What is the deal with these?
I always dismissed some of the accusations as the usual right wing propaganda but they are everywhere, particularly barbers and there is no way they can all be making money legitimately.
There was a barber near my parents for years. I got my hair cut there as a teenager and my dad used him as well. He closed up for good a while back saying he couldn't make it pay anymore. The shop is now occupied by another barber, the shop next door is a barber, go up 5 steps and 20 yards round the corner and there is.......a barber. About a quarter of a mile down the road a vacant unit has not long opened as a barber and another 200 yards along the street there is a barber.
Near me on Niddrie Mains Road there are 3 barbers about 50 yards apart. One also specialises in the totally related fields of phone repairs and vape sales. There is another barber on Milton Road that I have literally never seen a customer in. Every time I pass there is one guy is sitting on his phone. Portobello High street has at least 5 barbers on a half mile drag.
There are all kinds of explanations on social media that verge from the racist to the believable. They can't all be legit though can they? It must be money laundering of some description surely? A business that could easily be handling a lot of cash seems as good a front as any I suppose.
Results 1 to 30 of 136
-
06-01-2025 06:23 PM #1
Barbers, Nail Salons and Vape Shops
-
06-01-2025 06:40 PM #2
- Join Date
- Dec 2007
- Age
- 55
- Posts
- 1,006
This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Ignore the racist pish though.
-
06-01-2025 06:41 PM #3
I've wondered about this myself.
Some streets in Glasgow have so many nail bars, barbers, ice cream shops, tanning salons and other businesses that surely have a limited customer base, considering how many there are in close proximity.
-
06-01-2025 06:43 PM #4This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
06-01-2025 06:45 PM #5This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuotePM Awards General Poster of The Year 2015, 2016, 2017. Probably robbed in other years
-
06-01-2025 07:13 PM #6
Post brexit, these, charity shops & coffee shops are Britain's growth industries. Right behind food banks.
Sent from my SM-A750FN using Tapatalk
"I did not need any persuasion to play for such a great club, the Hibs result is still one of the first I look for"
Sir Matt Busby
-
06-01-2025 07:27 PM #7
I have my own business - in a sector that the untrained eye would think it’s easy to be successful in - and it’s become much more challenging to make a profit over the past few years, so I often look at other businesses and wonder how on Earth they manage to survive.
Labour costs will presumably be cheap for a lot of them, that’s often the killer. But heating premises, heating water, rates, loan repayments then cost of credit servicing loans, insurance etc etc - most businesses just look like money pits.
My sense of optimism left the building some time ago, which is a problem when you’re the leader trying to be the ray of light.
But yeah, I look at all of that and think wtf too. Is that what there is demand for in Brexit Britain or is it something else?
-
06-01-2025 08:19 PM #8
- Join Date
- Apr 2007
- Location
- Dont know its too dark in here
- Age
- 67
- Posts
- 12,587
Add American sweet shops to the list. Private Eye did a thing on them, in London, a while back before we got the same in Edinburgh.
I'm not sure about some of the Indian street food places either.Space to let
-
06-01-2025 08:36 PM #9This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...rd-Street.html
-
06-01-2025 08:38 PM #10This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Sent from my SM-A750FN using Tapatalk
"I did not need any persuasion to play for such a great club, the Hibs result is still one of the first I look for"
Sir Matt Busby
-
06-01-2025 08:40 PM #11This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
tbf, that story is on many sites. The Mail version seemed to be the easiest to understand.
-
06-01-2025 08:43 PM #12This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Sent from my SM-A750FN using Tapatalk
"I did not need any persuasion to play for such a great club, the Hibs result is still one of the first I look for"
Sir Matt Busby
-
06-01-2025 08:43 PM #13
- Join Date
- Apr 2007
- Location
- Dont know its too dark in here
- Age
- 67
- Posts
- 12,587
This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
That's the gist of it though. If only councils in Scotland followed Westminster's (council) lead.Space to let
-
06-01-2025 08:43 PM #14
With the barbers, is it not just supply and demand? All the ones in Corstorphine are always flat out busy. Maybe blokes are going more than every 6 weeks these days, especially with all the beard trimming?
I would suspect money laundering if they were all empty but that doesn’t appear to be the case?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
-
06-01-2025 09:15 PM #15This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
06-01-2025 10:22 PM #16This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
07-01-2025 05:24 AM #17
- Join Date
- Aug 2017
- Posts
- 17,048
I read a thread from an actuary, the numbers are a guess but roughly he said. He lived in a town of less than 10k people within 5 miles and had 5 Turkish barbers. He worked out every male would have to have a haircut once a month just to cover rents and rates. That doesnt take in staff, electricity, people who cut their own hair or are bald.
The one beside me has two 100k Range Rovers outside regularly and is pretty dead most of the time.
The government probably knows they are fronts but it's fills up empty dying high streets and gets them some tax from the drug money, plus from landlords, electricity and the council gets money from council tax.
I'll copy and paste
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...rs-profit.html
There are now 17,702 nationwide, a 50 per cent increase since 2018, with 918 new establishments opening in the last year alone, the National Hair & Beauty Federation (NHBF) said.
-
07-01-2025 05:42 AM #18
There are 5 barbers about 500 yards from me, i use one and he's nearly always busy. £12.50 a cut, it's not hard to see where he can make money.
I go in and normally there's 4 or 5 waiting, 15 minutes to cut each person, the money can mount up over a day/week.
-
07-01-2025 06:10 AM #19
- Join Date
- Feb 2017
- Posts
- 4,241
This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
07-01-2025 06:52 AM #20
Obviously not all barber shops are born the same but the ones you are alluding to are money laundering fronts for drug money, simple as that.
-
07-01-2025 08:00 AM #21
- Join Date
- Feb 2022
- Posts
- 11,753
Said the same about a couple of pubs near me.
I speak to the landlord when I’m out with the dog. Alright guy, bit of a gob*****, but he’s forever away to Dubai, eating in the finest restaurants, wandering around with his numerous Canada Goose jackets and out on the lash in all the other pubs and bars around the area. And there’s absolutely no chance in hell he’s turning a profit from the 2 (now 1 after he gave 1 up) pubs he’s got, infact he simply has to be making huge losses.
-
07-01-2025 08:22 AM #22
How does a business with no customers launder money? Do they simply book themselves out to make them look a lot busier than they are on paper?
There's similar in Lanark, numerous barbers with no customers and big motors parked up out front. The only busy one is the one I use which is part of a chain in South Lanarkshire and West Lothian."...when Hibs won the Scottish Cup final and that celebration, Sunshine on Leith? I don’t think there’s a better football celebration ever in the game.”
Sir Alex Ferguson
-
07-01-2025 08:36 AM #23
As a stated above, the barbers I see are always busy. Younger men these days go to the barbers FAR more frequently than my generation. I'm 51, have a short back & sides hair cut and have gone for a hair cut once a month religiously since I were a lad. My 18 year old step son goes at least once a fortnight. I have a family member who's a hipster barber in Stirling. He has many clients who pay by monthly direct debit and go every week, without fail, for their (to the bone) skin fades.
Vape shops and tanning joints on the other hand.......I remember a few years ago reading a report that if the numbers declared by Glasgow tanning studios were accurate, the average Glaswegian would be black!
-
07-01-2025 08:45 AM #24This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
The barbers I use is generally busy. There are others though, including one right next door to where I go that are never busy. There is one guy who sits in the shop day in, day out and I have never, ever seen him cut anyone's hair. Across the course of an hour or so a couple of fancy cars will pull up, nip inside for a minute or 2 then leave again. If it's legit then I'm a Hearts fan.PM Awards General Poster of The Year 2015, 2016, 2017. Probably robbed in other years
-
07-01-2025 08:49 AM #25This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
07-01-2025 08:59 AM #26This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
-
07-01-2025 09:09 AM #27This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
These days, with anti money-laundering legislation in place, it can be quite difficult to do. Lawyers, accountants and banks are legally bound to report any suspicion of ML, and HMRC play their part too.
My suspicion is that the police are well aware of the ML side of things (they will get enough reports not to be), but the source of the cash is more important to them. They will chase that source as a priority, and any ML charges will come as an add-on.
-
07-01-2025 09:44 AM #28This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Story was they would do this in bookies all over Edinburgh and beyond so that if the police caught them with large amounts of cash on their person they could show the receipts as proof it was gambling winnings.
Not really money laundering as such and pretty unsophisticated and I always wondered if the police would buy it. They would have had to have been the luckiest punters in Scotland.PM Awards General Poster of The Year 2015, 2016, 2017. Probably robbed in other years
-
07-01-2025 09:59 AM #29This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
07-01-2025 10:08 AM #30This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Log in to remove the advert |
Bookmarks