City shuts down teen's hot dog stand

Started by AnCap Dave, July 26, 2012, 02:56:18 PM

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QuoteIn Holland, Mich., a 13-year-old entrepreneur thought he would be able to sell hot dogs and financially help his family with the purchase of a food cart. Unfortunately, city zoning officials have shut down his business, based on an ordinance that prohibits competition to brick-and-mortar restaurants from mobile food vendors.

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Blatant corporatism, and yet statists continue to spew the same rhetoric that governments ensure "fair competition."

Apparently "fair" means "nonexistent" to them.

I know, right?
Reminds me of the people who bitch about Steam, Google, or even Standard Oil.
So, what?  By competing super awesomely, they are somehow undermining competition?  Wha--at?
"When the mob and the press and the whole world tell you to move, your job is to plant yourself like a tree beside the river of truth, and tell the whole world—'No. You move.'"
-Captain America, Amazing Spider-Man 537

They only want "fair competition" for their cronies. And "unfair competition" means anything that threatens to take business from their cronies. It's never been any other way.

You know what's tragic?

We all remember reading about aristocracies back in ye olde days.  Remember reading about nobles and thinking what collassal jerks they were?

Well people...WHERE DO THINK THEY CAME FROM!?!

They're people with political connections who lobbied for favorable laws!  It's the EXACT SAME THING!!
I recently heard that the word heretic is derived from the greek work heriticos which means "able to choose"
The more you know...

yeah, but most people are to ignorant, apathetic, or too plain stupid to genuinely learn from history.
Meh

Quote from: Lord T Hawkeye on July 26, 2012, 08:29:32 PM
You know what's tragic?

We all remember reading about aristocracies back in ye olde days.  Remember reading about nobles and thinking what collassal jerks they were?

Well people...WHERE DO THINK THEY CAME FROM!?!

They're people with political connections who lobbied for favorable laws!  It's the EXACT SAME THING!!

But...but...THAT WAS THEN THIS IS NOW!! THINGS ARE DIFFERENT NOW!!! WE LIVE IN A DEMOCRACY NOT A MONARCHY SO WE HAVE A CHOICE!!!1111
BUT THOSE HAVE A DIFFERENT NAME!!1111111ONEONEONE

Sorry, I couldn't resist.
"When the mob and the press and the whole world tell you to move, your job is to plant yourself like a tree beside the river of truth, and tell the whole world—'No. You move.'"
-Captain America, Amazing Spider-Man 537

Quote from: surhotchaperchlorome on July 27, 2012, 02:00:13 AMSorry, I couldn't resist.

can't say I blame you.

like a character from one of the Sharpe movies once said--albeit with a slightly different context:

"Democracy nor monarchy don't make no difference. Money talks, Merit walks".
Meh

An update to this story.

The family he was trying to help is now homeless

QuoteHOLLAND, Mich. — Several weeks after a city zoning officer shut down his hot dog business, 13-year-old Nathan Duszynski and his parents are homeless.

The family was hoping Nathan's hot dog cart could help them through a difficult time.  Nathan's mother, Lynette Johnson, suffers from epilepsy and his stepfather, Doug Johnson, has multiple sclerosis. Their illnesses have restricted them from finding permanent, full-time work.

The family receives about $1,300 a month in disability payments, Medicaid and food assistance. The three are having a hard time staying together. MLive confirms what the Mackinac Center learned Thursday — Nathan and his mother are staying at the Holland Rescue Mission.

"Nate and I are now in a shelter," Lynette Johnson said. "Doug can't stay with us because he takes prescription narcotics to deal with his pain and the shelter does not allow him with those kinds of drugs."

She said the situation has been stressful on the family. Lynette is afraid to be away from her husband in case she has a seizure.

Nathan wanted to help out his family by selling hot dogs from a cart he bought with money he saved. He worked out an arrangement with the owner of a local sporting goods store to sell hot dogs in the parking lot. The owner of the store thought it would be a great way to attract customers and even offered Nathan a sales commission if he got people to rent his motorized bicycles.

The city of Holland, however, shut down the business 10 minutes after it opened, informing Nathan it was in the city's commercial district where food carts not connected to downtown brick-and-motor restaurants are prohibited. The Mackinac Center's coverage of the issue has drawn national attention.

Last week, Nathan and his family made an appeal to the Holland City Council. Mayor Kurt Dykstra defended the city's ordinance, saying it was to protect downtown restaurant owners, who asked that the "success of the downtown district not be infringed upon by those who don't share in the costs of maintaining the attractiveness of that space."

A video of the mayor's comments and the latest on the family's plight will be posted soon.