Bring Scarce Resources To A Head: Beer & Wine(?)

mascale

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Feb 22, 2009
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Water Conservation is suddenly on the minds of consumer industrial professionals. In all of the world--Beer needs water. On the Central California Coast, water gets turned into wine--leaving not much water. Many would say that actually paradise is probably a lot like that, with everyone else consigned to hell.

No water, no beer: brewers race to save the ales - NBC News.com

In Paso Robles, vineyards' thirst pits growers against residents - latimes.com

A charming new concept, "Chateau Cash Flow" seems to have been created in San Luis Obispo County, California. My own grandfather thought he had grown rich--after water had come into the San Fernando Valley--and Los Angeles--100 years year ago. In legend, he had dug only the third successful well ever in the desert valley, northwest of Los Angeles. His father had been on the losing side in the Civil War, of Morgan's Raiders. Life was scarce again, in the South. A cattle drive commenced into California, then north up to Whittier--Of Quaker heritage--and then to where "Se Habla Ingles" could then be equated with a real estate boom. Where there had been only land, suddenly there was water. So grandpa moved up the coast, like many even now. William Randoph Hearst thought he had money instead, not even allegedly Tejano-speaking. He was native San Francisco home-grown. He moved onto the next ranch north, and built San Simeon, the famous Hearst Castle. Then he and Marion Davies, the famous liberal woman, could drive back to town to the Hollywood-level, $165.0 mil. estate, (valued most-pricey, even now). It had only been $100.0 mil. a few years ago. Still, it is a scarce resource, and again there is demand. Anyone sees "natural law" at work in U. S. Civilization.

The LW Gregg building third floor, of Burbank, was also not unlike the apartment life of aristocratic France, in Paris. California is of Hispanic origins. The ranch--around a central patio--was up north. The business and medical services were right there across from Burbank City Hall, starting 1925. The Hearst couple likely had their own amenities, also back in town, even then. San Simeon was ready by 1927, and kept on going.

So anyone sees the lurch of the crises, even going forward, and how some concepts in fact still apply--like from France. Surely in California, for example: The Road To Wealth and Riches is famously California Civil Service, of the patronage and wealth of L'Etat. David Frost is recently deceased, who ably was famous for having shown that even Richard Nixon understood about, "L'Etat:" "If the President says it, it is law!" The Louie's of France understood this.

"Crow, James Crow: Shaken, Not Stirred!"
(Still better able to run like hell if White Eyes play "William Tell Overture" celebrating launch against the fruit, in some kids's hair!)
 
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