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ABC78

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Chef at ritzy eatery served the worst meat to Asians

Chef at ritzy eatery served the worst meat to Asians

César Ramirez of Chef’s Table at Brooklyn Fare

The chef at a three-Michelin-star eatery in Brooklyn dictated that lesser pieces of meat be given to Asian customers and Upper West Siders, a new lawsuit charges.

César Ramirez of Chef’s Table at Brooklyn Fare — which charges a flat $255 per person plus a $50 “service charge” each — was blatant about his biases, according to the suit filed by some of his former sous chefs and servers.

He openly prohibited Asian customers from being placed too close to him at his section of the Downtown Brooklyn restaurant’s chichi counter, routinely referring to them as “s- -t people,” ex-server Emi Howard alleges in the suit.

And when it came time to distribute cuts of meat during the fusion French-Asian meal service, Asians — along with suspected Upper West Siders — were given inferior scraps, while preferred diners were given choice chunks, the suit says.

“When a large piece of meat was cut into many pieces for the guests, Defendant Ramirez instructed Ms. Howard to give the worst pieces of meat to the ‘s- -t people,’ i.e. Asian people, and to Upper West Siders,” the suit states.

When an Asian patron was once placed close to Ramirez during one of his culinary cabarets, the chef boiled over with rage at Howard, who is Asian, the document states.

“On one occasion, Ms. Howard ‘violated’ Defendant Ramirez’s discriminatory rule by seating Asian individuals close to his spot at the center of kitchen counter,” the suit states.

“In response, Defendant Ramirez subjected Ms. Howard to a wild verbal tirade.”

“Mr. Ramirez from then on took control of the seating, so that he could ensure that no Asians be sat next to his place.”

Howard and four other former employees also accuse Ramirez and owner Moe Issa of cutting them out of tips and bilking them out of overtime pay.

The plaintiffs claim in the suit that the restaurant automatically charged a 20 percent gratuity for each bill but that servers never saw a dime of those $50 tips.

They also say Issa and Ramirez refused to pay staffers overtime, even when they worked more than 70 hours a week.

Howard and fellow axed staffers Kyle McMahon, Loren Mash and Santos Hernandez are seeking unspecified back pay and damages.

Ramirez refused to comment Monday night.

Issa said in a statement that the restaurant was an equal-opportunity environment.

“We pride ourselves on the diversity of our staff,” the statement read. “And we welcome everyone who comes through our doors.”
 

Miragedriver

Brigadier
Here are some signs that will make you laugh!

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I think I’ve had this before


RuqLGBS.jpg

I’ll use the next bathroom, thanks


IDdU0h4.jpg

Certainly young lady


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I think that this sign was on the door of my bachelor apartment


FCvL5f9.jpg

No thank you….



I will now get back to bottling my Malbec
 

ABC78

Junior Member
WTF !?! He demands a pardon for assaulting two Asian immigrants.

Mark Wahlberg should not be pardoned

Mark Wahlberg should not be pardoned

December 5, 2014, at 8:54 AM

In April 1988, Mark Wahlberg, 16, set upon a Vietnamese immigrant named Thanh Lam, and, with a wooden stick, beat him so severely that Lam fell to the ground, unconscious. Later that night, according to contemporaneous accounts, Wahlberg found another Asian man, Hoa Trinh, and, calling him a "gook" and "slant eye," smashed him in the face.

Trinh lost sight in his right eye.

Wahlberg was arrested, convicted, and spent 45 days in jail, an experience that hardened him for the rest of his younger days and provided him creative fodder for many of his later projects. He has insisted that, despite his liberal use of racial slurs, race did not motivate his attack. His intoxication, apparently, did.

Twenty-six years later, Wahlberg wants a formal pardon from the commonwealth of Massachusetts.

Why? He has devoted the rest of his life to being a model citizen. His movies do not glorify violence (apparently). He has contributed significantly to his community. He has mentored many young boys away from a life of crime. He has demonstrated, in deed, a respect for the police.

His pardon application includes the following ambition: "My hope is that, if I receive a pardon, troubled youths will see this as an inspiration and motivation that they too can turn their lives around."

Interesting logic. It works better, though, with this rewrite: "My hope is that, by not seeking a pardon, troubled youths will know that their actions have repercussions, even if they later become wealthy celebrities. Although this wonderful country provides plenty of opportunity for them to turn their lives around, they can never use their renown to erase the indelible consequences of their decisions."

Is a young person not going to commit a crime they'd otherwise commit because Wahlberg got his own criminal record expunged? Or would a young person be less likely to commit a crime, (supposing, by the way, that they look to Wahlberg as the arbiter of their ethics) if they knew that even if they managed to overcome obstacles and become successful later in life, they could not get pardoned?

***

Last night, before I heard about Mark Wahlberg's pardon plea, I had dinner with Simon Cho. Cho is a world champion speed skater, who at age 20, sabotaged the skates of a rival on the orders of his coach and was punished by a two-year suspension from the sport. He had been an Olympian, a bronze medalist; he will probably never take to the ice as a competitor again.

His mistake was not criminal, but it will spook him for the rest of his life.

We spoke about the "mess," as he calls it today. Cho took full responsibility for his conduct, accepted the suspension without appeal, and apologized directly to the competitor he curtailed. He was still a kid when he did that, when he faced a battery of cameras and took hostile questions from the press.

He's 22 now. He's slowly rebuilding his life. He is driven, smart, and talented, very self-aware, and will go on to live a great life. He won't forget what he did; he doesn't want to. It reminds him of what he can never do again. When he marries and has kids, he wants to use the lessons he's learned to teach his kids not to make the same mistakes he did.

I'm sure you'll see Cho's story in a few years on one of those ESPN 30 for 30 documentaries. He's passed the point of no return — the end of Act 2, as they say in the movie biz, and he's working quietly to contribute something meaningful.

Both Cho and Wahlberg have lessons to impart about making mistakes and about redemption.

Accepting, fully, your past and its aftermath, is a start. Special dispensation for celebrities is a step back.

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In4ser

Junior Member
Japan newspaper apologises for running anti-Semitic ad

Tokyo (AFP) - A conservative Japanese daily on Saturday apologised for carrying an advertisement for books by an author who claims Jewish people were behind the country's 2011 earthquake-tsunami disaster.

The advert ran in a regional edition of the Sankei Shimbun national newspaper on November 26, and promoted the works of Richard Koshimizu, a self-styled journalist and activist who also blames Jews for the September 11, 2001 terror attacks in the United States.

A little-known figure in Japan, Koshimizu used the promotional space to market a book claiming the United States is a "Jewish dictatorship state" that detonated an atomic bomb deep underwater to deliberately trigger the earthquake and subsequent tsunami.

It was intended to destroy the Japanese economy and defend the dollar, he claimed.

"It is extremely regrettable that an advertisement of this content was carried and delivered to our readers, and we deeply apologise to readers and the people of the Jewish community," Sankei president Takamitsu Kumasaka said in a statement published in the paper.

"It was obvious there was a fault in our screening of advertisements," he said.

The March 2011 natural disaster sparked the Fukushima nuclear plant meltdown and left 18,000 people dead or missing.

In another book featured by the advertisement, Koshimizu claims the Holocaust was a "fabrication" designed to establish the state of Israel.

Kumasaka added he had received a letter of protest from Abraham Cooper, associate dean of Jewish rights group the Simon Wiesenthal Center, over the advert.

"The Sankei considers the Holocaust by the Nazis as an unforgivable, heinous crime," the president said.

The Sankei said the ad was in the Tokai/Hokuriku edition covering central Japan, which has a circulation of just 5,000 copies.

Racially homogenous Japan does not have a large Jewish community, with the vast majority of people believing in an admixture of imported Buddhism and indigenous Shintoism.

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Miragedriver

Brigadier
Car chase, Russian style
[video=youtube;z883vZRCpsA]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z883vZRCpsA&feature=player_embedded[/video]


I will now get back to bottling my Malbec
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Car chase, Russian style
[video=youtube;z883vZRCpsA]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z883vZRCpsA&feature=player_embedded[/video]


I will now get back to bottling my Malbec

I guess thats the Russian remake of the 6 million dollar man AKA The 1.33 Trillion Ruble Komrad.

For a second I though the Officer on foot would try to pit maneuver the Jeep
 
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SteelBird

Colonel
I supposed the wings of the owl are for flying.

According to news, an owl was attacked by two eagles and fell into a lake nearby. The owl didn't sink into the lake, instead, it used its wings to swim across the lake.

[video=youtube;6lJhM2mrrrs]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6lJhM2mrrrs[/video]
 
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