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Sep
18
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The Daily News reports today that Keenan’s, beloved North Wildwood Irish pub, will be closed for Irish Weekend. Keenan’s? Closed for Irish Weekend? Be still my Irish heart!
The annual festival, which begins today, brings thousands to the five-mile island to do many things celebrating Irish heritage, like drinking, getting drunk and listening to Timmy Kelly (pictured) while consuming alcohol. (There are events that are about Irish heritage and non-alcoholic fun — and there’s probably a Mass, too — but I’ve never known anyone who attended them. Maybe I only know drunks.)
Keenan’s big sin was (get ready for this) serving alcohol to both a 20-year-old and an 18-year-old. Since every bar everywhere ever in the history of mankind has served underage patrons, the usual maxim with selectively-enforced laws applies: Somebody at Keenan’s pissed the wrong person off.
Keenan says the bar is constantly fighting a battle against fake IDs. He believes that his family is being punished for flaws in New Jersey’s and Pennsylvania’s licensing systems. “That hand we’ve been dealt isn’t 100 percent accurate. Yeah, we served minors. But we confiscated 175 fake IDs from Memorial Day to Labor Day,” said Keenan, 35.
“The bottom line is we have four separate violations, with a total of six underage drinkers in 10 years. Every one of them had a Pennsylvania valid ID with no dupes.”
Hey, only six underage drinkers (in a bar that takes up a whole block) in 10 years! That’s quite a record. Now that the bar is closed for Irish Weekend, no one under the age of 21 will ever drink in New Jersey again. You can lay off now, Richard Codey!
N. Wildwood’s Keenan’s shut for Irish Weekend [Daily News]
Photo by Irish Philadelphia, Creative Commons License
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dmac | 12:43 PM | 3 Comments
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Aug
18
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In the beginning, God created man and the ethyl alcohol molecule. Later, man discovered the ethyl alcohol molecule was psychoactive. In other words, he discovered how to get drunk.
Alcohol is officially endorsed by both God and Jesus, and as such it’s one of the most popular drugs in the world. But even though God and Jesus both love alcohol, some people thought it shouldn’t exist. So the U.S. banned alcohol and everything was fine except for the flagrant violation of the alcohol laws and the gang wars and the deaths from contaminated alcohol and (most importantly) the loss of tax revenue. America got rid of Prohibition and Pennsylvania founded the Liquor Control Board.
Officially, Pennsylvania hoped for the return of Prohibition, if only to shut down the saloons in Philadelphia (see, in some ways this Prohibition wasn’t about alcohol at all!). But soon the state did discover the value of the tax revenue of drunks, and now it restricts the sale of “wine and spirits” to state-owned stores that usually suck.
The most-famous alcohol tax in Pennsylvania is the Johnstown Flood Tax, originally levied at 10 percent to help the Western Pa. town recover from a 1936 flood. Now the money goes to the general fund. As you might have guessed, the rate is now 18 percent, having been raised for reasons not related to flooding in Johnstown.
Yes, the state loves alcohol revenue. It gets better: The state once banned out-of-state wineries from shipping directly to consumers in Pennsylvania, because that makes sense. But a bunch of court rulings eventually made that law unconstitutional, so now somehow the state is going to make a new law that will do the same thing and (I guess, you never know) be constitutional.
All of this is being done to “protect the children,” because allowing wineries to ship alcohol to Pennsylvania residents would make it easier for kids to get booze. They, apparently, do not have access to it now.
For more information, consult your local anti-Pennsylvania LCB bloq.
Pa. Lawmakers May Restrict Wine Shipments [AP/NBC 10]
Photo by RobotSkirts, Creative Commons license
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dmac | 12:38 PM | 1 Comment
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May
28
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Way back in 2004, NBC 10 (”The Investigators!”) broadcast a report alleging that firefighters in Colwyn, Delaware County, were operating an illegal bar, and the mayor and others were going there. Colwyn is a dry town, and Lu Ann Cahn actually said this, “Are you all above the law?” OMG IRL drama.
Then for some reason earlier this month all of Colwyn’s firefighers resigned at once. Cops also raided the “speakeasy” and killed seven members of the Hogan gang, as well as confiscating illegal video poker machines and alcohol.
Then last night the town council ended its relationship with the fire company. The head of the Colwyn Fire Co. was dramatic: “God, heaven forbid, someone gets hurt or really killed. Then it’s really going to hit the fan.” And this is also pretty much the best government plan ever:
Colwyn borough officials said the borough would have fire protection from surrounding Darby and Collingdale until they can re-open a fire company with a core of volunteer firefighters who didn’t go to the firehouse bar.
So thanks to your local media, residents of Colwyn, Pa., you no longer have a fire company. Be sure to thank NBC 10 for the service.
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dmac | 12:14 PM | 8 Comments
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May
14
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KYW 1060 reports on the latest case the Pennsylvania Supreme Court is hearing: The Sheetz convenience store chain wants to be able to sell beer at its locations.
John Rafferty (R-Chester, Montgomery Counties) is chairman of the Senate Law and Justice Committee, which oversees liquor issues. He thinks the court will rule in favor relaxing beer sales: “I have a feeling that – and this is strictly a gut feeling – that the court is going to open the windows for us, and that there will be a more liberal ruling, if you will, widening the market for selling beer.”
Making beer easier to get? Who knew Pennsylvania could even do that? Hopefully the court will rule with that “gut feeling” clause in the state constitution.
High Court Ruling Could Make Selling Beer in Pa. Easier [KYW 1060]
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dmac | 9:03 AM | 1 Comment
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May
4
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DRAFT Magazine — a magazine, apparently — recently ranked the top 10 airports for beer, and what do you know, Philadelphia International Airport ranked first, having 48 taps at several terminals.
Thanks to Jet Rock, Philly features the rare jewel of a big-selection airport bar in not one, but four terminals. The rock ‘n’ roll-themed restaurants in terminals B, C, and D pull 48 taps (24 in F) with a mix of local micros and big-brewery lagers.
The idea of a rock ‘n’ roll-themed restaurant sounds pretty terrible — ever been to Hard Rock? — but with 48 taps, there’s certain to be a beer you’ll like. It makes sense, though: Only a lot of beer could make PHL palatable.
PHL tops in hops [Food & Drinq]
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dmac | 1:56 PM | 0 Comments
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Apr
14
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The Inquirer today has a story about Pennsylvania residents illegally crossing into New Jersey and Delaware to buy liquor. Because of the tax still levied on alcohol from the 1936 Johnstown flood — which the state is apparently still devastated from — alcohol is much more expensive in the Keystone State than elsewhere.
Technically, it’s illegal to buy liquor in a neighboring state and bring it back into Pennsylvania. But how likely are you to be caught? Well, only 11 people were cited in Pennsylvania last year for illegally importing alcohol.
The manager of Total Wine and More, in Delaware, says he’s just making a living. But, hey, he doesn’t sell to Al Capone and his cronies!
“We don’t knowingly sell to speakeasies and restaurants because we don’t condone that at all,” Grunes said.
The state won’t ever repeal the law because it brings in a million billion dollars a year, which the state legislators then spend on themselves.
Crossing the border with booze not exactly a high-profile crime [Inquirer]
[Image of L.C. Bee]
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dmac | 11:32 AM | 1 Comment
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Apr
2
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Here, CBS 3 news anchor Larry Mendte introducing a class assembly I never had at my Catholic high school: A fake drunk driving accident!
Yes, administrators at Cardinal O’Hara decided to hold a pretend car crash to show students the perils of drunk driving; the students no doubt responded by saying it was only deadly (well, pretend deadly) because they staged it that way.
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dmac | 5:02 PM | 2 Comments
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Mar
17
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Hey, today is also St. Patrick’s Day, which this year is conveniently also only a few days before Easter and therefore during Holy Week, so nobody is out celebrating or drinking or anything like that.
Okay, so people have been drinking a bit. But no matter, drinking is one of our legal drugs and therefore the only harm people are doing is to themselves. And to the people they drunkenly punch. I hereby await the call for our next holiday where the main activity is taking a drug: 4/20 Day!
Oh, yeah, there’s also the Irish stuff, and the story where St. Patrick chased all the snakes out of Ireland. Hooray!
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dmac | 5:47 PM | 0 Comments
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