• Home
  • Illinois News
  • Illinois Politics
  • US Politics
  • US NEWS
  • America First
  • Opinion
  • World News
  • Second Amendment
Sunday, May 11, 2025
Illinois Review
  • Login
  • Register
  • Home
  • Illinois News
  • Illinois Politics
  • US Politics
  • US NEWS
  • America First
  • Opinion
  • World News
  • Second Amendment
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Illinois News
  • Illinois Politics
  • US Politics
  • US NEWS
  • America First
  • Opinion
  • World News
  • Second Amendment
No Result
View All Result
Illinois Review
No Result
View All Result
Home Illinois News

Rene Hernandez: Will the state of Illinois reward or punish our new business?

Illinois Review by Illinois Review
October 9, 2020
in Illinois News
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
1
26
SHARES
434
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Screen Shot 2020-10-08 at 1.32.28 PM

You might also like

Weyermuller: Saint Jude March for Fallen Chicago Police Officers 2025

Kristi Noem Deports Two During Illinois Visit, Criticizes Pritzker for Sanctuary Policies During Press Conference with Victims’ Families

Pritzker Rebukes ‘Do-Nothing Democrats’ who ‘Lack Guts, Gumption’ Over Trans and Immigrant Scapegoating Following 2024 Losses

CHICAGO – Rene Hernandez was born in Mexico, and is starting his own business in Illinois.

Why would Illinois want to make it harder for immigrants like him to start successful small businesses?

He answers in this 2 minute video: 

The very week the COVID lockdown hit Illinois, Rene Hernandez Jr. began filing paperwork to launch a small business.

“Who starts a business when a pandemic is hitting? We didn’t know what it all meant. I thought it would be just a couple of weeks of slowdown, but little did I know …” the 43-year-old senior sales rep said, looking back, shaking his head.

But Hernandez decided he would put his hard-earned savings into starting a liquor distribution company – focusing on selling mezcal, a spirit growing in popularity in the United States that is produced in his native Oaxaca, Mexico. So he forged ahead.

Hernandez found opening a liquor distribution business in Illinois is complicated. It involves hiring attorneys and accountants to help with background checks and filling out pages upon pages of paperwork – to just get started.

“At times, it was frustrating and complicated to answer all the questions and pay all the fees,” he said. “I didn’t understand much of what they wanted. But even though I felt like it at times, we didn’t quit. Now with the business starting, I can finally have that confidence that I have it in my control. I’m the boss – I can definitely grow and make it successful.”

That very reason is why Rene’s grandfather came to America in the 1940s – America was the land of opportunity. When Rene’s grandfather was suddenly killed in a car accident, Rene’s father became the breadwinner for his mother and siblings. Later he also cared for his own family – including Rene Jr.

“My dad dropped out of high school and started working. Even with the little they had, he was still in a better situation than if he had remained in Mexico,” Rene said. “I learned to work hard from my dad. He worked three jobs to put me through college. I want my kids to learn the same work ethic. Nothing was given to us – we earned what we have.”

Rene says he was proud to become an American citizen in 2002.

“I’m proud to an American, but I’m not embarrassed to say I was born in Mexico. Still, I am as American as apple pie,” he said. “I graduated from Elmhurst University, I am a Chicago teams’ fan, I vote. It’s important to be involved and give back to the community.”

But Rene is concerned what he’s willing to give back to the state is being misspent and wasted.

“It is no secret that Illinois is a poorly-run state. It’s been managed poorly. The state is billions of dollars in debt,” he said with a sad expression on his face. “It’s very expensive in which to live. A lot of my good high school friends have gone to Tennessee and Texas.”

But for Rene Hernandez, the choice to leave Illinois is not so easy.

“This is where my family lives. This is where my wife’s family is from,” he said. “I want to stay here and be a part of the change Illinois needs – to be more responsible fiscally. I want this state to prosper and be a state where it’s a good place to do business.”

But punishing him by demanding higher taxes if his new business is successful doesn’t make sense to Rene. While Illinois embraces immigrants, its policies are making it very difficult for those very immigrants to start their own small businesses and grow them into thriving enterprises.

“It’s frustrating to run into a situation where the government is making it difficult for me not only to grow, but to prosper, and that’s what could possibly seal my fate,” he said. “That will be really, really hard because that’s not the American dream. That’s not what America was founded to be. That’s everything against the American dream.”

Rene’s company, Don.Abel & Rene Distribution, is working to distribute Salvadores Mezcal as soon as next month. He’s building towards the American dream with all the hope within him that Illinois will make a radical change and finally start encouraging new business endeavors like his.

If Illinois doesn’t start in a new direction, it will be devastating, he says. Stopping the Progressive Tax amendment on the November 2020 ballot would be the first step to slow down an impending financial disaster and stop discouraging new enterprises like his.

“For a state government to set up more obstacles and hurdles to keep us from becoming successful is wrong. That is not what America was made to be,” he said.

Related

Share10Tweet7
Previous Post

Bost tests positive for COVID

Next Post

Democrat Joe Biden: Voters ‘Don’t’ Deserve To Know If I’m Going To Pack Supreme Court

Illinois Review

Illinois Review

Founded in 2005, Illinois Review is the leading perspective and source of conservative news, opinion and information in Illinois. Follow Illinois Review on X at @IllinoisReview.

Recommended For You

Weyermuller: Saint Jude March for Fallen Chicago Police Officers 2025

by Mark Weyermuller
May 8, 2025
0
Weyermuller: Saint Jude March for Fallen Chicago Police Officers 2025

By Mark Weyermuller, Events ContributorLast Sunday, bag pipes and drums led a march to honor Chicago Police Officers who have died in the line of duty over the...

Read moreDetails

Kristi Noem Deports Two During Illinois Visit, Criticizes Pritzker for Sanctuary Policies During Press Conference with Victims’ Families

by Illinois Review
May 7, 2025
0
Kristi Noem Deports Two During Illinois Visit, Criticizes Pritzker for Sanctuary Policies During Press Conference with Victims’ Families

By Illinois ReviewOn Wednesday, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem visited Springfield to meet with families who lost loved ones to crimes committed by undocumented immigrants – cases she...

Read moreDetails

Pritzker Rebukes ‘Do-Nothing Democrats’ who ‘Lack Guts, Gumption’ Over Trans and Immigrant Scapegoating Following 2024 Losses

by Illinois Review
May 6, 2025
0
Pritzker Rebukes ‘Do-Nothing Democrats’ who ‘Lack Guts, Gumption’ Over Trans and Immigrant Scapegoating Following 2024 Losses

By Illinois ReviewIll. Gov. JB Pritzker – a progressive liberal who inherited billions from his family’s hotel business, is attacking his own party for blaming far-left progressive policies...

Read moreDetails

Pritzker Demands Mass Protests Against MAGA Agenda During NH Speech: ‘Republicans Cannot Know Peace’

by Illinois Review
April 28, 2025
0
Pritzker Demands Mass Protests Against MAGA Agenda During NH Speech: ‘Republicans Cannot Know Peace’

By Illinois ReviewAt a Democratic dinner in New Hampshire on Sunday, Ill. Gov. JB Pritzker – a progressive liberal who inherited billions from his family’s hotel business –...

Read moreDetails

Political Earthquake Rocks Illinois as Dick Durbin Announces Retirement, Triggering a Scramble to Replace No. 2 Democrat in U.S. Senate

by Illinois Review
April 23, 2025
0
Political Earthquake Rocks Illinois as Dick Durbin Announces Retirement, Triggering a Scramble to Replace No. 2 Democrat in U.S. Senate

By Illinois ReviewIn a social media post on Wednesday, U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin – the nation’s No. 2 Democrat in the Senate, announced that he’s retiring after five...

Read moreDetails
Next Post

Democrat Joe Biden: Voters ‘Don’t’ Deserve To Know If I’m Going To Pack Supreme Court

Please login to join discussion

Best Dental Group

Related News

IL Freedom Caucus calls on Lurie Children’s Hospital to cease gender services for kids

October 27, 2022

Beckman: Is the Brigham Young University racial slur controversy another hoax?

October 27, 2022

Salvi polling shows closer race

October 27, 2022

Browse by Category

  • America First
  • Education
  • Faith & Family
  • Foreign Policy
  • Health Care
  • Illinois News
  • Illinois Politics
  • Opinion
  • Science
  • Second Amendment
  • TRENDING
  • US NEWS
  • US Politics
  • World News
Illinois Review

© 2024 llinois Review LLC Editor in Chief Mark Vargas Publisher Thomas McCullagh Chief Counsel Scott Kaspar

Navigate Site

  • Checkout
  • Home
  • Home – mobile
  • Login/Register
  • Login/Register
  • My account
  • My Account-
  • My Account- – mobile

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Illinois News
  • Illinois Politics
  • US Politics
  • Health Care
  • US NEWS
  • America First
  • Opinion
  • TRENDING
  • Education
  • Foreign Policy
  • Second Amendment
  • Faith & Family
  • Science
  • World News

© 2024 llinois Review LLC Editor in Chief Mark Vargas Publisher Thomas McCullagh Chief Counsel Scott Kaspar

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?