned transformation to a leaner, meaner, high-tech, and inherently joint and coalition fighting force. But the events of 9/11 caused the transformation to happen on the fly, rather than in stages, so the transformation was more of an evolution. After 9/11 we also started wearing our combat uniform in the Pentagon in lieu of the old Class B (green polyester) office attire. Wearing a combat uniform (first BDUs, then DBDUs, then ACUs) was a way of expressing solidarity with the troops in Afghanistan in 2001, and then in Iraq in 2003. The ACUs I wear to work in the Pentagon are some of the same ones I wore in Baghdad.

Now, 10 years later, we're ditching the beret and switching to office attire. I went to clothing sales and bought my short sleeve white ASU shirt and the blue pants with gold stripes.

Time for a change.


Here's a 30-second clip of Your Army: DVIDS - Video - 236th Army Birthday

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Toward a New Economics


Fritz Schumacher's (1911-1977) prophetic questions of correct scale, appropriate technology, and right livelihood intrigue me. Consider this quote from page 56:
What is the meaning of democracy, freedom, human dignity, standard of living, self-realisation, fulfillment? Is it a matter of goods, or of people? Of course it is a matter of people. But people can be themselves only in small comprehensible groups. Therefore we must learn to think in terms of an articulated structure that can cope with a multiplicity of small-scale units. If economic thinking cannot grasp this it is useless. If it cannot get beyond its vast abstractions, the national income, the rate of growth, capital / output ratio, input-output analysis, labour mobility, capital accumulation; if it cannot get beyond all this and make contact with human realities of poverty, frustration, alienation, despair, breakdown, crime, escapism, stress, congestion, ugliness, and spiritual death, then let us scrap economics and start afresh.
Schumacher, E. F. (1973 / 1999). Small is beautiful: Economics as if people mattered, 25 years later... with commentaries. Point Roberts, WA: Hartley & Marks Publisher's, Inc.

Saturday, June 11, 2011

‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off’ and its 25 contributions to pop culture lore


Twenty-five years after the release of Ferris Bueller's Day Off, a compilation of 25 contributions the movie has made to pop culture HERE.  - Celebritology 2.0 - The Washington Post

“Life moves pretty fast. If you don’t stop and look around every once in a while, you could miss it.”


Hat tip to Andy


Tuesday, June 7, 2011

5000 Views!



Congrats to MCRWS, winner of the 5000th view award!

Monday, June 6, 2011

Create your Better Life Index





The Better Life Index allows citizens to compare well-being across the 34 OECD* member countries based on 11 dimensions in the areas of material living conditions and quality of life: housing; income; jobs; community; education; environment; governance; health; life satisfaction; safety; work-life balance.


*OECD is the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development. More information is HERE

There is more to life than the cold numbers of GDP and economic statistics.
This Index allows you to compare well-being across countries, based on 11 topics the OECD has identified as essential, in the areas of material living conditions and quality of life.
See how well your country compares to the others on the dimensions you value. Create your personal BLI HERE
According to my BLI, I place higher value on the dimensions of Life Satisfaction, Health, Community, Education, and the Environment. Based on surveys and policy analysis, the countries most likely to offer a Best Life opportunity for me are Canada,  Australia, or maybe Sweden. Not surprising. That I should avoid Turkey, Mexico, or Chile was also not terribly surprising. My home country of the USA barely made the top third, behind places I had not even considered, such as Norway, Finland, and Iceland.

The take-away for me is that if I want to find my Best Life at home, I should help improve policies in under-performing areas. 

I do not understand how dimensions are defined or measured. For example, what is really meant by "Life Satisfaction?" How do we know when we have achieved it? Is my scale the same as everyone else's? Probably not. Also, an improvement in one dimension may cost more than an improvement in another dimension. I did not put a high priority on jobs. Is that because I have a job? Would I rate the dimension differently if I were unemployed and had no prospects? In any event, I like this and any attempt to look at well-being from something other than the GDP.

You can see my BLI via OECD HERE

With a hat tip to http://thespectacledbean.wordpress.com/

Am I living the right life?



Am I living the right life?  Nietzsche framed that seemingly simple question with a thought experiment: 


"If you were told that you would spend the rest of time repeating this life again, exactly as it was, how would you react?"

Hat tip to MFL!