Beer Mat Bankruptcy

Trouble is brewing according to news from Spiegel Online. We may soon notice a lack of beer mats:

…the economic crisis is threatening the beer mat — and unnerving its fans. The world’s biggest beer mat company, Katz Group, has declared itself bankrupt. Tucked away in Weisenbach in the south-west of Germany, Katz Group, which was founded as a sawmill in 1716, had been in the beer mat business since 1903. Katz International Coasters controlled around two-thirds of the European market and 97 percent of the US market.

It seems they were a form of advertising that started in 1880. The decline after a hundred strong years is not exactly a bad run, and seems to coincide with the decline in other print advertising. Interesting that there was no competition in America.

Jin Ling Smuggling

Every month since 2004, the market research institute Ispos has collected some 12,000 discarded cigarette packs from 24 garbage collection points in Germany for analysis. This led to the discovery that the eighth most popular brand of cigarettes in Germany is actually Jin Ling, which is not legally available. $1 billion worth is smuggled in from Eastern Europe each year and is the second most popular brand in Berlin, according to Der Spiegel. Although cigarette consumption has declined in Germany, smuggling has increased, suggesting anti-smoking taxation is shifting consumers to illegal supplies.

German political violence rise

Germany reports they have seen more politically-motivated violence.

A sharp rise in the number of crimes committed by right-wing extremists drove the number of politically motivated offences in Germany to a record high last year, the interior ministry said on Monday.

The number of such offences rose by 11.4 percent to 31,801 – the highest level since the statistics were first collected in 2001. Of the total, 20,422 were linked to right-wing extremists, including violent attacks that killed two people.

Interior Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble described the figures as “worrying”, and urged people to support the government’s efforts to crack down on extremism and intolerance.

Passau has always been known for being a hotbed of right-wing extremists and the article mentions their police chief was recently attacked.

The German news contrasts with the American DHS report. Aside from the fact that the DHS mentioned a link to veterans returning from war, which set off a lot of “don’t make suggestions about the veterans” criticism, the German report differs in that it suggests a statistical and empirical method to measure and predict threats. The DHS report seemed so speculative and anecdotal, critics clearly found easy pickings. I wonder what they would say about the German findings.

In a related story, the US has added a domestic left-wing extremist to the FBI “Most Wanted” terror suspect list for the first time:

Daniel Andreas San Diego, a 31-year-old computer specialist from Berkeley, Calif., is wanted for the 2003 bombings of two corporate offices in California.

Authorities describe San Diego as an animal rights activist who turned to bomb attacks and say he has tattoo that proclaims, “It only takes a spark.”

The report points out a new reward of $250,000 on the wanted poster is five times greater than other domestic terrorists. Here are some more interesting tidbits:

In the past, he has worked as a computer network specialist and with the operating system LINUX. San Diego wears eyeglasses, is skilled at sailing, and has traveled internationally.

Linux, eyeglasses, sailing and travel? Uh, that’s a familiar profile…