To: Scarpetta
Whats the rationale behind demanding the bulletproof plexiglass come down? I couldnt find it in the article.
10 posted on
11/27/2017 5:57:50 PM PST by
Drew68
To: Drew68
Whats the rationale behind demanding the bulletproof plexiglass come down? I couldnt find it in the article.Easy answer for that question. It's making it too hard for the Blacks to rob the Koreans.
15 posted on
11/27/2017 6:00:38 PM PST by
PAR35
To: Drew68
Had a tough time finding it anywhere.
http://planphilly.com/articles/2017/11/03/council-advances-bills-on-truck-cranes-vinyl-siding-stop-n-go-stores-and-slapp-suits
The problem seems to be that restaurants having liquor licenses have stopped selling\serving food, attracting unsavory characters, causing the bullet-proof glass to be put up.
STOP-N-GO-AWAY
Council's long burning crusade against so-called “stop-n-go” bars also came to a climax. These are neighborhood bars that elide the spirit, if not the
letter, of liquor license regulations requiring food for on-site consumption and seating for patrons. Councilmember Cindy Bass and others have long
denounced them as nuisances that promote public drunkenness by serving beer and occasionally shots of liquor late into the evening.
The bill seeks to regulate bathroom access, another requirement for businesses serving alcohol. Under Bass's bill, restrooms would only satisfy the public
access requirement if they were readily accessible to patrons, and not, for example, located in the back of a kitchen or other area normally
restricted to employees. She would also prohibit those seeking a large establishment license — which provides seating for 30 or more — from
erecting a physical barrier between themselves and the customers. That would effectively ban the bulletproof glass that often separates customers
from proprietors in many late-night neighborhood establishments.
“Currently, with stop-n-gos in my neighborhood, they're mostly in poor neighborhoods, mostly in ‘the hood,’ as we know it,” said Bass. “I have more stop-
n-gos in my district than I have public schools, and something is really wrong with what's happening here.”
49 posted on
11/27/2017 6:26:13 PM PST by
stylin19a
(Best.Election.Ever.)
To: Drew68
Probably the same rationale as that for the Sullivan Law in New York.
52 posted on
11/27/2017 6:31:27 PM PST by
arthurus
To: Drew68
She wants to put some controls on these small stores that she says sell booze, very little food and are the source of trouble in her district. This is the Womens Temperance Union of the modern age.
She blames these small stores for the fact that the men in her district spend a lot of their time drunk and violent.
And she thinks that if she forces the stores owners to be vulnerable to that violence that they will stop selling 40s to her constituents and those constituents will become less violent.
The Korean stores sell the booze the blacks consume the booze. If the Koreans stop selling the booze the boozers will go elsewhere to buy the booze (somebody elses neighborhood). Maybe the violence will follow them.
54 posted on
11/27/2017 6:35:46 PM PST by
Pontiac
(The welfare state must fail because it is contrary to human nature and diminishes the human spirit.L)
To: Drew68
Whats the rationale behind demanding the bulletproof plexiglass come down? I couldnt find it in the article.
Trying to get the stores to close early so they can’t sell Ripple to the local thugs late at night. Also, it’s pretty clearly a black-Korean conflict. Blacks hate Koreans who moved into their neighbors and built successful businesses. Always have.
61 posted on
11/27/2017 6:55:12 PM PST by
lodi90
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