BHB Guest Post: ‘A Fan’s Open Letter to the Wiener Whiners’

BHB received this guest post Monday. The neighborhood wiener roast gets one more grilling… 

(Editor’s note: Please check update of this story here.)

I am a Washington, D.C., native who is lucky enough to spend quite a bit of time in beautiful Brooklyn Heights. Consequently, I read the local blogs and am following with bemusement the Hot Dog Cart Incident that has now spilled onto the pages of The New York Post.

I’ve come to the conclusion that Brooklyn Heights’ Coterie of the Chronically Outraged is homogenizing the community into its own sterile Stepford. They are the true blight on this otherwise charming neighborhood. The anonymity of the posts gives people an idiot courage that they lack in real life.

This entire teapot-sized tempest is the Information Age equivalent of running someone out on a rail—to say nothing of the not-even-thinly-veiled bigotry behind it all.

When you make the choice to live in a city—any city—you have to understand and take part in the social contract behind it all. We know that having to endure the sight of a hot dog cart on your Hollywood movie set slice of New York life is an impediment to your lifestyle. It gets in your way as you jog your double-wide baby stroller to your hot yoga session, so that later you can enjoy a post-workout free trade soy latte lovingly prepared in your French press, while reading the latest McSweeney’s post.

Do you know who might enjoy a disgusting hot dog served by a disgusting person? A policeman walking a neighborhood beat. Construction workers and utility people keeping your neighborhood pristine. Your nanny, who really doesn’t get paid enough for overseeing your privileged progeny to dine regularly at your favorite vegan restaurant. A college couple that might want the romance of sharing a hot dog while strolling the Promenade.

God, these people disgust me.

Even the hipster culinary icon Anthony Bourdain, who has come to symbolize the sine qua non of snarky foodie-ism, extols the virtues of “meat in tube form” and more specifically its provenance from the corner street cart merchant. I enjoy the occasional pushcart hot dog in D.C. and New York. I love the opportunity to sit on a park bench and munch happily away while contemplating how social climbing is turning the great American melting pot into an overcooked slurry of self-centered consumerism.

Look, if you don’t want a hot dog, don’t eat a hot dog. But don’t pretend that you are doing the community a service. You are the very models of checkbook charity—giving to popular issues not because you care, but so that you don’t have to actually endure them. It’s not even snobbery. It’s the basest form of prejudice, and it’s sad. For you.

There is a place where you can live your lifestyle free from the horrors of the demon hot dog vendor. It’s called the suburbs. Give it a look.

The rest of us who live in the city would appreciate it.

Sincerely,
Alex Cook

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  • Mr. Crusty
  • Mr. Crusty

    In the good old days a famous Heights resident was known for her love of hot dogs.

    “Where Cathy adores a minuet,
    The Ballet Russes, and crepe suzette,
    Our Patty loves to rock and roll,
    A hot dog makes her lose control …
    What a wild duet!”

    Lucky Gerry wasn’t around back then or he might have called the cops on her.

  • Gerry

    I find the NYPD to be helpful with quality of life issues here in Brooklyn Heights the Commanding Officer at the Gold Street Precinct was happy to help me he removed the vendor who had no permit who was obstructing a sidewalk creating a dangerous situation.

    Even the vending boxes for the New York Times and Daily News that had been on the corner were removed years ago because a number of peope tripped on them and hurt themselves.

    This sidewalk is for walking and not selling food.

    The vendor is gone.

    Thanks NYPD.

  • Mr. Crusty

    People tripped on newspaper vending boxes? Yeah, I guess they kinda just sneak up on ya.

    I was a high ranking law enforcement officer for many years Gerry. I’ll guarantee you that after what I imagine was a very diplomatic conversation with you he must have rolled his eyes and said, “Do you believe this effing a******”? Just my educated guess. We just loved getting calls from self important people like you that take the most minor and trivial matters and blow them up so that they are portrayed as “dangerous and illegal activities”. Get a life Gerry.

  • AEB

    Your self-righteousness isn’t pretty, Gerry.

    You’d do well to put yourself in the place of others as a basic exercise in human sympathy.

  • AEB

    …before you turn other people in.

  • Curmudgeon

    @Gerry. Wait a minute. People tripped over the vending newspaper boxes and they were deemed dangerous? Those boxes are all over the city and the Heights. Tell me how you managed to get the police to remove them. Oh, perhaps it was because of the prestigious location that they were deemed dangerous to real estate values.

  • AEB

    Methinks Gerry didn’t do or say any of the things s/he claims to have done, but wishes to say s/he did in print to attract attention and feel important….

  • Big Dave

    Bratwurst banter rules
    A beautiful summer morn
    Such life to relish!

  • Arkady

    Well, it’s certainly been a very frank discussion.

  • travy

    where was all this righteous indignation when rent controlled seniors were getting the boot?

  • Cobble

    And, alternately, a very saucy discussion as a condiment, I mean compliment.

    I miss the old Hebrew National on Montague. They had perfect knishes.

  • bx2bklyn

    I bet Gerry was also the guy who called his police precinct with an emergency toilet stoppage. True story- heard it from the police officer myself. The officer was asked to bring a plunger and fix the toilet. (Must have been stopped up with franks and buns.)

  • John Q

    Unfortunately “exclusiveness” always does involve “exclusion.”

  • GHB

    Wow… the weenies got more play than the Open Thread!

  • Hicks St Guy

    who cares what the people who read the NY Post think?
    if I paid a ton of money to live on that block of Montague,
    I certainly wouldn’t want a dirty water dog cart there, it’s not
    a commercial street. thought it would be more reasonable
    on the Promenade itself. which then leads to my last question,
    why do people seeming have to eat all the time?

  • Hicks St Guy

    er, seemingly. .

  • maestro

    Go weenies!

  • Cobble

    Right, because criticizing people for eating is the “new black” this year.

  • Worst of the Wurst

    Hicks St Guy, You are wrong. Montague is a commercial street even that block, I count 6 storefronts and one sports club on Montague between Hicks and the Promenade. Besides there is no law preventing food vendors from selling on noncommercial streets. However, there is a ban on vendors from being on Montague and some other streets throughout the city. Too bad if someone doesn’t like having a vendor outside there house they don’t own the street.

  • Prom Gal

      Brooklyn Heights is America’s first suburb. It is the first nationally landmarked historical district as well.

      Food carts are not allowed on commercial streets bc of the  BID and BHA desire to protect restaurant owners, and prevent litter. 

    One must buy a license for a specific location- the Kustard King guy is a good example. He has been here for many many years and is a wonderful guy, a beloved fiixture in the neighborhood, precisely because he follows the rules to the letter. 

      I love a good hot dog, and whenever I’m near a Grey’s Papaya or Papaya King, I stop in. That doesn’t mean I want one to open on Montague Terrace. Food carts present their own health and legal problems. Difficult for the city, or a neighborhood to control from a health and sanitation and litter point of view. Hot dogs sitting in filthy water over a long period of time can cause serious health problems. 

      If you think it’s racist to want to preserve the historic charm and property values in BH, then report me and others on this blog to the Human Rights Commission.

      It is probably you who are the whiners and consumers of soy lattes and vegan food. Most people in BH like their food to have had parents at some time. Haven’t you smelled the charcoal grills and barbecues going in the evening in homeowner’s backyards? 

     Oh! The pollution! The carbon emissions!

      BH is not cool and not hip. Restaurants are mainly  empty after 10 pm because people have to get up in the morning to get their kids 
    off to school and go to work. 

      To the OP, the Heights Casino is not a ” sports club”. It is a beautiful, historic, private tennis and squash club. Members must be sponsored by more than one member, and pay an initial fee, yearly dues, and a monthly food fee. I believe it is the only remaining club in NY with proper indoor tennis courts.

      It is also home to the Yuletide Ball, the annual BH black tie social event. 

      If you saw ‘Trading Places’ with Eddie Murphy and Dan Ackroyd, the exterior and indoor tennis scenes were filmed at the Casino. 

      We love the Casino and our children love it. The members are really nice people. 

  • GHB

    @Hicks St Guy “why do people seeming have to eat all the time?” That’s why Americans are so damn fat!

  • Hicks St Guy

    @GHB, true, and it’s their constitutional right to be obese, diabetic or rife with heart disease. and then it’s their constitutional right to need heroic medical care and expect medicare to pay for it.

  • Mr. Crusty

    Right PromGal, your concern about hotdogs sitting in filthy water causing health concers is truly touching. Commendable of you to watch out for my interests and preventing me from harming myself with a Sabrett. I am indebted to you.

    So, by a show of hands, how many buy PromGal’s excuse here? That’s what I thought.

    More harm to Brookkyn Heights was done by the intemperate and snobby comments on this blog, (some of them yours), than any hotdog cart could have done in a century. A community’s reputation, if it is , as i believe it has, is as at least as damaging as the tiny potential increases in litter, smell and noise that a cart might generate.

    Of course these are subjective judgements but I can’t imagine someone saying, oh I’ll never move to Brooklyn Heights because they have a couple of food carts, but I can imagine someone saying, as they have, I’ll never move to Brooklyn Heights because of the disgusting comments and snobby comments I read on this blog..

    Again that is just my opinion but what I really do really resent is that the people that are doing the most harm seem to think that they are the ones “saving” Brooklyn Heights. Spare me PromGal.

  • Mr. Crusty

    Why would someone that lives on Montague Strret call himself, Hicks St Guy? Curious.

  • Willowtowncop

    Gerry sounds like the kind of ass who calls the precinct demanding that someone is sent this very minute for such dangerous and illegal BS as a kid smoking a joint or a homeless guy sleeping on a bench and god forbid the sector has some actual calls to handle first or doesn’t fix the ‘problem’ exactly like he wanted it fixed because he will make a complaint against the cops. People like that are why most cops would rather work in the worst ghetto on the planet than a place where yuppies call and stand on thir stoops with their arms folded saying whatareyougonnadoaboutit? it being a total waste of police resources. First world problems are not real problems! It’s a hot dog vendor! Get a freaking grip.

  • Hicks St Guy

    @Crusty, your answer is to read a bit more closely, I used the word, if. . .

  • Cobble

    Oh, Mr. Crusty—I think I’m falling for you! Sigh…

    Prom Gal and her absurdly over-the-top lecture and lesson in snobbery were making me lose my organic-free-range-chicken-salad-post-yoga lunch!

    The really nice people at the Casino don’t speak the way she does. So I imagine she’s on the fringe. An arriviste, if you will.

  • Mr. Crusty

    Exactly Willowtowncop. And Gerry is so out of it that he actually thinks the Commanding Officer was thankful that Gerry brought to his attention this imminent danger to the population at large. Can anyone be more clueless?

  • Mr. Crusty

    Duly corrected Hicks St Guy. My apologies.