Good on Ninkasi Brewing for art support.

Society needs to recognize that the creative craft brewing folks at Ninkasi Brewing in Eugene, Oregon have been doing a great job not only brewing fine IPA beers, but with their success, they are also giving back to the world in note worthy ways. Read on.

https://thefullpint.com/beer-news/ninkasi-brewing-opens-in-house-recording-studio/

I’m not going into details here, but you can certainly read about how cool the folks at Ninkasi Brewing are at the above or below links.  As a beer drinking, guitar/bass plucking, drum beating, bad singing song writer with bad hair that can make a quality music video, I personally wanted to take the time this holiday season to say ‘thank you’ for what you all do at Ninkasi. More folks should use this business model. Maximum respect Ninkasi.

http://www.ninkasibrewing.com/

Keep up the good work Team Ninkasi. Cheers.

Can we feed the starving in Africa and elsewhere? One kitchen, one love.

http://www.theguardian.com/global-development/poverty-matters/2011/jul/27/africa-potential-to-feed-world

UN rep, Kanayo Nwanze, and president of the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) seems to think it’s possible. 

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The thing that always bothers me is when we see on TV loads of food arriving by boat on a dock somewhere to feed folks and then the news cuts to shots of all kinds of starving people. My question is, why can’t the camera folks and talking heads on camera take the food they are filming at and give it to the starving people they are filming?

The Dude of Food thinks it’s time to stop sensationalistic reporting and start farming and sharing like good humans, not capitalistic robots.