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Mass. Warns Whole Foods on Thanksgiving
AP ^
| 11/19/5
Posted on 11/19/2005 12:14:15 PM PST by SmithL
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Mass is going back to the bad-old-days of back-alley poultry.
1
posted on
11/19/2005 12:14:16 PM PST
by
SmithL
To: SmithL
But in Massachewsets it's okay to be open on Christmas Day.
2
posted on
11/19/2005 12:16:20 PM PST
by
FerdieMurphy
(For English press one. Only in America!)
To: SmithL
Must take that pilgrim's heritage awfully seriously...
To: SmithL
officials at a Whole Foods competitor, Shaw's Supermarkets, wrote him a letter asking him to block the opening
If it's already against the law, why would any opening have to be "blocked"? If they open, file charges. Shaw's is acting really childishly.
4
posted on
11/19/2005 12:17:56 PM PST
by
andyk
(Fear my strategery of misunderestimation.)
To: SmithL
I thought Blue laws were only on Sunday.
5
posted on
11/19/2005 12:18:31 PM PST
by
HuntsvilleTxVeteran
(Rush agrees with me 98.5% of the time!)
To: SmithL
Progessive Massachusetts still has 'blue laws'?
Wow, I didn't know any state still had them.
6
posted on
11/19/2005 12:19:42 PM PST
by
TomGuy
To: SmithL
Isn't Thanksgiving on Thursday? Have I missed a change to the calendar?
7
posted on
11/19/2005 12:20:09 PM PST
by
TXBubba
( Democrats: If they don't abort you then they will tax you to death.)
To: HuntsvilleTxVeteran
"I thought Blue laws were only on Sunday."
I thought so too.
8
posted on
11/19/2005 12:20:21 PM PST
by
freekitty
To: SmithL
I have been to Shaw's, and I have been to Whole Foods.
The folks at Shaws may think that they are competitors, but they're fooling themselves. Totally different class of retailing going on at the two enterprises.
9
posted on
11/19/2005 12:20:40 PM PST
by
Radix
(Wishful Thinking: A Tag Line Field which actually contains enough places to complete a serious thou)
To: SmithL
Time for groceries in the bordering states to set up some semis loaded
with Turkey Day goodies...just outside the Mass. state line.
10
posted on
11/19/2005 12:21:47 PM PST
by
VOA
To: HuntsvilleTxVeteran
But one that remains in effect requires all stores, except convenience stores and gas stations, to close on Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Day.What silliness.
11
posted on
11/19/2005 12:24:23 PM PST
by
SmithL
(There are a lot of people that hate Bush more than they hate terrorists)
To: SmithL
"We're not going to break the law, he said. "If the blue law says we'll have to be closed, we have to be closed." This is typical abject Massachusetts submission to an arbitrary and tyrannical law.
This is just the kind of authoritarian crap which should be openly defied.
12
posted on
11/19/2005 12:25:06 PM PST
by
sargon
(How could anyone have voted for the socialist, weak-on-defense fraud named John Kerry?)
To: TomGuy
Bergen County, New Jersey (which includes Paramus- the largest shopping mecca in the U.S.) doesn't allow retail sales on Sundays.
To: SmithL
This is all about using the government to limit the competition. This is the basic reason companies "donate" to politicians.
14
posted on
11/19/2005 12:27:22 PM PST
by
Mark was here
(How can they be called "Homeless" if their home is a field?.)
To: SmithL
If you can not buy food on Thanksgiving Day, are restaurants open?
To: SmithL
How come the muslims don't sue to have everything closed on Friday, and the Jews to keep everything closed on Saturday? It only seems fair in a state that seems to twist everything out of proportion in the name of fairness and equality.
16
posted on
11/19/2005 12:29:56 PM PST
by
Casloy
To: SmithL
Odd to see the homosexual-marriage state playing Puritan.
17
posted on
11/19/2005 12:30:13 PM PST
by
dighton
To: FerdieMurphy
But in Massachewsets it's okay to be open on Christmas Day.The article sez:
Many of the state's Puritan-era blue laws, passed in the 1600s to keep colonists at home or in church on Sundays, have been repealed, such as a ban of liquor sales on Sundays. But one that remains in effect requires all stores, except convenience stores and gas stations, to close on Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Day.
18
posted on
11/19/2005 12:30:35 PM PST
by
jennyp
(WHAT I'M READING NOW: Art of Unix Programming by Raymond)
To: HuntsvilleTxVeteran
It is Massachusetts. They take the First Thanksgiving was in Massachusetts fairy tale very seriously.
19
posted on
11/19/2005 12:32:28 PM PST
by
R. Scott
(Humanity i love you because when you're hard up you pawn your Intelligence to buy a drink.)
To: TomGuy
Wow, I didn't know any state still had them. Come South sometime. It is ridiculous. Talk about separation of church and state. And the funny thing is that when there is talk of change, the Baptists and Atlanta bar owners (who can serve on Sunday)are allies. Hilarious.
20
posted on
11/19/2005 12:39:33 PM PST
by
doodad
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