feat(web): Wave 4 — prose layouts + /policies on Tailwind typography
diff --git a/content/posts/2026/how-to-deal-with-competitors-who-call-the-cops/index.md b/content/posts/2026/how-to-deal-with-competitors-who-call-the-cops/index.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..22529b9 --- /dev/null +++ b/content/posts/2026/how-to-deal-with-competitors-who-call-the-cops/index.md @@ -0,0 +1,63 @@ +--- +title: "How to deal with competitors who call the cops" +pubDate: 2026-04-05T20:05:11.000Z +updatedDate: 2026-04-05T20:05:11.000Z +draft: false +excerpt: "A rival collective called the cops on our free events because we were drawing crowds across the street from their paid headliner shows. The police came minutes after a noise … Read more" +categories: + - Guides +tags: + - competition + - format-guide + - legal + - tone-confrontational +featured: + src: https://cdn.slist.net/posts/how-to-deal-with-competitors-who-call-the-cops/cover.png + alt: "Abstract dark police light on wet asphalt" +legacy_wp_id: 16028 +--- +A rival collective called the cops on our free events because we were drawing crowds across the street from their paid headliner shows. The police came minutes after a noise complaint — timing that felt coordinated. One of their associates showed up early and left moments before the officers arrived. + +This is not uncommon in underground nightlife. Sabotage is a feature of the competitive landscape, not an edge case. Here’s the playbook for handling it. + +## Recognize the pattern +Diff truncated (70 lines total). View full commit on GitHub →