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THE BREWER'S CORNER
Articles and information from the AVBC brewers

 

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I, BEER THRALL
The Politics of Beer Drinking

I was on my way to get my pau hana (Hawaiian for end of work ) beer. The phone rang and I turned around to answer it. It was my editor. He wanted to let me know that this issue of American Brewer would be “the Political issue”. After we hung up I pondered that for a few minutes. I thought “there are no politics to beer, and even if there were, why should I want to think about them?” One of the things I like most about beer is that there are no “politics.” Beer doesn't care about your color, sex, creed, tax bracket, nation of origin, or sexual preference. Beer cuts across those sorts of lines. Beer brings people together. Beer is an equal opportunity enjoyer. Beer is fun. I have had beers with a myriad of people, in over a dozen different countries (well, a dozen if you count Alaska as a separate country) and often the only thing we could agree on (or even communicate to one another) was that beer was good. Beer was our common ground. Beer is apolitical.

Sitting there I had this nagging feeling. Somehow, had I missed the point? Was I unconvinced by my own arguments? I took out the dictionary:
“Political, adj., 1. of, or concerned with government. 2. having a definite governmental organization or involvement.”
Well, there you have it. As a beverage that contains alcohol—we qualify. There are probably more regulations and rules for alcohol than there are for guns. Maybe I would have to rethink my position.

I glanced over at my bookshelf, there was the CFR 27 parts 1 through 199 (almost 2 inches thick) and the “update” next to it. Yeah, we are political (hell, and that's just the federal regs. Let us not forget the state, county, and city regulations). For those of you not familiar with the CFR (the Code of Federal Regulations) it really is great stuff— reading that will put you down faster than a Quaalude with a beer chaser (not that I recommend either). Just looking at that book makes my head swim. Anyone who has ever really used it knows it is a mind-numbing exercise. I pulled it down and opened it up. Out of the 1,095 pages in the CFR 27 (parts 1 through 199) over 600 pages are devoted to alcohol and less than 150 are devoted to guns and ammo. That just seems wrong to me. Shouldn't guns be more regulated than beer? Maybe we should amend the constitution. Forget about the right to bear arms, think about the right to brew beer.

I opened the CFR at random: “Restriction on location. A brewery may not be established or operated in any dwelling, house or on board any vessel or boat, or in any building or on any premises where the revenue will be jeopardized or the effective administration of this part will be hindered.”

I guess it really is location, location, location. But ….

Why should the federal government care whether a brewery picks a bad location and doesn't make bank? Ahhhh, the money. Taxes, that makes sense. And now I am wondering, “Well, how much tax do we pay, as brewers?”

According to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, federal excise tax collections for alcoholic beverages totaled more than $8 billion in the year 2000 (that's BILLION dollars), and that's just the Fed. Then there is state, county, and sometimes even city excise taxes* on top of that. Think of all the other taxes brewers pay: business tax, sales tax, property tax, employment tax (over 14 billion in taxes annually). Then there are the allied industries like wholesalers, hop and malt suppliers, growers, retailer, bottle manufacturers .... the list is a big one. It's a whole lotta money. At least we don't have to ever worry about prohibition coming back, the government couldn't afford it.

And then, I guess, I really need to face the fact that beer does have (lord have mercy on us all) alcohol in it. It is a fact that in our society (and many others) alcohol carries with it a lot of political baggage. There is always some knuckleheaded puritan somewhere trying to pass legislation to save us all from the demon drink (Come on guys, didn't Jesus turn water into wine… or was that beer). And there is such great information put out by these people—like one of my recent favorites: "Cheap beer is a leading contributor to the spread of sexually transmitted diseases." Maybe I'm a little confused about how STDs are transmitted, but isn't there another activity that greatly contributes to catching something? I mean, really, folks if you're gonna make up facts at least make them believable.

The struggle between “drys” and “wets” continues even some 70 years after the repeal of the Volstead Act. And maybe that is beer's ultimate contribution to politics: Prohibition. By most accounts beer and the brewing trade were the targets of the temperance movement, and especially the powerful Anti-Saloon League (prior to prohibition, a large percentage of saloons were owned by brewers). The irony of Prohibition was that it didn't decrease consumption. It actually led to an increase, and it was in no small part responsible for the rise of organized crime, which, in future decades, would move from bootlegging to drug trafficking (and then came Las Vegas).

Repeal was an act of political expediency. It eliminated the bootlegger, literally overnight, and put much-needed lining back in the government pockets. Government was back in the beer business, allowing it to be sold in bodegas, saloons, grocery stores, ballparks, and taverns. And, unlike the bootlegging days, they were making damn sure they got their cut.

I guess I was being naive. Brewing is a multi-billion dollar industry. Alcohol is an intensely polarized topic. The way in which our industry is handled (or handles itself) can have a dramatic effect on people's lives (case in point; prohibition). Of course beer is political, there's no way around it, I guess. It all makes my head hurt.

And all I really wanted was to have my pau hana beer, with a few of our crew.

*check out: http://www.taxadmin.org/fta/rate/beer.html for all the state tax rates (as well as some county and city rates).

An interesting note is that the other definition of politic in my dictionary is "crafty; unscrupulous"



Fal Allen is the co-author of Barley Wine, and the former General Manager for Anderson Valley Brewing Company in Boonville, California
Home of the Legendary Boonville Beer Festival
April 19th 2003

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