Sinopsis
You like beer, and you like conversation, right? Of course you do. Pigweed and Crowhill review a beer (sometimes their own homebrews) and discuss issues of the day. They try to break down serious issues into bite-sized chunks, and add some humor when possible. But it's all in good fun. Just two pals chatting over a beer.
Episodios
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221: A Retrospective on Donald Trump. P&C try to take the measure of a very unmeasured man
29/06/2022 Duración: 53minThe boys drink and review 1621 Brewery's East Bound and Brown Indian Brown Ale, then look back on Donald Trump and assess his good and bad qualities. Now that we have some distance, what can we learn about the Trump phenomenon? The boys recommend two bird's eye view perspectives to govern how we view Trump. First, there is "Donny from Queens." Second, there is the observation that the right takes Trump seriously but not literally, while the left takes him literally but not seriously. The boys review a few lists of accusations against Trump and try to parse them according to those two rules.
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220: The origins of common phrases. They might not be what you've been told. Sometimes the origins are shrouded in mystery.
29/06/2022 Duración: 46minThe boys drink and review Sweet Baby Swirl, a chocolate peanut butter white stout, by DuClaw, then discuss various common phrases of dubious origin. Close but no cigar. The whole nine yards. At the drop of a hat. Pushing the envelope. Best foot forward. Spitting image. In the nick of time. Pudding time. Beyond the pale. Jump on the bandwagon. Get off your high horse. Living high on the hog. Mad as a hatter. Toe the line. Crossing a red line. Dressed to the nines. Up to scratch. The bees knees. Apple of my eye. Therein lies the rub. Okay. Cat got your tongue. Turn a blind eye. Bit the bullet. P&C review and comment on these sayings and try to probe possible origins.
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219: The Book of Revelation. The boys delve into this mysterious, dramatic and somewhat frightening text.
29/06/2022 Duración: 49minP&C drink and review Sweet Baby Jesus, a chocolate, peanut butter porter from DuClaw, then discuss the last and possibly weirdest book in the New Testament. The Book of Revelation is often compared to a drug-induced hallucination. It's anything but. It's a very structured, organized book that ties together many prophetic themes from the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament tradition. Many themes in pop culture come from this book. The beat, and the mark of the beast. The mysterious number: 666. The four horsemen of the apocalypse. Themes about Babylon, and the whore of Babylon. Plagues. Bowls of the wrath of God. P&C go chapter by chapter and explore the major themes of the book and some of the possible meanings of the text. The overall message is that just as Jesus conquered through suffering and death, Christians are called to the same fate, and will conquer in the end.
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218: Are quotas a good idea? When do racial and sexual quotas help and when do they hurt?
29/06/2022 Duración: 50minP&C drink and review Union Brewing's Steady Eddy IPA, then discuss quotas. Quotas have become part of the landscape in many parts of our society. University admissions. Hiring. Political appointments. The boys believe that quotas undermine the accomplishments of the people they are designed to help. President Biden promised to choose a black woman as vice president, and then made the same promise for his first SCOTUS nominee. Is that good for the country? P&C expose the hypocrisy of the left in pretending to want racial, ethnic and sexual diversity on the court while opposing nominees like Janice Rogers Brown or Miquel Estrada. The NFL has also entered the game of racial and sexual quotas for coaching positions, leading to ridiculous and counter-productive measures for football.
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217: What can we learn from our dreams?
29/06/2022 Duración: 52minP&C drink and review Zelus Beer Company's "Light Into Dark" Porter, then discuss dreams and dreaming. Why do we sleep? What's the benefit of spending so many hours in an unconscious, vulnerable state? Where do dreams come from? Are they messages, or just a rehash of the day's events? The boys review theories from psychoanalysts and from modern science, and discuss what we've learned about dreams and dreaming with modern technology. They review the four stages of sleep, and when we're most likely to dream. The boys also discuss common dreams and their alleged interpretation, which raises the question, are dreams a mechanism for getting messages from our subconscious? Is it healthy to pay a lot of attention to your dreams?
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216: The rise and fall of mall culture. Suburbs and shopping malls seemed to go hand in hand
29/06/2022 Duración: 50minP&C drink and review an amber ale from Guinness, then, with special guest Longinus, discuss mall culture. Longinus gives a quick history of the development of suburbs and malls. Shopping centers evolved into department stores, and the next step was malls. They were mostly to serve the growing suburbs. Malls started popping up all over the place. Investors got involved, and malls were built as investment vehicles rather than to serve actual communities.
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215: Four Isaac Asimov Stories. The boys review Patches, What if, Nightfall, and Breeds There a Man
29/06/2022 Duración: 51minP&C drink and review a homebrewed Black Saison, then continue their "shortcut to the classics" series with a review of some of Isaac Asimov's short stories. Asimov was an amazingly prolific and wide-ranging author. This is just a taste of his impressive body of work. Patches -- The conflict and contrast between individualistic humans and a collectivist entity that seeks to liberate humans from their quarrels and conflicts. What if -- A married couple on a train meets a man with a device that can show them what would have happened if the circumstances of their life had been different. Nightfall -- A planet with constant sunlight from six suns faces the prospect of total darkness, which is predicted to have devasting psychological effects on the population. Breeds There a Man -- The essential, genius scientist in a Manhattan Project-like venture is going insane because of a strange theory about how humanity is being regulated and controlled by mysterious forces.
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214: Words ruined by the left. Words change, but these changes come with an agenda
29/06/2022 Duración: 34minP&C drink and review O'Hara's Irish Red, then find that they can't communicate. The words they try to use have taken on new and confusing meanings. Orientation. Diversity. Identity. Transition. Reassignment. Privilege. Trigger. Equity. Tolerance. Pronouns. Even the rainbow. The new definitions of these words are intended to force you to think in a different way -- to adopt a particular view of the world, and of your neighbor. The boys don't like it.
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213: Ireland and St. Patrick's Day. A brief history, plus some fun Irish facts and humor
29/06/2022 Duración: 41minThe boys drink and review O'Hara's Irish Stout, then celebrate March 17th. They do a quick review of Irish history, starting back in pre-history, through St. Patrick, the Vikings, Brian Boru and the English occupation, and up to modern times. They ask why is Ireland divided north and south, and wonder about the demise of the IRA. They also discuss the two spellings of whiskey, the potato famine, St. Patrick Day customs, Irish beer, and how much Irish blood Pigweed and Crowhill have in them.
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212: Suffering and the justice of God. What is suffering, and why does God allow it?
29/06/2022 Duración: 47minThe boys drink and review Cigar City's White Oak Jai Alai IPA, then discuss suffering. Does suffering disprove the existence of an all-powerful, perfectly good God? What is the nature of suffering, and why does it exist? What is the proper response to suffering? Why do Catholics "offer it up" when they experience suffering? Would humans be capable of enjoying a world without suffering? Don't we need obstacles to overcome? Finally, the boys discuss transhumanism, and how there might be a future in which men have been altered to eliminate all suffering.
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211: The BS and hypocrisy of corporate wokeism. Companies pretend to care to distract us from their misdeeds
29/06/2022 Duración: 54minP&C drink and review Pilsner Urquell, then discuss how businesses are using wokeness as a smokescreen to pretend to be virtuous. The boys discuss what "woke" means, then review some of the work of Vivek Ramaswami. Corporate wokeness is all a magic trick. They keep our eyes on woke BS to keep our attention away from their misdeeds. "Never mind that we use Chinese slave labor. Look at the rainbow flag on our LinkedIn profile!" Wokeness has become a substitute for religion and traditional morality for many companies. It's filling a gap created by the secularization of society.
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210: Sun Tzu and The Art of War. Does this ancient Chinese text have any relevance today?
29/06/2022 Duración: 48minP&C drink and review Pigweed's latest IPA, then discuss Sun Tzu's classic. It's an ancient book that might date back to the 6th century BC. It came out of a time when Chinese intellectuals were classifying and organizing things. While it's explicitly about war, it's often re-interpreted as a general commentary on strategic thinking. The Art of War is relevant to things in the news right now, like the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
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209: The simulated universe and God. Are we living in a simulation? What does God have to do with it?
29/06/2022 Duración: 44minThe boys drink and review another Pastryarchy offering from DuClaw, Irish Cream Dessert Stout, then wonder whether we're living in a simulation, and whether it matters. From Descartes's skepticism to Nick Bostrom's famous paper, P&C review some of the top arguments for why our world might not be what we think it is. If simulated humans can have first-person experience, we are almost certainly in a simulation. Or are we? There are interesting arguments both ways. Then the boys discuss how the simulation question relates to the God question. Does the possibility that we are in a simulated universe shed any light on God's existence?
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208: What do you want to do about global warming?
29/06/2022 Duración: 47minThe boys drink and review Still Holidazed and Confused from Hysteria Brewing, then discuss how to save the planet. P&C decide to buy in to climate alarmism (for purposes of the show) and discuss what we'd have to do to save the planet. What would have to change? If radical change is necessary, what would it look like? Most of the normal suggestions are simply window dressing -- polishing the brass on a sinking ship. If you really wanted to make a significant change, P&C give you some ideas.
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207: Food fads, "free range" chicken, farmed fish, etc.
29/06/2022 Duración: 48minThe boys drink and review a "lazy beer," then discuss food fads. Is it better to "eat local"? Are farmed fish less healthy than wild caught? Are "free range" chickens happier and healthier than others? Unfortunately, many of these things are so imprecisely defined that they're meaningless. Pigweed and Crowhill both agree with many of the goals of the people who promote some of these food fads, but when you look into them, they tend to fall apart under scrutiny.
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206: The decline of men, and why families are important
29/06/2022 Duración: 43minP&C drink and review a homebrewed red ale, then discuss families. Men are not as manly as they used to be. Testosterone has been dropping at 1% per year for decades. Men are withering away. At the same time, they have easy access to porn, and masculinity is regularly dissed. The result is that men are less interested in women and families. Families model future relationships, they provide a sense of security, they sacrifice for and nurture children, they civilize men. Getting married causes both men and women to grow up, and it affects their vision of the future in a positive way.
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205: Chivalry then and now. Society needs rules to rein in male behavior.
29/06/2022 Duración: 46minP&C drink and review Pigweed's Texas Brown Ale, then discuss the history and modern application of chivalry. The word comes from "horsemanship," and originally applied to knights. Society needs hard men who are willing to fight, but they also need these men to be decent and courteous off the battlefield. Medieval Europeans developed expectations for knightly conduct, and this turned into a code. Some knights were almost like fighting monks, and formed religious orders that regulated their conduct in war and in peace. Chivalry also regulated courtly love. How does this apply to a modern man? P&C list several ways men should be expected to behave in modern society.
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204: Multiple Personalities / Dissociative Identity Disorder
29/06/2022 Duración: 55minP&C drink and review one of Crowhill's recent homebrews, then discuss multiple personality syndrome, or, the way it's known these days, dissociative identity disorder (DID). The boys review some popular treatments of the subject, including The Three Faces of Eve, Sybil, the Billy Milligan story, and Split. Is DID real, or are people being coached (even hypnotized or drugged) into a diagnosis by their therapists? P&C have their doubts. Cases of DID always increase after a popular movie or book covers the subject. Today, there's a whole community of DID sufferers on TikTok.
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203: The infantilization of the West. We have prolonged adolescence and forgotten to expect people to grow up.
29/06/2022 Duración: 42minThe boys sip and review 1623 Brewing's Lil Sips Scottish Imperial Stout, then wonder why our society has lost the idea that people should grow up. Educated grown-ups are claiming that words are violence. That's the way a child views the world. Our culture has become so infantilized that we think we should "listen to the children." The popularity of superhero movies are an example of this attempt to freeze life in a perpetual adolescence. P&C review a list of areas in which society seems to refuse to grown up. We've come to accept arrested emotional development. Russia and China are laughing.
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202: Therapy culture. Does everything need a diagnosis?
29/06/2022 Duración: 46minP&C drink and review a single-hop IPA, then discuss therapy culture. Are we addicted to therapy? Have we redefined ourselves around our emotions? Are we all vulnerable, broken, "at risk," scarred for life? There's been an erosion of the boundary between the private and the public. Now we have TV shows where people disclose their personal issues. There's nothing more virtuous today than seeking treatment. We've demonized silence, stoicism and a stiff upper lip. Do healthy people really have to talk about themselves? Publicly?