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cheers and jeers for 2012Vandalism, forgery, nudity, armageddon the year in drink went down with a few bracing kicks. (That's $20 million total if you're counting.) In an act that shook the wine world, a vandal broke into cellars owned by Gianfranco Soldera several weeks ago and opened the taps on all the Brunello di Montalcino casks, letting six harvests' worth of maturing wine run horrifyingly into the drains. According to a police report cited by Italian newspaper Corriere Fiorentino, Andrea Di Gisi, 39, may have been motivated by vengeance at being denied a small apartment on the estate. Rather than calling for full scale privatization, which neither the Wine Council nor many consumers want anyway, the trade group representing 80 domestic producers would like the government to legalize independent wine stores (as opposed to corner grocers) to compete with the LCBO. It would be akin to systems already in place in British Columbia, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Nova Scotia. Prefer the shopping experience at the LCBO as many readers keep telling me they do? You'd have that option. Just don't cite your liquor board love as justification for a government monopoly. Otherwise, by that logic, you really should be advocating for the abolition of all private retailing so that the merchandising marvels at Queen's Park can corner the market in trousers, bread and electronics, too. A state run utopia!To Scottish brewery Brewmeister, which created what it claims is the world's strongest beer, weighing in at a head spinning 65 per cent alcohol by volume. Called Armageddon, it packs more punch