Poor people not allowed in AOC's luxury apartment complex

squarepush3r

Well-Known Member
so she went from being a bartender and living where she could afford to live, to being a representative, who makes 174k a year....you expected her to stay in alphabet city in a 3rd floor walkup? would you? how exactly does this make her a bad person? is she supposed to live in a tent next to her office and donate all of her income to charity? do you?
i'm not particularly fond of this woman, but this is a stupid non issue....
She campaigned against luxury builders, and on a pro-affordable housing platform. She attacked luxury builders for hurting the poor, and now once she gets some loot she immediately starts financially supporting them :) Socialism is pretty typically "do as I say, not as I do."
 

srh88

Well-Known Member
She campaigned against luxury builders, and on a pro-affordable housing platform. She attacked luxury builders for hurting the poor, and now once she gets some loot she immediately starts financially supporting them :) Socialism is pretty typically "do as I say, not as I do."
Thats almost like illegal mexicans being a national emergency but hiring them to work at your properties
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
She campaigned against luxury builders, and on a pro-affordable housing platform. She attacked luxury builders for hurting the poor, and now once she gets some loot she immediately starts financially supporting them :) Socialism is pretty typically "do as I say, not as I do."
I support Medicare. Is Medicare socialist? Does my support for Medicare make me a socialist?

"Do as I say, not as I do" is pretty much what Trump is all about. Does that make him a socialist?
 

Rob Roy

Well-Known Member
i already am. if i didn't like it here in the US, i'd move instead of whine about it. that's just me though. and pretty much everybody but you.
Don't forget to get passport permission to travel and make sure you hold still while the TSA grabs your scrotum.
 

rkymtnman

Well-Known Member
Don't forget to get passport permission to travel and make sure you hold still while the TSA grabs your scrotum.
passport doesnt' give permission to travel, just the abilty to travel. no one is coercing me to buy flights to parts unknown, i do so of my own free will.

and i always request a tsa agent by the name of bruce or lance to do a cavity search on me. it doesn't cost extra.

but hey, i'm sure you're happy with Greyhound. leave the driving to us!
 

hotrodharley

Well-Known Member
Last edited:

Rob Roy

Well-Known Member
passport doesnt' give permission to travel, just the abilty to travel. no one is coercing me to buy flights to parts unknown, i do so of my own free will.

and i always request a tsa agent by the name of bruce or lance to do a cavity search on me. it doesn't cost extra.

but hey, i'm sure you're happy with Greyhound. leave the driving to us!

 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
The highest rent in her building is 5200 dollars per month.

I don't think I'd call it luxury.
perspective i guess....i rent apartments, fairly nice 2 bedrooms, with fireplaces, 650 a month....
always amazes me what people will pay to live, packed in like sardines, in an overpopulated, noisy, dangerous city...
 

TacoMac

Well-Known Member
perspective i guess....i rent apartments, fairly nice 2 bedrooms, with fireplaces, 650 a month....
always amazes me what people will pay to live, packed in like sardines, in an overpopulated, noisy, dangerous city...
We're talking about Washington, D.C., the nations capital, not the outskirts of Chicago or Atlanta.

The average one bedroom apartment in D.C. goes for about 2,500.00 per month. The lowest decent one bedroom efficiency I found on ApartmentFinder.com is $1,600 per month. It's less than 800 square feet.

In contrast to that, I live in the northeast suburbs of Atlanta in what has consistently ranked in the top 25 small cities to live in the entire United States. The mortgage on our house, which is 2,900 square feet not counting the two car garage or basement, is $1,650 per month.

It's not WHAT you rent or own, it's WHERE you rent or own.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
We're talking about Washington, D.C., the nations capital, not the outskirts of Chicago or Atlanta.

The average one bedroom apartment in D.C. goes for about 2,500.00 per month. The lowest decent one bedroom efficiency I found on ApartmentFinder.com is $1,600 per month. It's less than 800 square feet.

In contrast to that, I live in the northeast suburbs of Atlanta in what has consistently ranked in the top 25 small cities to live in the entire United States. The mortgage on our house, which is 2,900 square feet not counting the two car garage or basement, is $1,650 per month.

It's not WHAT you rent or own, it's WHERE you rent or own.
i guess so, the apartments i manage are about 1000 sq feet. we're in a tourist town, where they don't pay shit. can't charge people more than they make..
 

TacoMac

Well-Known Member
i guess so, the apartments i manage are about 1000 sq feet. we're in a tourist town, where they don't pay shit. can't charge people more than they make..
Yep. What's more, you can't as a congressman rent just any apartment. It has to be a secure building for obvious reasons. You don't get Secret Service details as a freshman congressman. So she pretty much has to rent at the higher end of the spectrum just to be able to have secure parking, a doorman for monitoring who comes and goes, and access to a secure taxi stand.

Otherwise, you'd be reading about congressmen getting the hell beat out of themselves every day.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/politics/poor-people-not-allowed-in-aocs-luxury-apartment-complex

by Alana Goodman
| February 19, 2019 02:43 PM
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Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., recently moved into a luxury apartment complex in Washington, D.C. that does not offer the affordable housing units that were a key plank in the New York congresswoman’s campaign platform.

Ocasio-Cortez, 29, who said in November that she was concerned about being able to afford rent in D.C., now earns a $174,000 annual salary and is living in a newly built high-rise in the city’s Navy Yard area, the Washington Free Beacon reported last week.

The freshman congresswoman, a self-described socialist, campaigned on a platform to expand affordable housing, and her controversial Green New Deal proposal promises “Safe, affordable, adequate housing” for all.



But Ocasio-Cortez’s new building — built by leading D.C. developer WC Smith — is part of a luxury complex whose owners specifically do not offer affordable units under Washington, D.C.’s Affordable Dwelling Units program. The Washington Examiner is not naming the building or complex.

In 2018, a civil rights attorney sued the Washington, D.C. government for allegedly discriminatory gentrification policies, claiming that development in Navy Yard area and other parts of southeast D.C. encouraged an influx of affluent “millennial creatives” who displaced minority residents.

Ocasio-Cortez, commonly referred to as "AOC," repeatedly criticized luxury real estate developers during her campaign, claiming that their buildings hiked up rent prices and pushed low-income residents out of their neighborhoods.

[Previous coverage: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez warns Amazon HQ2 could worsen housing crisis in New York, DC]


Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez outside her apartment complex last week. This photograph has been altered to obscure the name of the building.
(Graeme Jennings/Washington Examiner)


“We need to kick luxury real estate lobbyists to the curb and defend working people’s way of life,” Ocasio-Cortez said last March. “Skyrocketing cost of living is a national crisis that CAN be addressed. It’s not just an NYC issue - it’s happening in every US metro area.”

Ocasio-Cortez also promised not to take campaign contributions from luxury developers during her campaign. “It’s time we stand up to the luxury developer lobby,” she said in a speech last April. “Every official is too scared to do it - except me.”

Her new apartment complex — which boasts on its website that it vows to take "luxury apartment living" to a higher level — offers over 100,000 square feet of amenities for its residents.

These include: two private massage rooms with state-of-the-art hydrotherapy beds; men’s and women’s saunas; a full-scale demonstration kitchen with wood-fired pizza oven; a 25-meter indoor lap pool; a rooftop infinity pool with panoramic views of the Capitol; a Peloton cycling studio with over a dozen bikes; and a fireside lounge featuring a Steinway & Sons player piano.

Also included is a PGA-grade golf simulation lounge with a wrap-around screen and viewing bar that allows residents to play virtually at dozens of the world’s most exclusive golf courses with the touch of a button. Last week, Democrats mocked President Trump for installing a new golf simulator at the White House — updating with his own money one originally installed by former President Barack Obama.

Apartments in the building currently start at $1,840 per month for a 440 square foot studio, and range up to $5,200 for a three-bedroom. The average rent in Washington D.C. is $1,340 for a one-bedroom apartment and $1,550 for a two-bedroom, according to the most recent data from Apartment List.

W. Christopher Smith, 66, the Annapolis-based CEO of WC Smith, is a Democratic donor who contributed to Barack Obama's 2008 presidential campaign and the Senate campaigns of Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-M.D., Sen. Mark Warner, D-VA., and Jane Raybould, who lost a 2018 Senate race in Nebraska.

Smith donated to Rep. Eleanor Holmes Norton, D-D.C., in 2017, and 11 employees of WC Smith gave $6,900 to the campaign of Muriel Bower, the Democratic mayor of D.C. In 2018, WC Smith's vice-president of communications Ann-Marie Bairstow gave over $1300 to Act Blue earmarked in small amounts — $100 or less — for various candidates, including $50 to Ocasio-Cortez.

but what is her mustard preference?
 
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