The only thing I have to add to Josh Barro's and Matt Yglesias' points about paramilitary police raids on barbershops(!) in black and Hispanic communities is that unlike yacht dealing, barbershops are among the small businesses that tend to thrive even among the isolated urban poor, which also is part of why they've become so much more than mere barbershops, providing services the average white barbershop doesn't. So this kind of overregulation and criminalization disproportionately hurts people with the least access to economic opportunity, in particular, as Yglesias has pointed out in the past, people coming out of prison, who are already dealing with diminished job prospects as a result of the stigma of having done a bid.