Sinopse
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.
Episódios
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483: Are we seeing the end of western civilization?
28/01/2025 Duração: 31minThe boys drink and compare a Scotch and a Scottish ale, then discuss the end of western civilization. There are some disturbing signs. * Feminism and the destruction of gender roles * The death of masculinity * The celebration of obesity * Identity politics * The porn pandemic and OnlyFans * Replacing faith with materialism * The isolation in post-war suburbanism * Wokeness * The declining birth rate * The erosion of free speech * The crisis of meaning * Political polarization and tribalism * Consumer culture and the loss of authenticity * Overdependence on technology * The attack on childhood innocence Most of this is not from external threats. It's a rot from within. Why does the west hate itself so much?
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482: Trump 2.0 Day 1: Why we're so happy Biden is gone
24/01/2025 Duração: 41minThe boys drink a "Golden Age" cocktail and celebrate the end of the national nightmare. Are we celebrating the end of Biden / Harris, or the beginning of Trump? Let's start with the horrors of the Biden administration. Biden promised the rule of law, a return to norms, and a smooth transition. He did none of those things. He weaponized the justice department against his enemies (mostly Trump), shattered norms, and tried to sabotage Trump during the transition. Which only added to the rest of his sins, including ... * The Afghanistan withdrawal * Promoting wokeness, with DEI, trans-ing the kids, Title IX changes, and pushing wokeness on the military. * His shaky support for Israel * His catastrophic policies on immigration * His mental incompetence (who was running things?) * The antics of the Biden crime family * Ukraine ... and more. Trump is a sharp (and welcome) contrast. The boys discuss. And drink.
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481: Two-tiered policing and the soft bigotry of low expectations
22/01/2025 Duração: 26minThe boys drink and review Baltimore Breakfast from Oliver Brewing, then discuss a few issues from the mail bag, including two-tier policing, the soft bigotry of low expectations, and education. MarxH8tr asked about the Notting Hill event in England and why the police didn't treat bad behavior at that event the way they would at a football game. Are we supposed to hold people to different standards based on the culture they're from? If we have to accept that people from different cultures can't follow the same rules as the natives, maybe we don't want people from that culture. In response to the show on universities, GoRedskins challenged the boys to say what classes students should be taking in university. P&C discuss what a well-rounded education should look like.
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480: Why are the rich and famous such perverts?
17/01/2025 Duração: 25minThe boys drink and review a red ale from Evo, then ask why so many of the rich and powerful seem to be engaged in some form of perversion. Are perverts attracted to positions of power, or does power and privilege create conditions that lead people into perversion? What happens when there are no consequences to your actions? What happens to your moral compass when you can cut in line, be rude, skip the bill at the restaurant, and people still think you're cool? There are so many examples of people in power who seem to do horrible things. * The Catholic Abuse Crisis * Other religious organizations (Jehovah Witnesses, Southern Baptists, ultra-Orthodox Jewish communities) * School teachers may be worse * Jeffrey Epstein * Harvey Weinstein * Pedophilia in Hollywood * Perversion in the music industry * Bill Clinton * Diddy (Sean Combs) * Larry Nassar * Jerry Sandusky It seems there are a few ways to look at this. 1. People who are abusive are drawn to positions where they can abuse. 2. Once a per
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479: What's the point of the university? Have they become subversities?
14/01/2025 Duração: 35minThe boys drink and review Lucky 7 Porter from Evo, then discuss the purpose and role of universities. Why do we have so many majors in university? Why not have a basic education, then specialize at the masters and doctorate level? Early on, universities were "finishing schools for nobility." They taught how to think critically, how to communicate, how to be a cultured person, and how to fit in with the rest of European society. There is a cultural good to having an educated population, which is why we provide publicly funded education. Many of the universities were originally founded to train preachers and pious, civic-minded people. They've changed their emphasis over time. They still want to train people to be good citizens, but they've lost the concept of virtue and a common culture with common values. Often the universties are a hotbed of hostility towards our culture. They've become "subversities." There used to be a common understanding of "the good." There isn't anymore. The boys then discuss the
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478: The Trump effect takes over America and the world
10/01/2025 Duração: 39minP&C drink a well-aged bourbon barrel stout from Goose Island to celebrate the general effect Trump is already having on the culture. In recent news, Mark Zuckerberg announced a big change in the way Meta will monitor and censor content. It's a huge step in the right direction. The Trump effect goes further. Before even taking office, Trump is pushing things in the right direction, including ... His approval rating is higher than it's ever been. Tucker Carlson gave a great speech about how the spell has been broken. The left used to tell us that all polite, right-thinking people thought a certain way. Now we know that's not true. We see more foreign investments in the U.S. - Softbank Grop has pledged to invest $100 billion in U.S. projects. (Trump asked for $200 billion on live TV.) - DAMAC Properties plans to invest at least $20 billion in U.S. data centers - Adani Group plans to invest $10 billion in U.S. energy security and infrastructure. Steve Madden announced that they're slowing manufacturin
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477: What's the difference between domestication and GMO?
09/01/2025 Duração: 37minP&C drink and review a "special lager," then discuss the domestication of plants and animals, and how that differs from genetically modified food. Dogs were domesticated about 18,000 years ago. Plants were domesticated about 10,000 years ago. Goats, sheep, and chickens might have been domesticated about 8,000 years ago. The farm animals we have today are very different from the original stock they were taken from. Domestication raises some interesting questions, like what characteristics make an animal domesticatable? E.g., why do we have domestic horses but not domestic zebras? It's not just animals. Most of the food we eat has been modified from its wild origin. The apples, carrots, corn and such that we eat are very different from the wild plants they came from. The same applies on the animal side to sheep, cows, pigs, goats, and such. If these plants and animals were modified from their "natural" state, why is this different from genetically modified organisms? The boys discuss domestication and
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476: Why can't we marry our cousins?
08/01/2025 Duração: 35minThe boys drink and review a light dopplebock from Schlaffly then discuss the cultural relevance of cousin marriage. The England parliament has recently started debating whether to prohibit cousin marriage, which P&C thought was already against the law. Apparently not -- not in England, and not in all the states. The increase in Muslims in England has made this a big issue. In Pakistan, up to 60 percent of marriages are to first cousins. In England, while British Pakistanis accounted for 3.4 percent of all births, they had 30 percent of all children with recessive disorders. It's become a public health issue, but it's also a "sensitive issue." The larger issue with cousin marriages is the difference between clan-based societies -- where affiliations are based on family relations -- and western societies -- where affiliations are based on other factors. Banning cousin marriages in the west created high-trust societies that were not based on family relationships. By contrast, many dysfunctional countrie
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475: Historical juxtapositions and amusing coincidences from history.
08/01/2025 Duração: 29minP&C drink and review a piney IPA, then discuss strange juxtapositions in history. Did you know ... * George Washington didn't know about dinosaurs. * Sharks are older than trees. * The 10th president of the U.S. has a grandson who is alive today. * Woolly mammoths were still alive while the Egyptians were building the pyramids. * The Oregon Trail was first used the same year the fax machine was invented. * The University of Oxford is older than the Aztec Empire. * The guillotine was still France's official method of execution when Star Wars debuted. * The Roman Empire fell only 40 years before Christopher Columbus landed in the Americas. * The Great Pyramid was older to the Romans than the Romans are to us. And more ... Join us for this fun review of strange coincidences and connections in history.
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474: Population decline? Is that the new threat to humanity?
06/01/2025 Duração: 36minThe boys drink and review an English Mild from Schaffly, then discuss different approaches to population. Pigweed starts the show with the startling facts about population and how rapidly we got from 1 billion to 8 billion so quickly -- with no apparent signs of stopping. Malthus raised the concern that population can increase geometrically, but food production increases arithmetically, and predicted widespread starvation. In fact, food production skyrocketed, so the problem has been averted for now. Paul Erlich has been riding a similar issue for decades even though all his predictions turned out false as well. We didn't poison everything, the air is cleaner, and there has not been widespread disease and famine. The reality is more complicated. Population growth is not only slowing, but in many areas it's negative. The most recent trends indicate that population will level off in about 2050. Even if population only levels off, that still creates problems. The ratio between young and old would change dr
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473: Christmas origins, history, and traditions: Is Christmas pagan?
17/12/2024 Duração: 33minWith special guest Longinus, the boys drink and review Naked Elf by Troegs (a version of their seasonal Mad Elf), then discuss the history of all the funny traditions that make up our modern Christmas. Was Jesus really born in a manger on the 25th of December? And speaking of dates, why do the Orthodox celebrate Christmas on a different day? What did Saturnalia, the winter solstice, and Yule contribute to our Christmas traditions? How did St. Nicholas get associated with Christmas? Where did we get tree decorating, mistletoe, Yule logs, gift-giving men in fur cloaks, strange animals pulling sleighs, and the general festivity of the season? Why are "scary ghost stories" associated with Christmas? And how did Thor's goat get thrown into the mix? Why did Oliver Cromwell and the early Americans have such a problem with Christmas? Is Santa Claus really St. Nick, or is he the pagan Father Frost, or maybe Odin? The boys discuss these and other fun stories about the origin of our modern Christmas celebration.
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472: A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens -- review and comment
13/12/2024 Duração: 43minTo help you get in the holiday spirit, here's the latest edition of P&C's "shortcut to the classics." The expanded crew drinks and reviews Sam Adams' Old Fezziwig ale and discusses the Charles Dickens classic. Special guest Longinus starts the show with a brief bio of Dickens and provides some historical context to the story. The boys discuss how the book differs from the various movie versions (not much), and provide background on some of the more striking and interesting details. There are also 19th century concepts and terms we're not used to today, like the treadmill for the poor, negus and smoking bishop (which were types of punch), and forfeits, a party game. There are other little things that might have hidden meaning, like Scrooge's first name. Why "Ebenezer"? Other questions come up. * Why can't the ghost of Christmas future speak? * Why did Scrooge (and no one else) get this special chance at redemption? If you've seen one of the movies, you know the basic story, but the book is delightf
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471: How can we (should we) protect children on the internet?
13/12/2024 Duração: 28minThe boys drink and review an English IPA from Guilford Brewing, then discuss the internet, and why we allow children on the thing. People 50 years from now are going to condemn us for the way we've destroyed children's innocence by giving them access to this putrid environment. Australia recently passed a bill to restrict social media to 16 and above. That might be a good start We have to show an ID to buy beer or cigarettes, why do we allow children on the porn-infested internet. Why not a kid-friendly, open internet, and another internet where you have to sign on and demonstrate you're an adult? There are legit privacy questions, of course. Will the government -- or Apple -- have a record of what everyone does online? Those are excuses. There are solutions to this problem, we're just not trying hard enough to create them.
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470: Why did Joe Biden pardon Hunter, and was it right?
10/12/2024 Duração: 25minThe boys drink a sidecar cocktail, then discuss Joe Biden's pardon of his son Hunter. Despite repeatedly promising not to do it, Biden did what everyone knew he was going to do. At this point, everyone is now on record as not trusting the justice system. The timing of the pardon is interesting. Did he want to get it through before Kamala 25-amendmented him? Or, rather, did he want to do it before Hunter was actually sentenced? Did Biden lie about his promise not to pardon Hunter, or did he mean it and change his mind? Was the pardon self-defense? After all, Hunter could spill the beans on the Biden crime family, which could lead to lots of trouble for Joe. The pardon isn't small potatoes either. It's a blanket pardon for anything he did or could have done over an 11-year period. The pardon could backfire on Joe, since Hunter can no longer plead the 5th. The boys enjoy their cocktail and discuss all the implications.
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468: Are we entering a new era of book banning?
04/12/2024 Duração: 13minThe boys drink Right Proper Pale Ale and discuss book bans. Anne Arundel County in Maryland has become "a book sanctuary." They want "all voices, all stories, and all perspectives to be protected." Crowhill calls it out as a flat lie and virtue signalling. These same people (or their intellectual fellow travelers) have been in favor of censorship on social media. Why is the library any different? Should we make a distinction between what children can access and what adults can access? A big part of the problem is the misuse of the word "banned." You're not banning a book if you choose not to stock it at the local library. You're not banning a book if you believe children's story hour shouldn't include child pornography. At the local library there are tables full of "banned books." They're so banned that they have a prominent place at the front of the library. Are these "sanctuary libraries" going to include Mein Kampt, books on how to make your own suicide vests, "My Favorite Lynchings"? The rhetoric i
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467: Does abortion qualify as "healthcare"?
03/12/2024 Duração: 16minWhile drinking a local stout, the boys ask whether abortion is really healthcare and then discuss that and related issues. Healthcare is generally understood as the maintenance or improvement of health through prevention, diagnosis, treatment, or management of illness, injury, and other physical or mental impairments. How does abortion fit in with that? Pigweed and Crowhill evaluate the reality against the propaganda and the pro-choice slogans. Is it really "my body, my choice"? Do people really want to affirm Roe v. Wade? Is it actually a "conversation with my doctor"? "Keep your laws off my body!" Is that a legit legal standard? So where should we draw the line? When does a fetus become a human with protected rights?
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466: What can we expect from Trump's new administration?
29/11/2024 Duração: 41minThe boys drink and review a festive, Christmas beer, then discuss Trump's selections for his cabinet and what we might expect from them. Nazi Germany, of course. And fascism. And the end of democracy. But beyond that .... As of the time of the podcast, Trump has chosen ... Marco Rubio for Secretary of State Pete Hegseth for Secretary of Defense Matt Gaetz for Attorney General (although he withdrew) Doug Burgum for Secretary of the Interior Howard Lutnick for Commerce Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for HHS Sean Duffy for Transportation Chris Wright for Energy Linda McMahon for Education Doug Collins for Veterans Affairs Kristi Noem for Homeland Security Other key positions include ... Lee Zeldin for EPA Elisa Stefanik for the UN Mike Huckabee as Ambassador to Israel Tilsi Gabbard as Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe for CIA Tom Homan as "Border Czar" ... and a few others. He's also asked Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy to head a new "Department of Government Efficiency." Remember t
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465: Is Scientology a religion, a cult, or science fiction?
21/11/2024 Duração: 35minThe boys drink and review Sierra Nevada's Cold IPA, then discuss Scientology. If you had your choice, would you rather your child be woke or a scientologist? It's a hard choice. Pigweed starts the discussion with a bio of L. Ron Hubbard, the founder / creator of both Dianetics and its later manifestation, Scientology. He was one of the most prolific authors in history, with as many as 1,000 titles. The distinguishing factors of Scientology include ... * The reactive vs. the analytical mind. The reactive mind stores painful traumatic memories called “engrams.” You find these through “auditing.” Once you get rid of the reactive mind you’re “clear.” * Auditing is done with the E-meter, which is essentially a galvanometer. * Opposition to Psychiatry and Psychology are flawed because they focus on symptoms rather than addressing the underlying problem of engrams. * Focus on self-empowerment and personal responsibility * Bridge to total freedom * Thetans and spiritual identity. * Survival as a core drive
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464: Do you really need to pay income tax?
21/11/2024 Duração: 31minThe boys drink and review "Raised by Wolves" from Right Proper brewing, then wonder if they're suckers for paying their income taxes when other people seem to get away with not filing! They start by steelmanning the arguments against the income tax, which include ... * The "sovereign citizen" idea * Questions about the ratification of the 16th Amendment * That it's a violation of the constitution's original intent * The "voluntary compliance" language * That the income tax was not intended to apply to everyone Pigweed and Crowhill examine these arguments and give their analysis. Remember to visit us at https://www.pigweedandcrowhill.com/, and write to the show at [email protected]
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463: Why are public schools failing so miserably?
19/11/2024 Duração: 35minBroadcasting from the Royal Oak pub, the boys drink and review Crowhill's homebrewed porter then discuss the failure of our government-run schools and the American education system. Over the last 40 years we've had an increased role in education by both governments and unions, we've spent more and more on education, but results are worse and worse. Why? Private schools that spend far less per student get better educational outcomes, and homeschoolers -- who spend very little -- frequently outperform private schools. At the same time, we keep hearing that teachers aren't being payed enough. Okay, so where is all this money going? It's going to administrators. The boys review some statistics and discuss possible remedies.