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Kathianne
07-18-2019, 05:04 PM
This is hilarious:

https://www.insider.com/police-called-boy-selling-ice-cold-beer-sign-root-beer-2019-7


Police were called to the scene of a boy selling 'Ice Cold Beer' but found it was just a 'marketing strategy'


A child in Utah had a peculiar roadside sign. "Ice cold beer," it said, in big, bold letters.
In a Facebook post, the police in Brigham City, north of Salt Lake City, said they received several concerned calls over the lemonade stand with a "twist." But upon investigation, they found the child wasn't selling alcohol at all.
Actually, it was root beer. A closer look at the sign shows that it says "Ice cold root beer."

The Brigham City Police Department called it a "marketing strategy" — and a good one at that. The Facebook post said "business has been good" at the roadside stop.



https://abc13.com/food/brothers-12-and-13-balance-owning-bakery-and-college-classes/5397583/?fbclid=IwAR2dPL7kfD3BpAa2v3ul8XuGabuV08VokMjH4FCq fSV49qVaHYQNJh-KW5I

They've a bakery, are very good students, and have written a book for sale on Amazon!


Brothers, 12 and 13, balance owning bakery and college classes



Tuesday, July 16, 2019 3:53PMMISSOURI CITY, Texas (KTRK) -- Brothers Shane and Nigel Mushambi may only be in middle school, but they're baking up sweet success with their own business.

Shane, 13, and Nigel, 12, are the creative minds behind Two Bros. in the Kitchen (https://2brositk.com/). The brothers first started their business after winning a local baking competition three years in a row. For every cake or cupcake they sell, they donate part of the proceeds to charity.


"We like giving back to the community because the community has given a lot to us," said Shane. "We give to Fort Bend Cares and the JB Dondolo Foundation, which is trying to rebuild a hospital in Africa."

The brothers have also donated hundreds of meals to the homeless.

But baking isn't their only talent. Shane and Nigel both love math and science and use those subjects in the kitchen.

"I like to bake because it's a mix of art and a mix of science," said Shane. "You need to know how acids react to bases."

Although Shane is technically an eighth grader, he's taking college-level math and engineering courses at Houston Community College. Nigel, who's in seventh grade, is taking a pre-calculus course in the fall.


In addition to schoolwork and their business, the brothers also love to write. They just published their first book, Beyond the Kitchen: How to Cook Up Success with Life's Mistakes (https://www.amazon.com/Beyond-Kitchen-Success-Lifes-Mistakes/dp/1073755142), to inspire other young people to go for their dreams.

"It's about our failures that we've made in the kitchen and how we learned from them," said Nigel. "We just released our book last week."

"It teaches how you don't have to be perfect to succeed," said Shane. "It's okay to fail as long as you learn from it."


For more on Two Bros. in the Kitchen, click here (https://2brositk.com/).

STTAB
07-19-2019, 09:42 AM
Sadly I'm not surprised that people called the cops.

Kathianne
07-19-2019, 01:18 PM
Sadly I'm not surprised that people called the cops.

Yep, but the cops were cool. They bought some root beer and pics. Very nice!

STTAB
07-19-2019, 01:20 PM
Yep, but the cops were cool. They bought some root beer and pics. Very nice!

Cuz the kid wasn't doing anything wrong.

Well I guess they could get him for operating with a business license. And he damn well better not be offering plastic straws. Or supersized Root Beers.

Kathianne
07-19-2019, 01:54 PM
Cuz the kid wasn't doing anything wrong.

Well I guess they could get him for operating with a business license. And he damn well better not be offering plastic straws. Or supersized Root Beers.

A few weeks ago, I posted about Heinz, (Countrytime), paying the fees for any kids that wanted to run a lemonade stand and were being hassled by laws. They also have a section on how parents can help their kids learn how and work on changing local laws. All-1. running the stand. 2. learning the law and how 3. how to change it
are lessons that are of utmost importance. It is from these experience that citizens are made.

STTAB
07-19-2019, 02:18 PM
A few weeks ago, I posted about Heinz, (Countrytime), paying the fees for any kids that wanted to run a lemonade stand and were being hassled by laws. They also have a section on how parents can help their kids learn how and work on changing local laws. All-1. running the stand. 2. learning the law and how 3. how to change it
are lessons that are of utmost importance. It is from these experience that citizens are made.

I must have missed that thread, that's pretty cool.

But I thought wearing ski masks and throwing concrete milkshakes at people when they weren't looking was how you changed laws in this counry?

Kathianne
07-19-2019, 02:35 PM
I must have missed that thread, that's pretty cool.

But I thought wearing ski masks and throwing concrete milkshakes at people when they weren't looking was how you changed laws in this counry?

It's things like this post of yours that make me want to go quiet. I'm all for antifa talk, but not on a thread like this.

STTAB
07-19-2019, 02:38 PM
It's things like this post of yours that make me want to go quiet. I'm all for antifa talk, but not on a thread like this.

Oh come on, that was funny, and go read my "hey liberals suck on this thread" it's hilarious and not what you think, seriously.