Anonymous wrote:I truly understand that people really like Max and have sympathy for his situation, but can't believe how many people are blinded by their emotions and refuse to acknowledge the realities of the business circumstances at hand.
Mom-and-pop shop or not, when Max entered into a lease that renews on a 5-year cycle, there were inherent risks that he should have accounted for. The biggest of these being that the lease could potentially not be renewed at the landlord's discretion. So when he made the decision to invest "tens of thousands of dollars" (not sure how accurate this number is, but it was mentioned earlier in this thread) into a custom freezer, that seems like a risky investment at best, and a short-sighted and ill-advised investment at worst, given the lease arrangement. When you don't own the property, this comes with the territory. Would you pay to upgrade the kitchen in a house or apartment that you are renting?
Max's biggest supporters have based their defense of his situation completely on emotion, without any thought of Max's responsiblity or accountability as a business owner. Why should everyone else make concessions (i.e. "Rocklands can up and move to one of the other storefronts" or "the landlords shouldn't rent to XYZ"), yet Max gets a pass on being held accountable for his own buiness judgements and decisions?
The fact that he upgraded his freezer shows he was thinking about his product and being a responsible businessman. May have been a miscalculation given the circumstances, but not exactly blowing all your dough on the lottery expecting to hit it big.
Not all of the Max supporters are supporting based solely on emotion. There is benefit to having his store exist too and Rocklands can expand in another space.