Posted on 10/19/2014 11:58:47 AM PDT by Kaslin
Episode 115 of Seinfeld featured a gruff entrepreneur who ran a soup stand offering the best soup in New York City. You cant eat this soup standing up, your knees buckle, Jerry Seinfeld explained to Elaine.
Theres only one caveat — the guy who runs the place is a little temperamental, especially about the ordering procedure, Jerry said. Hes secretly referred to as the Soup Nazi because if you dont order right, He yells and you dont get your soup.
No one liked the Soup Nazi — but everyone loved his soup! Despite his grumpy, rude and domineering demeanor, the Soup Nazis recipes would command long lines out the door of his shop because he offered irresistibly delicious food at a reasonable price.
The Soup Nazi freely chose what to serve and how to serve it. His customers voted with their taste buds. Good cooking trumped bad manners.
Life recently imitated art when, in San Francisco, a restaurateur lost it in response to customers who could not order right. James Chus restaurant offered old-fashioned, conventional fare, and he got fed up with trying to satisfy every single patrons particular demands.
The last straw was a customer who said, The rule is, if we dont like it we dont have to pay, and then walked out cursing. Thats when I went poof, said Chu.
Chu temporarily closed the restaurant, posting a sign: So, yes we use MSG! So, we dont believe in organic food. And, we dont give a s--- about gluten free. There, he said it.
Instead of genuflecting to free-range, fair-trade, cruelty-free, wind-powered, non-GMO, non-transfat, gluten-free, no-MSG, crunchy-granola organic chicken, Chu cries conventional fowl. Soup Nazi and Joe the Plumber, meet James Chu, the entrepreneur of 2014.
Chu personifies the last vestige of the free-market economy in America. Its a refreshing change to see that a shred of freedom remains in a world where agents shut down a childs lemonade stand for lack of a business license, where local governments ban transfats and salts, where New York City bans large sodas, where state governments dictate the wages entrepreneurs must pay their employees, where Michelle Obama decrees Let them not eat cake at elementary school fundraisers, where government regulation runs amok and small businesses face seemingly endless job-killing bureaucratic red-tape.
It is easy to imagine nanny-state bureaucrats and politicians imposing their own views on Chu and other entrepreneurs. For now, we can celebrate Chus freedom to serve Chinese food that contains (gasp!) MSG and gluten, and we thank him for showing that, for now, the idea of America is not yet dead.
It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own interest, wrote Adam Smith. We address ourselves, not to their humanity but to their self-love, and never talk to them of our own necessities but of their advantages. If Chus customers demand MSG-free Chinese food, he can give them what they want or go out of business. But if they want MSG in their kung pao chicken, Chu is free to serve it up.
That, after all, is what the free market is all about. Entrepreneurs choose what they sell. Customers vote with their taste buds, their pocketbooks and, ultimately, their feet. We dont need government dictating what the result will be.
Our local, state and federal government has decided that food is the new sex, as Mary Eberstadt has argued. The rules being drawn around food receive some force from the fact that people are uncomfortable with how far the sexual revolution has gone — and not knowing what to do about it, they turn for increasing consolation to mining morality out of what they eat.
The hyper-regulation of food and entrepreneurs borders on obsession, with an effectiveness that exceeds that of the Puritans. But James Chu reminds us that we generally dont need laws to make choices that market forces can make on their own.
We work hard to please everyone, but we know we cant, reads Chus newest sign. So if youre hard to please, please just turn around and go somewhere else. Thanks! A morsel of freedom remains in San Francisco — at least for today.
Just try and get away with refusing to bake a wedding cake for a gay couple.
Something to chu on.
Nonsense. Mr. Trotter doesn't know what he's looking at. Mr. Chu personifies a particular marketing strategy. If his customers want free-range, fair-trade, cruelty-free, wind-powered, non-GMO, non-transfat, gluten-free, no-MSG, crunchy-granola organic chicken, they can go somewhere else.
THAT is a free market economy.
I’m conflicted:
I LOVE Mr. Chi and detest finnicky gay hippies.
But can u be totally relaxed as ChineseI knowswindlers poison you with CAT stewed in Chernobyl Sauce...?
Cuz i know what can pass as Almost Normal in SanFran sicko eateries and sidewalks, and when an Asian cook/owner is in the mix, well...
THAT GOES DOUBLE.
Eat at the Soup Nazi restuarant on 43rd St when in NYC - good soup
Big cities often get crazy entrepreneurs. I once frequented a bookshop on Lexington Avenue at about 41 St. in Manhattan called (and I kid you not) “Futon and Books.” It sold futon beds and books - although the futons were no where to be seen. But the books were marked off by ropes and you couldn’t touch them. The lesbian owner ruled the roost and took special time with businessmen to humiliate their choice of fare. The weird thing was that she had a great choice in books - but you couldn’t look at them! I wasn’t surprised when one day she closed up shop to become mail order.
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