Woman Loses Job After Confronting Man Wearing MAGA Hat in Palo Alto Starbucks

Send some to this lady also.


Texas woman threatens to call ICE on food truck with permit

In a video posted to YouTube, a Dallas, Texas woman is seen threatening a group working to set up their food truck.

According to Claudia Lopez, they have a permit for the truck, but an angry woman in a wrong-side-out shirt came outside to shout at them and tell them to leave. Lopez quickly turned on her phone to record the exchange, and the other woman did the same after seeing Lopez.

“Please move,” the woman told the food truck.

Another woman can be heard off camera talking about the “crazy” woman in Spanish, saying that they have permission to park in the spot.

“Go back inside,” Lopez was then heard saying.

“OK, baby girl, vamanos,” the woman said.
“I’m not your baby girl,” Lopez responded.

“I’ll call ICE,” the woman ranted.

“OK, call ICE,” Lopez shot back. She then walked back to the truck. “I don’t care who you call.”


What the hell is a food truck doing parking in what is obviously a residential neighborhood? Something is very screwy with this entire situation.
 
It can't be easy for these aging hipsters with TDS. They realize at some point that their artistic endeavors are meaningless so they find purpose and passion in politics as an outlet for their rage.

Yes, your insights on the history of lesbian basket weaving & ukulele restoration are now meaningless but cheer up.
upload_2019-4-4_15-38-33.png
 
What the hell is a food truck doing parking in what is obviously a residential neighborhood? Something is very screwy with this entire situation.
Probably a residential construction site with immigrants working at it. The food trucks and unlicensed illegal immigrants selling food out of their cars drive by these places knowing that they have a potential group of customers to sell to.
 
Probably a residential construction site with immigrants working at it. The food trucks and unlicensed illegal immigrants selling food out of their cars drive by these places knowing that they have a potential group of customers to sell to.

The background appears to show an established neighborhood rather than any type of new construction.

Considering the latest trend is to use "food trucks" to cook meth I can understand some people being concerned about unusual trucks parked out front in your residential neighborhood -- but a homeowner should call the cops in this situation rather than confront the people. Note this probably is not the basis of this particular situation. I just think the lady did not want a food truck parked in front of her residential home -- which in many cities is actually against the law. She however expressed it poorly and if there was a local ordinance against it then she should simply call the cops.
 
The background appears to show an established neighborhood rather than any type of new construction.

Considering the latest trend is to use "food trucks" to cook meth I can understand some people being concerned about unusual trucks parked out front in your residential neighborhood -- but a homeowner should call the cops in this situation rather than confront the people. Note this probably is not the basis of this particular situation. I just think the lady did not want a food truck parked in front of her residential home -- which in many cities is actually against the law. She however expressed it poorly and if there was a local ordinance against it then she should simply call the cops.
I did not mean new residential construction, existing work being done. Maybe a roofing crew was out there or a landscaping crew.
 
I did not mean new residential construction, existing work being done. Maybe a roofing crew was out there or a landscaping crew.

Work being done on a single home is usually not enough financial incentive or reason to set up a food truck for the peak mid-day period. The "Mexican" food trucks I see are generally parked in locations where an entire sub-division is being built and there is plenty of demand at lunchtime (or in the morning).
 
Work being done on a single home is usually not enough financial incentive or reason to set up a food truck for the peak mid-day period. The "Mexican" food trucks I see are generally parked in locations where an entire sub-division is being built and there is plenty of demand at lunchtime (or in the morning).
It depends on what part of the country you are in and your proximity to the southern border. I've personally seen it before. I would be willing to bet (if the details ever come out) that this is the case.
 
Work being done on a single home is usually not enough financial incentive or reason to set up a food truck for the peak mid-day period. The "Mexican" food trucks I see are generally parked in locations where an entire sub-division is being built and there is plenty of demand at lunchtime (or in the morning).
Mystery solved lol, watch the video at the very beginning, I am talking about the first few seconds, pause it, do you see the backhoe and construction site there with the pile of dirt and the gravel driveway???? I win lol.
 
Mystery solved lol, watch the video at the very beginning, I am talking about the first few seconds, pause it, do you see the backhoe and construction site there with the pile of dirt and the gravel driveway???? I win lol.

Fair enough.

You know how I can determine if a food truck business is heading for closure? Location, location, location.
 
Back
Top