Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Crushing the Entrepreneurial Spirit
Crushing the Entrepreneurial Spirit
Jan 31, 2026 12:29 AM

I saw Joe Carter’s post on Entrepreneurship and Poverty earlier today, and it got me thinking back to a subject that has been nagging at me for quite a while. It seems to me that starting a business is simply too hard these days, and for rather artificial reasons. But perhaps I’m just biased, and it’s not as hard as I thought? Seeking the truth, I did what any millennial would do and consulted google.

What I found was a fascinating article from John Stossel. In it, he details all the regulatory hoops he would have to jump through in order to engage in the most basic from of entrepreneurship in Americana: the lemonade stand.

It made me want to try to jump through the legal hoops required to open a simple lemonade stand in New York City. Here’s some of what one has to do:

Register as sole proprietor with the County Clerk’s Office (must be done in person)Apply to the IRS for an Employer Identification NumberComplete a 15-hr. food protection course!After the course, register for an exam that takes 1 hour. You must score 70 percent to pass. (Sample question: “What toxins are associated with the puffer fish?”) If you pass, allow three to five weeks for delivery of Food Protection Certificate.Register for sales tax Certificate of AuthorityApply for a Temporary Food Service Establishment Permit. Must bring copies of the previous documents pleted forms to the Consumer Affairs Licensing Center.

Then, at least 21 days before opening your establishment, you must arrange for an inspection with the Health Department’s Bureau of Food Safety and Community Sanitation. It takes about three weeks to get your appointment. If you pass, you can set up a business once you:

Buy a portable fire extinguisher from pany certified by the New York Fire Department and set up a contract for waste disposal.We couldn’t finish the process. Had we been able to schedule our health inspection and open my stand legally, it would have taken us 65 days.

I sold lemonade anyway. I looked dumb hawking it with my giant fire extinguisher on the table.

Months to open a lemonade stand! Imagine how disheartening this must be for non-reporters who are actually trying to open a new business. Now imagine that disappointment, but instead imagine what a child might feel for getting in trouble for failing to meet these regulations. Because that’s exactly what happened to a pair of young girls in Georgia, and it’s what prompted Stossel to try and meet all the rules. The government has a knack for crushing the entrepreneurial spirit, and it doesn’t mind starting young.

This is spiritually devastating. In “The Entrepreneurial Vocation” Father Robert Sirico refers us to the parable of the talents, where three servants are given money (talents) by their master. Two of them invest their money and make a profit for their master. The third chose to bury his money because he was fearful of making a loss. The master is outraged with the third. Among the many lessons from this parable, Father Sirico points out the moral lesson that we ought to face uncertainty in an enterprising way. It is shameful for government to obstruct this moral duty. Such obstacles encourage us to be less like the first two servants, and more like the fearful third servant.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The Rich Young Man: The Law Versus Privilege
Below is the full-length version of “The Rich Young Man: The Law Versus Privilege,” an essay published in the winter 2011 Religion & Liberty. John Kelly’s essay was shortened because of space limitations for the print issue. He was passionate about sharing the full version, which he edited himself for readers of the PowerBlog. Mr. Kelly, a financial advisor, also authored a piece in 2004 for Religion & Liberty titled “The Tithe: Land Rent to God.” — — — —...
Open Source Software and Market Competition
The traditional Drupal logo Last week I attended Drupalcon Chicago 2011. Acton Institute’s website runs the Content Management System called Drupal. It is a highly customizable website publishing tool that powers around 1.7% of the Internet. Drupal scales: you can use it for a personal website, but very large outfits use Drupal including the White House and Grammy. As you may know, open source software is free. Anyone can download the package and begin using it or view the internal...
Surging Food Prices
As a follow up to recent blog posts (here, here, and here) where rising food prices have been discussed, the most current numbers have been released. What many of us already know from visits to the grocery store is that food prices have increased dramatically. Food prices rose by 3.9 percent in the month of February, making this the largest increase since November of 1974. An article from the Associated Press explains the rise in food prices while also showing...
Material Poverty, Spiritual Poverty, and Tony Campolo
During my seminary days at Asbury Theological Seminary, Tony Campolo spoke at a chapel service and offered a litany of denunciations of greed and corporate America. However, one thing he said especially caught the attention of a professor of mine. During his talk, Campolo equated material poverty with spiritual righteousness. Later in the day during class, while the rest of the campus was still gushing over Campolo’s visit, the professor rebuked Campolo rather harshly. He said he stood with him...
Can the U.S. learn from Europe’s green mistakes?
Kenneth P. Green, of the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), recently examined green energy in Europe in an essay titled, “The Myth of Green Energy Jobs: The European Experience.” Green thoroughly analyzes the green industry in Europe while seeking to discover the reasons behind its current downward spiral. As readers discover, this is largely due to the green industry being unsustainable while heavily relying on government intervention and subsidies. Green uses the failing green industry in Europe to forewarn the United...
Five Things
It’s been awhile since I’ve done a summary post of this kind, but there’s been a fair number of things of interest over the last week or so that are worthy of a quick highlight. So here’s an edition of the aptly named “Five Things” (HT): Carl Trueman reflects on his visit to the Acton Institute. Concerned about how his Republocrat credentials e across, Trueman says, “Despite my fears that I might be heavily outgunned at Acton, the seminar actually...
Event: Catholic Education Foundation, March 25 in New York
From our friends at CEF in Rochester, N.Y.: The Catholic Education Foundation, an mitted to ensuring a bright and significant future for Catholic high schools in the United States, will be hosting its biennial, day-long celebration of Catholic secondary schools on March 25 in New York City. The theme of the event will be Catholic Education – Holistic Education: A Tribute to Pope John Paul II, Promoter of Catholic Schools. Presenters will include Sr. Mary Thomas, O.P., Principal, St. Cecilia...
Japan Quake, Military Aid, and Shane Claiborne
Waking up to the devastation today in Japan was heartbreaking. Malcolm Foster, reporting for the AP, notes: A ferocious tsunami unleashed by Japan’s biggest recorded earthquake slammed into its eastern coast Friday, killing hundreds of people as it carried away ships, cars and homes, and triggered widespread fires that burned out of control. Reporting for Reuters, Patricia Zengerle and David Morgan’s headline reads: “U.S. readies relief for quake-hit ally Japan.” From their article: The Defense Department was preparing American forces...
Green Patriarch: No Nukes
With the terrible human toll from Japan’s earthquake and tsunami catastrophe only now prehended, and the grave follow on crisis at the country’s nuclear power plants unfolding by the hour, the anti-nuclear power crowd has already begun issuing statements such as the one Greenpeace put out saying that “nuclear power cannot ever be safe.” Predictably, reports Geoffrey Lean in the Telegraph, “battle lines” are being drawn: On Saturday, some 50,000 anti-nuclear protesters formed a 27-mile human chain from Germany’s Neckarwestheim...
We Need a Place not a Prophet
The always challenging Peter Berger has a fascinating post up on the history of Bad Boll Academy: The Academy was to have two goals: to train the laity for service to society; and to be a place for free and open discussion about problems facing the society, especially between groups (such as management and labor) which did not normally meet under such conditions.This second goal was the most innovative. The Academy was not to be a place for evangelism. Nor...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved