How Disgusting Are Big Corporations?

An acquaintance wrote this article for our local PBS channel. He's a small businesses owner in San Francisco and a political liberal. Folks here are against big corporations but do people support small businesses? Here's a real life example of what excessive regulation can do.


Fees. Taxes. Red Tape.

Small business has always been a vital part of urban economies, but bar-owner Ben Bleiman says San Francisco is doing its best to bury it in fees, taxes and regulation.

Joni Mitchell once sang, “Don’t it always seem to go…that you don’t know what you got, til it’s gone.”

Imagine your favorite San Francisco neighborhood without small business. No bakery. No taqueria. No pizza parlor. No book store. Just dead storefront after dead storefront lining your community like tombstones.

I’ve owned ten bars and restaurants in SF for more than a decade, and I need you all to hear me: We are dying. North Beach has 36% storefront vacancies. In the Castro entire blocks are nearly empty. Three major restaurants closed their doors in South Beach last month. Walk down once bustling Union Street on a Thursday night at 8 pm and it’s as creepy as a zombie movie.

How’d things get so bad? It’s a boomtime, right? People blame greedy landlords and Millennial buying habits, but I don’t. I blame City Hall.

For the past decade city leaders have skyrocketed our expenses. Higher fees. Higher taxes. More legislation targeting us. And more red tape, adding to a permitting process and planning code that rival the Soviet Union in complexity and irrationality. Restaurant payrolls alone have gone up 52% in the last five years on average. You don’t need a degree in economics to know what effect that has on a mom-and-pop business.

Meanwhile, the City doesn’t live up to even its most basic responsibilities to us. The streets are filthy and dangerous. Permitting departments routinely lose our applications and refuse to return our calls. Our once-lean planning code subjects our businesses to months of public hearings and thousands of dollars of expenses.

What can small business do? We just raise our prices and pray. No wonder online retailers and blood sucking gig economy companies are eating us alive. After taxes, fees and tip, a burger and a beer at my dive bar costs $27. We have Norwegian prices without any of their social services!

It’s time City Hall started offering solutions for small business instead of more problems. No more fees or taxes that force our prices endlessly up. Streamline our permitting process and planning code. And pass legislation that boosts small business instead of destroying it.

Otherwise, the next string of vacancies may be in your neighborhood.

With a Perspective, I’m Ben Bleiman.

Ben Bleiman is a bar owner and small business advocate in San Francisco.

https://www.kqed.org/perspectives/201601139229/fees-taxes-red-tape
 
An acquaintance wrote this article for our local PBS channel. He's a small businesses owner in San Francisco and a political liberal. Folks here are against big corporations but do people support small businesses? Here's a real life example of what excessive regulation can do.


Fees. Taxes. Red Tape.

Small business has always been a vital part of urban economies, but bar-owner Ben Bleiman says San Francisco is doing its best to bury it in fees, taxes and regulation.

Joni Mitchell once sang, “Don’t it always seem to go…that you don’t know what you got, til it’s gone.”

Imagine your favorite San Francisco neighborhood without small business. No bakery. No taqueria. No pizza parlor. No book store. Just dead storefront after dead storefront lining your community like tombstones.

I’ve owned ten bars and restaurants in SF for more than a decade, and I need you all to hear me: We are dying. North Beach has 36% storefront vacancies. In the Castro entire blocks are nearly empty. Three major restaurants closed their doors in South Beach last month. Walk down once bustling Union Street on a Thursday night at 8 pm and it’s as creepy as a zombie movie.

How’d things get so bad? It’s a boomtime, right? People blame greedy landlords and Millennial buying habits, but I don’t. I blame City Hall.

For the past decade city leaders have skyrocketed our expenses. Higher fees. Higher taxes. More legislation targeting us. And more red tape, adding to a permitting process and planning code that rival the Soviet Union in complexity and irrationality. Restaurant payrolls alone have gone up 52% in the last five years on average. You don’t need a degree in economics to know what effect that has on a mom-and-pop business.

Meanwhile, the City doesn’t live up to even its most basic responsibilities to us. The streets are filthy and dangerous. Permitting departments routinely lose our applications and refuse to return our calls. Our once-lean planning code subjects our businesses to months of public hearings and thousands of dollars of expenses.

What can small business do? We just raise our prices and pray. No wonder online retailers and blood sucking gig economy companies are eating us alive. After taxes, fees and tip, a burger and a beer at my dive bar costs $27. We have Norwegian prices without any of their social services!

It’s time City Hall started offering solutions for small business instead of more problems. No more fees or taxes that force our prices endlessly up. Streamline our permitting process and planning code. And pass legislation that boosts small business instead of destroying it.

Otherwise, the next string of vacancies may be in your neighborhood.

With a Perspective, I’m Ben Bleiman.

Ben Bleiman is a bar owner and small business advocate in San Francisco.

https://www.kqed.org/perspectives/201601139229/fees-taxes-red-tape

yes. it's totally different. amazon is pissed if doesnt get special tax exemptions, meanwhile small businesses are destroyed with being held to the letter of the law. hint: big business is fine with this. it keeps out the riff raff, as they see it. "barriers to entry".
 
Those problems aren't limited to capitalism. Communist, not "socialist" nations tend to have similar problems. Large capitalist enterprises, just like large overbearing governments, tend to run roughshod over the interests of the people. That's why government regulation needs to be run by a government that is subservient to the people and not the corporations. Trump and the GOP are subservient to the corporations.

A communist nation has a socialist economic system.

When was the government ever subservient to the people?

Based on corporate campaign contributions the Democrats and Republicans seem equally friendly with the corporations.
 
A communist nation has a socialist economic system.

When was the government ever subservient to the people?

Based on corporate campaign contributions the Democrats and Republicans seem equally friendly with the corporations.

Yet there are plenty of countries that the right regards as "socialist" that don't have those problems. Here, we got government regulation of corporations because of popular demand, fueled by the damaging excesses of the corporations. As far as subservience to the corporations, at least the Democrats try to hide it and will follow policies that favor the country over the corporations. The GOP is totally subservient to the corporations.

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Yet there are plenty of countries that the right regards as "socialist" that don't have those problems. Here, we got government regulation of corporations because of popular demand, fueled by the damaging excesses of the corporations. As far as subservience to the corporations, at least the Democrats try to hide it and will follow policies that favor the country over the corporations. The GOP is totally subservient to the corporations.

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lol. globalization is the complete triumph of corporations over people, ya dumb smudge.
 
Stop begging for the government to do for you what you should be doing for yourself.

If you like Norway, Sweden, etc. so much, fucking move there. We don't need your kind here.

People like Banjofuck and Bullshit Blob apparently never heard of immigration laws.

Corporate personhood must be abolished. Corporate charters are granted by the state. If they don't operate in the public interest, they should lose their charters and assets alike.

Unfettered free enterprise is as culturally obsolete as slavery.

People who don't believe in a more comprehensive public sector and a more regulated private sector are an obstacle that requires removal.
If the Social Democrats who run the next government contemplate a purge of dumb fuck crackers, they're not stepping on my toes.

Whomever doesn't become President between Liz and Bernie will be the next Senate Majority Leader.
AOC will be the new Speaker of the House.
That's America's only hope for entering the 21st Century, albeit a couple of decades late.
 
is that what hillary told you?
What does Hillary have to do with anything? Hillary was the worst candidate that the Democrats could have nominated. Trump was actually worse, but he had a large cult following, based on being a reality TV star, and, of course, the GOP cheated. Trump has since demonstrated that he is completely unqualified to be President, but that doesn't bother his cultists in the slightest.

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