Josh wrote: ↑Wed Jun 29, 2022 4:32 pm
If a man starts a buisness- a cabinet shop, a restaurant, a mill, whatever- and it becomes successful enough to make his rich, should he shut it down because he has profited in a worldly way?
If you find your business is doing very well, you should start distributing profits to the employees and to your customers and community, until you find that the riches you bear are no longer so much of a burden. Even better, transform your business into one with employee ownership so that they start to think like owners, too. (If your employees all become rich, they'll have a spiritual burden, too - but that's a different topic.)
(And I'd affirm most of what Ken said above too.)
The Dwarf House (of which the original in Hapeville is now the only one) cooked a lot more things than just greasy fast food. You could order just about any meal you wanted.
He did take care of his employees, his family, his neighbors (he fed many, like the poor family who went to church with me in my teens, who happened to live right across the street from him), and his community. My sister worked for him personally. She was the corporate travel agent for him. Everybody who worked at the office ate for free at a buffet. He provided high salaries, and the best insurance. I've never heard an evil report of the man. And that's saying a lot.
As soon as he died, things changed. His son, Dan is the owner now- but I don't think he has much to do with the operations. He just lives off the business, and let's the bean-counters run it. My sister lost her insurance and many of her benefits as soon as Truitt died. He buckled to the woke mob and quit giving to the Salvation Army and another Christian charity because they taught homosexuality to be sinful. And that's when all the Dwarf Houses (like the one in Griffin) became just another fast-food restaurant- the only Dwarf House is the original in Hapeville now.
I have a lot of respect for the man, not because of his wealth, but because he WAS unselfish and generous to all around him.