Culture Mina’s World and the Line Between Representation and Tokenization - 2021 article on a "queer" coffee shop that's currently being held hostage by the trannies

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ForFor once, Sonam Parikh would like to be written about for being the best. “Not just the gay best,” Parikh says, sitting on the curb in the backyard of Mina’s World, the coffee shop that Parikh runs with their business partner Kate Egghart. “But the best.” The menu at Mina’s World — from the house-made cardamom syrup to the pea-and-tofu samosas — is what makes it notable, Parikh says. “We’re an incredible cafe with incredible recipes. We really believe in the stuff that we’re making.”

In a moment of reflection while Egghart and Parikh’s small, sweet dog Joon pads back and forth between their legs, Parikh brainstorms a headline for this story: “Check Out This Incredible Cafe — Also, This Is the Background of the People. And Can You Believe They Do This While Being This?”

Even if it’s a tad wordy, Parikh’s point is a salient one. Queer-owned food businesses like Mina’s World, where a safe, inclusive culture is prioritized and workers are paid fairly and treated with dignity, often find themselves in a double bind. Do they want to be represented as a coffee shop first and foremost, one that sells crispy spinach-and-onion pakoras, creative chai lattes, and ceramic incense holders made by local artists? Or is the cafe a queer- and trans-inclusive community space where the mission and identities of the owners are foregrounded? For that reason, “it’s interesting,” Parikh says, “that this article is running during Pride Month.”

“The line between tokenization and representation is perforated.”

It’s been a little over a year since the shop opened, smack-dab in the middle of a global pandemic, and Parikh and Egghart are still mulling over these questions. “The line between tokenization and representation is perforated. It’s hard to distinguish where it is or what it is,” Egghart explains, adding that she doesn’t think it’s for her or Parikh to decide. “I do think that representation can be a folly of some sorts. But also I wouldn’t have come out and done what I’ve done without seeing other trans people.”

In the time since their soft open, Parikh and Egghart have managed to create a vibrant queer community space — without ever having a single customer step inside. A bright yellow window and a colorful community fridge draw customers to the shop on South 52nd, but there is a walk-up window with a microphone talkbox where they can order from behind clear plastic. After Parikh lost their father to COVID-19, Egghart, Parikh, and their staff decided that the safest thing to do would be to stay closed inside until the worst of the pandemic is over.

“It seems like a lot of people have moved on from the idea that we are experiencing a global pandemic,” Parikh says. In Philadelphia, as of June 2, almost all restrictions have been lifted and businesses are now permitted to return to full indoor capacity. “Just because things look okay doesn’t mean they’re okay in a lot of communities.” Mina’s World is located a block away from Malcom X Park in the heart of West Philly, where Black and Brown people make up much of the population. “For us, selling some extra coffee just isn’t worth that risk and the potential harm it could cause.” When the time comes, the pair will include their staff in the decision to reopen.

“A lot of our leadership entails asking everybody what they think and making the decision together,” Parikh says. “Mina’s World is not the perfect workspace or a queer utopia, but we’re trying to make it as harmless as a space as possible.”

Mina’s World began as a record label and zine distributor in the thriving DIY music communities of Boston and Philadelphia. When Parikh and Egghart conceived of opening a physical space, they had wanted it to be a coffee shop that in turn supported a music venue. After four years of planning and setbacks, the pair decorated the front counter in bright yellow tiles, hired staff who understood the shop’s mission, and curated a menu founded on ethically sourced coffees and personal recipes from Parikh’s Indian and Egghart’s Korean heritage.

The cafe formally opened on February 28, 2020 — and, well, you know what happened next. Two and a half weeks later, Philly went into full lockdown and the cafe was forced to close. “I think a lot of people want us to reopen and want to come inside because it’s a cute space,” Egghart says. “There are no bathrooms close to the park and I think that’s been huge, at least for me. It feels really bad denying somebody the use of a bathroom.”

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Limiting access to the shop also limits Parikh and Egghart’s ability to dispel certain pretensions associated with coffee. Third-wave coffee culture can feel exclusive and white; Mina’s World wants to present an image that counteracts that notion. “Coffee is a luxury item, it’s a privilege,” Egghart says. “It can be gatekept or put on this pedestal.” In other words, good coffee should be accessible and not intimidating.

Much of that openness and willingness to include marginalized folks in conversations around food and coffee comes from Parikh’s parents, who emigrated to America from India in 1982. Parikh grew up in the family bodega in Brooklyn, a kid hanging out around salsa jars and sitting on stacks of cat food. “Watching them interact with our neighbors and how much of an ecosystem they created and were a part of on our little block in New York, it was really powerful,” Parikh says, tearing up. “It kind of informs how we act here.”

It’s also one of the reasons that the Mina’s World’s menu includes pakoras and samosas sourced by International Food and Spices, a South Asian grocery in Spruce Hill. Parikh wrote the recipe for tofu and pea samosas — not the usual fare at coffee shops — with their dad. “We try to bring a part of our cultures and who we are to the menu,” Egghart says. The samosas, as well as the drip coffee, cost only $2 as a way to keep the shop accessible to those who might not be able to afford Mina’s World’s specialty lattes. Much of Parikh and Egghart’s decisions are made with intentionality, even if they acknowledge that their journey so far has been a learning experience.

Outside the shop, Parikh dreams up another headline to capture what they hope to accomplish at Mina’s World. “I’ve always wanted to say, ‘Dear reader,’” Parikh says, laughing. Whether Mina’s World is a queer-inclusive community space or a coffee shop with a thoughtful menu of coffee and food, Parikh says customers should just stop by and decide for themselves. Simpler than their first suggestion, Parikh puts this headline suggestion plainly: “Dear Reader, Come Through.”

https://philly.eater.com/22517795/minas-world-west-philly-sonam-parikh-kate-egghart (A)



Fast forward to today

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https://old.reddit.com/r/philadelph...derstand_whats_going_on_with_minas/?context=8 (A)




wow maybe don't hire mentally ill people next time
 
Lol
It's funny how you always hear leftoids talk about how everything should be a worker co-opt but very rarely do those work well unless you can be Selective in hiring, which you can't since not hiring the tranny friend of a worker is not cooperation
Cooperatives do work if they are run with a set goal of building wealth for the guys involved. No horseshit, just working together with the incentive of pushing the business forward to make the lives of everyone involved better, I'm as far from a Marxist as it goes but this is a fact, there are plenty of cooperatives around that work out. It's bonkers to say otherwise, considering some traditional companies also have their fair share of incompetence, narcissistic managers fucking up the place and so on. Having some guys who like to do the same thing run a business together is something that makes sense!

What doesn't make sense is being weak like these guys are. I'm not judging them for wanting to build a queer space, fuck, be my guest, just be cool with me and I'll be cool with you. I'm judging them for doing that horseshit by the most idiotic means possible, over the stupidest possible reason! Wanting to build a good environment for workers is only viable as long as you're dealing with people who want to do their part and get treated well in return, bowing down to some assholes and just letting them walk over them is fucking pathetic!

Fuck, from what I have seen, one of the partners brought in the money while they ran the business. Even if wage theft happened, which needs to be taken with a grain of salt considering guys like these are the type to claim that merely wanting to make a profit is theft, that partner is still within their rights to sell their property in response to tard raging. It's fucking ridiculous that a small business can simply get gutted to shit over some entitled fucks deciding they own the place, even if it "gentrified" the area by bringing in jobs (oh, the horror!). These guys need to grow a fucking spine!
 
Crying about gentrification from a coffee shop is like crying about dogshit on your table when a fly lands on it.
 
Lol they're trying to raise 200k to buy the mom's share of the building and actually managed to raise 11k so far :story:

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https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-the-workers-of-minas-world (A)
Yes I saw the GFM when I checked Mina's World like two days ago. Apparently it started on June 15, the same day this article was posted.
11k out of 200k is nothing but it's no small amount of money and I'm actually surprised they were able to get that in less than a month. Something something a fool and his money.
 


Mina’s World, the West Philadelphia coffee shop that drew local and national attention as a community-oriented and LGBTQ inclusive space, has closed.

“We don’t have enough money to continue operating,” read the message posted Friday on Mina’s Instagram. “The People’s Fridge will stay in place for this moment — if we are asked to move it we find another host in West Philly.

“Thank you for the opportunity to serve you in the ways we were able to.”


Opened officially in 2020, Mina’s World had prided itself on being a safe, welcoming place for all, with a menu that embraced its owners’ immigrant family roots. Bon Appetit magazine called it “thoughtfully sourced coffee with a message.”

Its People’s Fridge, kept stocked for neighbors in need, is part of a growing community fridge movement around the city.

And part of Mina’s World’s avowed mission was also treating its employees with respect and paying them fairly.

But the closing comes with a shadow cast upon the 52nd Street-corridor cafe that was beloved by many.

In recent weeks, evidently a dispute had arisen between some of Mina’s employees and the cafe’s owners.

Sonam Parikh and Kate Egghart, partners in Mina’s, could not be reached for comment. Neither could the disgruntled employees.

While the exact nature of the dispute couldn’t be determined, it has become the source of much social media discussion, with expressions of support for both sides coming from community members.

Some of the workers have started a GoFundMe page to try to raise money to buy the building where the cafe is located. The page alleges that the current owner is seeking to sell the building “as a method of retaliating against the [workers’] collectivizing.”

In another social media post, a person identifying as E.J. Egghart and the owner of the building and mother of one of the cafe owners said that the cafe had been losing money and that she had been subsidizing it. Defending her daughter and her partner, she said they were motivated by “social justice.”
 
Mina’s World, the West Philadelphia coffee shop that drew local and national attention as a community-oriented and LGBTQ inclusive space, has closed.
In another social media post, a person identifying as E.J. Egghart and the owner of the building and mother of one of the cafe owners said that the cafe had been losing money and that she had been subsidizing it. Defending her daughter and her partner, she said they were motivated by “social justice.”
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

Yeah, we all saw it coming but that doesn't make it any less funny.
 
This article really doesn't do justice to this level of woke-eat-their-own retardation. We turn to Libs of TikTok for additional coverage:
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Archive video:


Queer-owned business shut down by employees for not being woke enough

Mina's World, a cafe in Philadelphia that prided itself in being “Queer-owned,” has officially closed its doors after a woke employee revolt. The cafe was owned by Kate Egghart and Sonam Parikh, two queer activists who started Mina’s in an effort to create an inclusive coffee shop. However, their employees have claimed Egghart and Parikh are anti-black and “gentrifiers.” Gentrifier is a woke term used to describe those who purposely contribute to the displacement of low-income families. Mina’s World was located just around the corner from Malcolm X Park in Philadelphia and employed mostly minority workers.
Ironically— prior to the allegations from employees—Parikh spoke to Bon Appetit about the opening of Mina’s World and said when she worked at different coffee shops, “white ownership neglected to protect their Black and trans employees. I knew there needed to be a space where you could have an amazingly made cup of coffee that’s not whitewashed.”


Fast forward two years and employees of Mina’s World have put out a public statement where they claimed they were suffering from a plethora of “systemic” woes as a result of the alleged gentrification including “employer opposition” and “anti-blackness.”

Employees expanded on these woes in their public “List of Grievances" which is basically a bunch of empty buzzwords to generate outrage and included no substantial evidence to back up their claims.

As if it couldn’t get any worse, the employees also demanded that the owners “redistribute the business” to them.

Egghart and Parikh responded to their employees’ demands in a hostage-style video in which they repeatedly apologized for being gentrifiers. Egghart spoke next to Parikh saying, “We’re going live as part of a radical accountability process. We’re complicit in the gentrification and anti-blackness on 52nd Street. We put our community at risk with our presence as well as our workers.”
Twitter avatar for @libsoftiktokLibs of TikTok @libsoftiktok
UPDATE: They deleted the hostage style video from Instagram which I embedded in the article. I always keep backups :)
July 6th 2022
54 Retweets333 Likes
The two owners agreed to attempt to hand over ownership of Mina’s saying, “With the guidance of the workers and Black and Brown Workers Collective, we’re trying to raise funds to buy the business and turn it over to our staff.”
The hostile takeover quickly backfired on the woke employees as the owner of the building where Mina’s World is housed listed the property for sale.

Despite the owners of Mina’s World being radically progressive, with Philly Eats even calling the cafe a “queer haven,” Egghart and Parikh were still cannibalized by the woke mob and Mina’s World has officially closed its doors for good this week.
Egghart and Parikh’s surrender to the outrage shows a point proven again and again— no matter how many times you bend the knee to the mob, you will never be able to adhere to their insatiable standards for progressive enlightenment. No matter how much of an “ally” you are, you will never be safe from becoming just another trophy head on the wall of wokeism.

Edit:
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And yet these are the type of people who want to tell everyone else how to run the economy, when they can't even keep a coffee shop open for more than a year. How long until their failure is somehow the fault of those evil straight, white capitalists?
 
People’s Fridge

Sounds commie.

But really, the food insecurity is very bad in Philly. There are people leaving boxes of groceries at bus stations.

Just don't open shops in West Philly. It's a dumpster fire with pockets of hipsters who think otherwise. Open your business in the Far Northeast where muh diversity will be low but you won't have screeching POCs demanding you hand the reigns over to them.
 
Sounds commie.

But really, the food insecurity is very bad in Philly. There are people leaving boxes of groceries at bus stations.

Just don't open shops in West Philly. It's a dumpster fire with pockets of hipsters who think otherwise. Open your business in the Far Northeast where muh diversity will be low but you won't have screeching POCs demanding you hand the reigns over to them.
Wait, why do people leave boxes of groceries at bus stations?
 
Wait, why do people leave boxes of groceries at bus stations?

Philadelphia has a very high poverty rate and a lot of homeless people. So churches and good samaritans hand out food. There was a church van driving around here giving out eggs last week. There's a church a few blocks from me that sometimes puts grocery bags outside for people to take. I've seen elderly people take them. In the poorer neighborhoods you'll often see free food signs.

It's just that when it comes to the tent city people, feeding them just encourages them to stick around and get high. There's also needles everywhere because they can't be bothered to use the dirty needle drop off boxes. Those boxes have a hand sanitizer dispenser attached.

It's just so gross here. Gentrifying the city is a waste of time. The tent city masses are going to end up taking over everywhere soon anyway. I've even seen them trying to camp up near the Northeast Airport. And that's a nice area.
 
Most recent episode of Blocked and Reported has an opening segment about the collapse of Mina’s World, nothing new really, but then right after it is a similar story about Doc Marie’s, a lesbian bar startup in Portland, OR, where after being open for just one night the staff revolted under leadership of a troon and demanded that ownership be handed over to their collective. :story:

Just in case you need more ludicrous clownworld stories about retarded coups.
 
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Lol
It's funny how you always hear leftoids talk about how everything should be a worker co-opt but very rarely do those work well unless you can be Selective in hiring, which you can't since not hiring the tranny friend of a worker is not cooperation
The funny thing is troons 'helping other troons out' in fucky ways like this is exactly the kind of mentality that led to the creation of the italian and irish mafia back in the day. I'll laugh my ass off if some woke troons one day try to go full tranny tony soprano and create their on queer mafia to shake down straight and white business owners. I mean woke mentality if 3/4 of the way there already

Say hello to my little HRT shrunken friend bigot

Snekposter said:
As if MOVE wasn't bad enough, now this? Why does Philly attract the craziest of the blacks?
Its starting to look like the liberty bell isn't the only thing cracked in philly these days

These troons are starting to remind me of a local hippie couple that bought out a corner store from an old guy who was retiring, using money they grifted from one of their mothers who had dementia. tldr the guy trooned out a few months later, tried to start a bike (as in actual bike not motorcycle) repair shop in the middle of redneck nowhere. Blamed all the local white rednecks when that didn't work. Then got the bright idea to solicit pennies from everyone so that they could make a 'penny floor' by literally just putting a layer of pennies on the floor and running over it with a rented floor waxer (this is how they both thought hardwood floors got that shiny lacquered layer on top of them) this went about as well as you are probably thinking - pennies ended up all over the place, some stuck to the floor in small piles of hardened floor wax. Then they tried to start a restaurant in the back room, completely unaware of how to do so, with no skill at cooking and no understanding that you need a license to do that. It got shut down in a hurry by the health department after making multiple sick. They then tried to cater to the local (completely and utterly non-existent) hippy commune types by converting the store over to selling nothing but crafts, overpriced granola, herbal tea and beef jerky. This was combined with stopping the sale of gas because its 'bad for the environment' which lasted a couple months until they somehow got it in their heads that the jerky had to be thrown out because it 'had been out of the fridge too long' (its fucking jerky, it isn't supposed to be in the fridge and keeps for a hell of alot longer than that) the troon also came to the sudden realization that the appropriately named beef jerky actually had beef in it, previously believing that it was some kind of name brand for a plant based beef jerky rather than actual meat. Shortly after this they got robbed by some local teens in the middle of the night, who proceeded to steal what little they had in their safe but also their entire medicine cabinet (which apparently involved them using the customer bathroom to store their various medications) surprise surprise, said teens not only stole a bunch of opiates but the troons HRT as well. They refused to even report the incident to police because they were upstairs the entire time and watched the thieves enter and leave through an upstairs window and didn't want to involve the cops because one of them was some black crackhead and that would totally be racist. Instead they put a sign next to the cash register explaining what happened and asked for donations. But the best part was how the store ended - it got shut down and the couple massively fined and prosecuted when one of the local mounties stopped in for non existent gas (they just stopped selling it, without removing anything or putting up a notice outside that it wasn't being sold) and when he saw the sign, asked about it and looked around a bit out of suspicion as to why it wasn't reported.....only to notice a box behind the register that was full of cartons of illegal native cigarettes, of which you get fined $100 per cigarette if you get busted with them. From what I heard the troon went apeshit and screamed at the cop like a lunatic, calling him a capitalist pig and all the usual antifa type ranting

The best part? They went bankrupt as a result, the store went back up for sale and the old guy bought it back for a fraction of what he originally got from selling it, then flipped it immediately and bought a really nice boat for his retirement

Point is thats exactly the kind of insanity I expect from these idiot employees

Constellationzero said:
Not pictured, thereby not centering, the People's Fridge:
Thats giving off some serious lucas werner vibes
 
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