Subway is not supposed to serve schwarma. I would like to see a store that imitates a real subway and markets to all customers as opposed to just religious Jews. When I was in Israel I kept kosher. I'm not against paying a little more for the extra work that is required to keep kosher, but I sure don't want to get ripped off because the places have monopolies. If I had enough options and could reasonably do so, I would keep kosher. Laissez faire and a free market are things we need to fight for.
Any place I need to go to needs to:
1. Provide clean filtered drinking water. I'm not against them charging something reasonable like a nickel or quarter for the cup, but I want something healthy and don't want to pay $2 for a soda or bottled water. Especially when other places charge around a dollar. It's understandable that meat has to go through extra processes, but the fact that they can mark up drinks and not even provide clean water shows that they are just ripping customers off.
2. They need to follow credit card laws. It is illegal for a merchant to deny a credit card sale or charge a terminal fee for the transaction just because it is below a limit. I understand that this transaction costs the merchant to make, but that is the cost the merchant agreed to when signing their agreement with the credit card company. If they don't like it, they don't have to accept credit cards at all, but it will discourage customers like me from purchasing there. Why the kosher places I've gone to chose to break these laws while just about every other merchant follows them gets me, but there have been many occasions that I have not gone to Kosher Bite, Tov's Pizza, and Carmels in Baltimore because of this issue.