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
 
Ah, the classics. Starts with 'We don't want to be known by our identities, but we're solely marketed and motivated by idpol.' Easily summed up by that one owner (I don't care which is which) suggesting rewriting the headline - not to take out all references to them being minorites, just to move it to the end, because without it they have nothing.

Include an unsustainable business model that, of course, turns out to be financed by a rich parent. Also include covid paranoia and hiring practices that they can afford because of said rich parent.

Then the mandatory woke self-destruction, because the moment there's a problem you have to make sure only the most problematic people are to blame, as well as them being permanently miserable grifters who are never given the power, income and free time they feel they deserve.

Funny how, when you allow people who think oppression means they get to be as horrible as they want because they deserve it, and combine it with speaking your truth being far more important than speaking the truth, it ends with total destruction every time...
 
Funny how, when you allow people who think oppression means they get to be as horrible as they want because they deserve it, and combine it with speaking your truth being far more important than speaking the truth, it ends with total destruction every time...
Remember the Great Leap Forward?
 
Why is it always either a book shop or coffee shop that these qUeEr people choose to open?

Do they think it's less work or can they just not come up with anything else? Also, did they really expect to continue to sell coffee like it's the first lockdown and survive because "we so queer!"? People want to sit down and enjoy themselves, not be treated like they're infectious...
Also fanfic. They think it’ll be an IRL coffee/book shop AU.
 
You love to see it.

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Ayo gimme your shop whypipo

Oh, mom responded. Other commenters say she is of Asian descent, which explains the black rage directed at her.
AYO OLD AZN WOMEN BE KILLIN US NIGGAS
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The only safe way to own and run a small business is to employ only your actual family members. I mean one of these sorts, restaurants and cafes and shops. Not like actual manual labor, you’re completely safe from trannies and commies there.
 
The 4 "disgruntled workers" have gathered under one instragram account: MWWorkers (Archive)
Screenshot 2022-06-16 at 15-30-05 Minas World Workers's.png
The 4 links in the description are links to the instagram accounts of the 4 people behind this. Supposedly only 3 of them are trannies, but they all look like trannies to me.

The last one is a link to their Gofundme to buy the property (archive). Looks like they are pretty far behind their goal so far:
Screenshot 2022-06-16 at 16-14-03 Support the Workers of Mina’s World organized by Van Brooks.png
And considering that the building is for sale for over twice the goal, I assume it wouldn't even help if they reached it.

These are their demands:
Screenshot 2022-06-16 at 11-25-37.png Screenshot 2022-06-16 at 11-26-32.png Screenshot 2022-06-16 at 11-26-48.png Screenshot 2022-06-16 at 11-27-10.png Screenshot 2022-06-16 at 11-27-34.png Screenshot 2022-06-16 at 11-28-12.png

The owner of the building and mother of one of the trannies running the business responded to them in the comments. She's an immigrant from Korea and came to the US with nothing:
287881035_1072627840358699_9180060103319879028_n.jpg 287586327_122073673684396_7006660194919954094_n.jpg 288003040_132801326049859_2696832536077126399_n.jpg 287647737_1025363004775142_4354087421100986256_n.jpg 287630124_3375303779359457_888059280875650897_n.jpg

"Kate" is not doing dealing with this so well:



Supposedly "Kate's" mother called the cops on him when he came to beg her to give the building and business away:
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So EJ decided to sell the property, and that is apparently violence:
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"Diente Celele Franco" seems to be the craziest one of the trannies (IG)
Screenshot 2022-06-16 at 11-52-09 Diente Celele Franco.png
IG picture is even a gun. She posts stuff like this:
218035706_270029884879774_602741533503299775_n.jpg 218917944_523955328823159_1803891079845589005_n.jpg 217610276_2874059279571563_4891731496863864926_n.jpg
This is her explaining what's going on:


Nae (IG):



Seamone (IG):


Van (IG):



Some more pictures from their instagrams:
287766124_407778961410666_4363869213517318496_n.jpg 287949807_1396656794151124_2038496669374137476_n.jpg 287986945_769359187765791_4769991383952451872_n.jpg resize1.jpg 287784344_2179990215512725_5907345579583550899_n.jpg

And last, but not least...What you really didn't want to see:
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it’s pretty sad that tranny infighting and drama is considered news while kensington is going on only 20 minutes away from there.
 
This is hilarious. Absolutely prime lolcow material, I strongly encourage ongoing reporting.

Normally I am against sneering at service labor, as all labor is honorable, but it’s very funny to me that these degenerate tards think that their services as coffee making scone sellers are so irreplaceable that the owners must not only come to the table but hand over ownership of the business.

They have confused labor’s bargaining power with emotional guilt trips. The actual bargaining power of labor is that the bosses can’t run the plant without you and you’ve gotten all the workers to stand in solidarity with you.

These idiots are extremely easy to replace and demand one-way solidarity but certainly do not offer it in return, so other service workers in the area would likely feel free to take the jobs they vacate. So they have no bargaining power at all. As soon as anyone says no to their emotional terrorism, it’s all over.

I do feel bad for Korean mom. First she has to deal with her son trooning out, now this?!?
 
The entitlement reeking off these black worker-drone troons is hilarious. They're astonished that the old Korean lady won't even kiss their asses online.
Some more pictures from their instagrams:
View attachment 3393727
And this all started because some of the troons didn't let local black kids STEAL THE TIP JAR.
"If you won't give us the $425,000 building for our 'workers collective', then at least give it to us for worker housing! Wait, where are you going? BIGOT!"
 
The entitlement reeking off these black worker-drone troons is hilarious. They're astonished that the old Korean lady won't even kiss their asses online.

And this all started because some of the troons didn't let local black kids STEAL THE TIP JAR.

"If you won't give us the $425,000 building for our 'workers collective', then at least give it to us for worker housing! Wait, where are you going? BIGOT!"

Can you elaborate on the tip jar theft? If it was in a previous screenshot, I missed it, sorry.
 
What gets me is that the nogs, who have been in the country for generations, are demanding 'reparations' from the Korean immigrant whose first language isn't even English. She's everything that proves them a liar when they claim that their country is against them. Her very existence shows them up as the ridiculous, vainglorious parasites that they are. No wonder they hate her so.

Watching Van's video was bloody near impossible. He is so unbearably ugly and smug and condescending. And the way he stuck his bacteria covered fake nails in his mouth and sucked on them, pretending he was some 1930s glamorous Hollywood actress made me shudder. Not to mention that he's lecturing us on 'gentrification' and the room that he's in looks incredibly fucking gentrified!
 
What gets me is that the nogs, who have been in the country for generations, are demanding 'reparations' from the Korean immigrant whose first language isn't even English. She's everything that proves them a liar when they claim that their country is against them. Her very existence shows them up as the ridiculous, vainglorious parasites that they are. No wonder they hate her so.
Korea Mom said it best herself, become accountant, acquire wealth, buy buildings. Lady got hustle. But no, get rich through serving coffee and begging online is also a good path. :story:

If the drama continues, this has the potential to graduate out to the lolcow forum, I didn't think there would be such depth. Keep us posted @Traummaschine !
 
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