A journal of political, social, and other important, possibly even somewhat related affairs, including but not limited to: Central European Society, The European Union, HC Kometa Brno, American Politics, Film, and Beer.

25 September 2012

Supply and Demand

Well, this article has pointed out something interesting during the hard alcohol prohibition:
"Some Czechs youths choose marihuana [sic] instead of the unavailable whisky or Cuban rum." Other people are drinking griotka like never before.
If supply decreases, substitutes emerge. Simple as that.


15 September 2012

The Liquor Ban in Czech Republic

Over the past week, 19 people in the Czech Republic have died after drinking cheap alcohol that was cut with methyl alcohol in the past week or so, and officials have even started exhuming bodies of people who have died in recent days to see if they also died in this way, though it seems that none yet have died because of this. 

Right now, it appears that most of the people who died got their alcohol from little dirty 24-hour kiosks that sell liquor by the shot in little plastic cups kinda like yogurt cups. But nobody is really sure, and rumors are flying all over the place because some of the people who died (and even more who went blind) have indicated that they bought perfectly "normal" alcohol, in bottles with tax stamps. Of the people who died, the vast majority have come from areas in eastern Moravia, which is generally poorer but also has a stronger tradition of making home-made brandy. But as soon as someone in Prague died, the government leaped into gear, and 19 people have been arrested (though it's still too early to say why) in connection with distribution of methylated spirits.

Yesterday, the government issued a temporary ban effective 7pm last night on the sale of all alcohol over 40 proof. Bars, restaurants, and supermarkets were all forced to remove their stock from areas where customer could get to it, and ČSA, the main Czech airline (the Lufthansa of Bohemia!) is also not allowed to give hard alcohol to its clients. I was in a pub last night (actually 2 pubs), and both had completely removed all hard alcohol from shelves. The only things that were left were a cherry liquor, "griotka," and other sweet shots of the type that you can pour over ice cream. One of the pubs had on their menus a selection of 10-year-old scotches and liquor imported from Brazil -- but they told me that they faced severe fines and possibly prison for public endangerment if they sold it. It was surreal to see the empty shelves and refrigerators.

The methyl epidemic has dominated the news here; if you look at the pages of the biggest paper in the republic, Blesk (a tabloid), "Prohibition" is their one-word headline. But other more respectable papers, such as Mladá fronta DNES and Hospodářské noviny, have also given wall-to-wall coverage of the situation, with up-to-the-minute reports and blogs dedicated to covering the most recent statements of the Ministry of Health and  a "Q and A" about "Everything you need to know about the ban," as well as reactions from bar owners and customers, most of whom are frustrated because "we get our alcohol from a wholesaler, Makro [a Czech version of Sam's Club or Costco], and so for us, the ban really doesn't make much sense."

The sheer dominance of this topic in the Czech press, however, is interesting. It seems to me that similar things, such as an E. coli epidemic, would not so dominate public discourse in the US; at the same time, the geographical proximity and the more direct channels of distribution of alcohol here may make it more noticeable. Furthermore, it touches on the issue of the Czech Republic's shady moonshine* business, which is tolerated, particularly in Moravia, because a great deal of semi-legal distilling is of home-grown apples and plums (and the homemade stuff is usually way better than what you get in the store). It also affects products that are considerably more "social" than spinach contaminated with botulism, and gives people in the pub something to talk about.

In a country like Czech Republic, however, there are still plenty of outlets for people to enjoy a drink, as long as it's beer or wine, and so perhaps it's appropriate that the main square in Brno, Náměstí svobody, (Freedom Place), has been turned into a giant pub for the week, with the "celebration of beer" in full swing. Go figure.


* shady moonshine? Editor!

05 September 2012

Thoughts on Eastwood

So it's been beaten to a pulp, but there's an aspect of the Eastwood speech that I haven't seen anybody discuss, and I can't really figure out why no one else has talked about it. It concerns Clint's last foray into politics, and what his performance at the RNC means in light of it for the American Middle.

A few months ago, during the Super Bowl, Clint Eastwood came out and told us about how "it's halftime." A lot of GOPers were kinda mad that Eastwood had sorta "sold out," and his tough talk about the resurrection of Detroit was in some ways the beginning of the Obama re-election campaign. In retrospect, it seems that a lot of political folks over-exaggerated that ad, but it also seems to me that a lot more Americans listen to Clint Eastwood than to Obama or Romney. If the last time Clint graced your TV screen was at the Super Bowl, and then the next thing is the performance at the RNC, I think there's a bit of continuity there, and people will nod and agree with him in a way that they won't for the slick politicians.

People -- Democrats and Republicans alike -- want Detroit to succeed, while at the same time remaining highly skeptical about the bailouts (and the bailout culture) of the current administration. In this respect, Eastwood has kept his finger on the pulse of the American Middle, and given it a voice that politicians can't emulate. When he says, "it's time to let him go," people hear their boss (or themselves) making the the same tough decision about that guy who doesn't show up on time, or has been given just a bit more responsibility than he can handle. And everybody who lives in the American Middle hanging around the water cooler knows why that guy's being fired, and why it's the right decision, and it doesn't mean that the guy's bad, just not the right fit for the company. And it's kind of a drag, but it's the way it has to be.

Politicians simply can't make the same appeal. When Romney fires people, it's scary, and he comes off as a jerk. When Clint Eastwood fires you, you know you've done something to deserve it, especially after he's given you the benefit of the doubt in Detroit. The red meat in the performance (which, the more I watch it, the more convinced I am that it was meticulously scripted, rather than Eastwood being old, confused, and crazy) tarnished Obama's halo; the knockout punch was the voice of the embattled small-business owner, trying to let Obama down as politely as possible. It was a great move for the Romney team, which followed it up with a visit to Louisiana the next day. If they keep this sort of thing up, they may actually win this thing.