🍻😎 BEER SAVES A WISCONSIN TOWN! — “Good Old Potosi’s” Comeback! 🍺 — Maggie Vespa Reports For NBC TV!

Maggie Vespa
NBC’s Maggie Vespa enjoys “on-site” interview with David Fritz, President of the Potosi Brewery Foundation.

https://www.today.com/video/small-wisconsin-town-is-revitalized-by-potosi-brewery-s-revival-210757701517

May 12, 2024

The small town of Potosi, Wisconsin, has been given a second wind after the revival of its historic brewery that is the pride of the community and delivering the taste of a comeback. NBC’s Maggie Vespa reports in this week’s Sunday Spotlight.

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Nice assignment, Maggie!  See the complete video at the above link.

“Good Old Potosi” was on the “low-budget shelf” at Mid-City Beer & Liquor in Appleton, Wisconsin when I attended Lawrence University. Their slogan was “Have You Had Your Potosi Today?” My buddies and I at the Sig Ep House quaffed a few during our time in the “community of scholars.” Little did anyone suspect that it would someday become a “cult favorite” that would prove economically significant!

 

Potosi
“Have you had your Potosi today?” — Historic Potosi Beer Matchbook Cover

The original Potosi Brewery closed its doors in 1972, following our graduation, but obviously unrelated. Cathy and I drove past the then-functioning brewery on camping trips along the Great River Road during my time in Law School.

I also recollect that my Grandmother Clara’s sister, Lydia, was friendly with members of the Schumacher Family that ran the brewery in the 20th Century. 

🇺🇸 Due Process Forever!

PWS

05-12-24

Paul Fanlund In The Cap Times (Madison, WI): The Demise Of Experts?

http://host.madison.com/ct/opinion/column/paul_fanlund/paul-fanlund-are-we-facing-the-death-of-expertise/article_59e56bea-1af1-5d13-a100-79bd2cc46607.html

“I was in the lobby at the car wash, killing time, when I noticed a birthday card on sale depicting the U.S. Capitol dome with these words: “For a relaxing birthday, take a tip from Congress.” The answer inside was predictable: “Do nothing.”

Yes, to many, politicians are uniformly worthy of scorn. The card brought to mind a passage I had just read in a long essay in the magazine Foreign Affairs.

“Americans have developed increasingly unrealistic expectations of what their political and economic systems can provide,” wrote Tom Nichols, “and this sense of entitlement fuels continual disappointment and anger.

“When people are told that ending poverty or preventing terrorism or stimulating economic growth is a lot harder than it looks, they roll their eyes. Unable to comprehend all the complexity around them, they choose instead to comprehend almost none of it and then sullenly blame elites for seizing control of their lives.”

That’s a tidy if unflattering take on today’s populism: Droves of regular, hard-working taxpayers losing faith in government to address their problems or even operate honestly. It’s a complaint rooted in the Watergate era, one that gained currency and momentum through the years and today has begat President Donald Trump.

Hand-wringing around that trend is not new, but Nichols’ principal theme struck me as even more worrisome under this headline: “How America Lost Faith in Expertise.” Nichols is a professor of national security affairs at the U.S. Naval War College and adapted his essay from his new book on the same subject titled “The Death of Expertise: The Campaign Against Established Knowledge and Why It Matters.”

To illustrate his thesis via anecdote, Nichols described a poll after Russia invaded Crimea in 2014 asking respondents to locate Ukraine on a map. Only one in six could, but that didn’t stop those who thought the country was in South America or Australia from being more likely than average to support military intervention. Pause on that: “I don’t know where it is, but let’s send troops.”

Such attitudes are becoming commonplace, Nichols wrote. “It’s not just that people don’t know a lot about science or politics or geography. They don’t, but that’s an old problem.

“The bigger concern today is that Americans have reached a point where ignorance — at least regarding what is generally considered established knowledge in public policy — is seen as an actual virtue. To reject the advice of experts is to assert autonomy, a way for Americans to demonstrate their independence from nefarious elites — and insulate their increasingly fragile egos from ever being told they’re wrong.”

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Read the complete article at the link.

PWS

02/05/17