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New Yorkers Protest Amazon HQ2: 'We Should Be Investing in Housing ... Not in Helicopters' (geekwire.com)

An anonymous reader shares a report: Shawn Dixon's life changed overnight. On Tuesday he was surprised to learn that Amazon plans to build a giant campus with room for thousands of high-paid workers on the same block as the small business he owns, Otis & Finn Barbershop. "We woke up yesterday with our whole world upside down," Dixon said. The announcement that one half of Amazon HQ2 is moving into his neighborhood -- Long Island City in Queens, New York -- motivated Dixon to attend a protest of Amazon's future campus Wednesday. He was joined by elected officials, labor leaders, and activists who gathered to speak out against the tax incentives, government subsidies and other perks -- including a helipad -- that New York is offering Amazon in exchange for the thousands of jobs the company promises to bring.

"We're worried about our ability to stay in the neighborhood," Dixon said. "I'm not against growth and I'm not against Amazon but what I'm against is giving away all this money to one of the richest companies in the world when our schools are underfunded, we don't have schools in this neighborhood, the trains don't run here, and small business owners have no protections." The rally was organized by New York State Sen. Michael Gianaris, who represents the Queens neighborhood Amazon is moving into. "By the way, Amazon was coming here without all this money anyway," Gianaris said when he took the podium.

199 comments

  1. Buy your condo or house by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Look, resistance is futile.

    Now, if you'll excuse me, I'll go sell the house I bought just a few years ago for five times what I paid for it.

    That said, you do have elections. But, as you can see with Seattle, those don't matter either.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    1. Re:Buy your condo or house by froggyjojodaddy · · Score: 1

      The problem with rising property prices is that, sure you can sell your house for 5 times what you paid for it, but unless you're moving out of the areas, you're probably overpaying for your next house.

    2. Re:Buy your condo or house by bblb · · Score: 0

      They do have elections... but even if they mattered, the elect folks like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez who couldn't even manage her personal financial planning around winning and moving to Washington so there's little hope they'll have any chance of managing more complex large scale economies.

    3. Re:Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, this is the glass half full view -- Seattle welcomes you to the new normal.

    4. Re: Buy your condo or house by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1

      You're confusing cause and effect here. Oscaio-Cortez is in the same boat as most Americans, due to predatory malinvestment.

    5. Re:Buy your condo or house by guruevi · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The problem with NYC and Seattle is that they keep supporting and electing the SAME leftist cronies. All of NY is ran the same way (DeBlasio, Cuomo) because NYC and Albany keeps electing Blue even though practically the entire rest of the state is Red and they're running the highest taxes, the highest cronyism; Cuomo and DeBlasio both have had lawsuits in regards benefitting particular contractors they either own or have family that owns with high value contracts.

      --
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    6. Re:Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      watch fox news do you? it makes you stupid

    7. Re:Buy your condo or house by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Ideologically, I am about as far as you can get from Ms Ocasio-Cortez, but attacking her because she isn't rich enough to afford two homes is really taking the low road.

      She has spoken out about against the Amazon tax subsidy, so at least I agree with her about that.

    8. Re:Buy your condo or house by Big+Boss · · Score: 5, Informative

      Living under rightist cronies in Utah, they are no better and not really any worse either. The false dichotomy of D/R, red/blue is the problem. Neither group really wants to limit government, they differ in what areas they prefer more government, but the net result is always more and always helps out those with the most gold.

    9. Re:Buy your condo or house by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 5, Informative

      NYC and Albany keeps electing Blue

      For 19 years, from 1994 to 2013, NYC had a Republican mayor.

    10. Re: Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ocasio-Cortez is in the same boat as most Americans due to being an ignoramus. She is a moron, like so many of our other fine citizens.

      Tell her to go back to tending bar with her valueless degree. But hey, at least she is an educated moron. International relations, hmm? Okay.

      Or let her sleep in a cardboard box. Surely some lobbyist can buy her a pillow. Or let her bite one! Mua ha ha.

    11. Re:Buy your condo or house by youngone · · Score: 4, Insightful

      ...they keep supporting and electing the SAME leftist cronies.

      How do you account for the massive subsidies paid by Wisconsin to Foxconn to build a factory, (which they're not really even going to honour anyway), or are you suggesting Scott Walker is a "leftist"?
      The reality is that your system of government in the US is open to the highest bidder, and if this Mr. Dixon has a problem with New York providing Amazon with subsidies, but not his business, then he should do what Amazon has done, and buy some politicians.

    12. Re:Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with NYC and Seattle is that they keep supporting and electing the SAME leftist cronies.

      Yeah. The last mayor primary in Seattle had me hopeful because the people running on actually increasing housing supply got ~60% of the vote (3 people got about 20% each), but the general was a blow-out for the status quo candidate who had been in previous administrations.

    13. Re:Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The problem with rising property prices is that, sure you can sell your house for 5 times what you paid for it, but unless you're moving out of the areas, you're probably overpaying for your next house.

      The most frustrating part of the whole conversation over housing prices is how the American public (and politicians) seem to never connect the dots between house values going up and housing being more expensive, even though they're the same thing.

    14. Re:Buy your condo or house by pak9rabid · · Score: 1

      Perhaps NYC needs another low-fat yogurt scam.

    15. Re: Buy your condo or house by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Most Americans want more benefits, and most Americans want lower taxes. Politicians who are too strongly opposed to either of those things tend to get voted out.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    16. Re:Buy your condo or house by Shaitan · · Score: 1

      Not true, in the next couple years the market will soundly crash again because of those rising prices. Sell, go through a spell renting somewhere cheap, then buy back in after the crash. Rinse and repeat.

    17. Re:Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NYC and Albany keeps electing Blue

      For 19 years, from 1994 to 2013, NYC had a Republican mayor.

      This is one of those cases where RINO is actually appropriate and not just someone complaining that the R is right enough.

    18. Re:Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Trust me politicians see it they aren't retarded

    19. Re:Buy your condo or house by EvilSS · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yea but Michael Bloomberg was a RINO. He was a democrat before switching to republican 2001 for his run for mayor. Then in 2007 he switched to independent, then this year back to democrat.

      --
      I browse on +1 so AC's need not respond, I won't see it.
    20. Re:Buy your condo or house by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Same thing in California. In the primary, Feinstein lost to another Democrat, but in the general, bizarrely, the traditionally Republican areas of the state all leaned towards for the progressive candidate, and the Democrat areas of the state voted to keep the relatively conservative, Feinstein.

      I don't even know what to make of that.

      --

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    21. Re: Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The commonality is both NYC and Wisconsin are run by smart idiots. Smart enough to get their cut. Idiot enough to let the rest of the population get screwed big time.

    22. Re:Buy your condo or house by reboot246 · · Score: 0

      She isn't intelligent enough to be a representative, but that didn't stop morons from voting for her. Have you ever listened to her trying to answer even simple questions?!? She's going to give Maxine Waters a run for her money for being the dumbest person in the House of Representatives.

      If this is the best we can do for representation, this country is royally fucked.

    23. Re:Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      become a realtor, doesn't matter, selling, buying, your commission always go up with the price.

    24. Re:Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No need to watch any news. just by induction, deduction.

      Yes, it is possible that she only able to manage complex problem, and completely act like an idiot when it comes to simple daily life things. Hey, it happens, at least in some movies.

    25. Re: Buy your condo or house by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but 2008-2010 you didn't get many commissiobs.

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    26. Re: Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh look at you. Aren't you a smarty. Want a cookie? Hyuk.

    27. Re: Buy your condo or house by bblb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, she's in the same boat as most Americans... irresponsible personal financial management. Funny how she thinks the answer to medicare for all is "just pay for it" but her answer as to how she can afford a DC apartment is "I don't know". That's liberal governance in a nutshell, emphasis on the 'nut'.

    28. Re:Buy your condo or house by bblb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Couldn't agree more. Reminds me of a quote I once read: People are always talking about demanding more and better performance from elected officials, but when you get right down to it, shouldn't a democracy demand more and better performance from the citizens who vote? If they do their job well, then the quality of those they elect will naturally follow." The ignorance, hysteria, and blind partisanship of elected officials is merely a reflection of the ignorant, hysterical, and partisan voters who elect them.

    29. Re: Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because they only name asteroids after morons.

    30. Re:Buy your condo or house by bblb · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No one is attacking her because she isn't rich enough to own two homes... for starters she doesn't own one home so that'd be a leap even if it were the case. What I'm attacking is her profound ignorance in having this be a surprise challenge to her. Anyone familiar with politics knows that it's not remotely uncommon for incoming freshmen elects to spend months sleeping on cots in their offices, this is nothing new. What's new is that this woman thinks that tax payers should be further burdened to help her avoid the same fate. That she thinks she's entitled to someone. Her ignorance is under attack, her failure to plan ahead is under attack, her presumptuous socialist desires are under attack.

    31. Re:Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What exactly do you expect? Republicans generally have zero policies that target urban populations in any favorable way.

    32. Re:Buy your condo or house by jeff4747 · · Score: 0

      What I'm attacking is her profound ignorance in having this be a surprise challenge to her.

      Can I attack you for believing this dreck?

      She talked about the problem. She never expressed surprise. Nor did she demand taxpayers do anything about it before we start paying her in January.

      But hey, if you wanna get your hate on an ex-food service employee for not having tens of thousands laying around and daring to talk about it, go right ahead. Your belief that only the wealthy can be in government has served us so well.

    33. Re:Buy your condo or house by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      The problem with NYC and Seattle is that they keep supporting and electing the SAME leftist cronies.

      No, the problem with NYC and Seattle (and San Francisco, and LA, and....) is zoning.

      The vast majority of housing in both cities is 4 stories or less with a huge portion of it being single-family residences. Getting a variance from the relevant zoning to build denser housing is really damn hard and expensive. Which means what little denser housing you do build is going to be targeted at wealthier buyers.

      Why is zoning a problem? Because most of the people who currently live in these cities own property in these cities. So they are not interested in electing politicians who want to change zoning, because they're making a shitload of money off of owning the existing property. The people who want to move there but can't because of housing prices can not vote there....and want their properties just outside these cities to appreciate massively too.

    34. Re:Buy your condo or house by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      TIL 1994 is after 2001.

    35. Re: Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet the GOP tax law was projected to drive up the debt... At least with the dreaded "liberal governance" we'd be getting affordable/single-payer healthcare. What is the GOP doing? Lining their pockets of course.

    36. Re: Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh look. B0Z0 with a bunch on nonsensical bullshit again. Jesus, you do love the look of your own posts.

    37. Re:Buy your condo or house by EvilSS · · Score: 1

      TIL 1994 is after 2001.

      Are you implying that Bloomberg was mayor in 1994, because if that's the case I got another thing you can learn today.

      --
      I browse on +1 so AC's need not respond, I won't see it.
    38. Re: Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also doesn't work if there's a homeless camp next door. The poor realtor trying to sell a unit in my building is having a really tough time in part because the unit looks out on a small homeless camp.

      And yet rather than dealing with the homeless problem here in Seattle, the council and mayor are doing whatever they can to add bike lanes and generally make the city as unlivable as possible.

      Forget shithold countries, we've got cities right in this country that are shitholes.

    39. Re: Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have more than enough money to pay for it, we just have to make decisions about spending priorities based upon what's good for the American people at large.

      Even research being funded by the Koch brothers comes to the conclusion that medicare for all would barely cost any more than our current system. In all likelihood it would wind up saving money before too long.

      If we dropped the Bush and Trump tax cuts for the wealthy and put military spending back to where it was pre-911, we'd have more than enough money left over to pay for medicare for all and still have a decent surplus left over.

      The left, progressives and liberals know far more about this stuff than you give us credit for. Because we're not fucking morons.

    40. Re:Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whom precisely do we vote for? You can't vote for people that aren't on the ballot.

      What's more, the issue we have in Seattle isn't the liberals, it's the corporatists and the incompetents that are causing the damage. It was the liberals and progressives that made Seattle attractive to these corporate leeches in the first place.

    41. Re: Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting. If you put Social Security spending back to pre-9/11 levels, you could afford Medicare for all, too. You would also have the benefit of leaving a gap that causes the next 9/11!

    42. Re:Buy your condo or house by careysub · · Score: 1

      I don't even know what to make of that.

      The likely calculation - at this moment in history it is better for Californians to have a seasoned hand experienced at dealing with Senate shenanigans, and positioned to take a powerful position (as the second most senior Democrat in the Senate) when the Democrats take the Senate in 2020.

      Both parties made that calculation and so Democrats voted in re-elect her, and Republicans voted for the new guy.

      --
      Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
    43. Re:Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the traditionally Republican voters in California leaned toward the leftist candidate (De Leon) because:
      1) They really, really really dislike Feinstein, and just can't get around that,
      2) They knew De Leon never stood a chance, so they just used their vote to stick up their middle finger to her.

      I personally found both to be foul, and left that spot with no vote on my ballot.

    44. Re: Buy your condo or house by sarren1901 · · Score: 1

      How are they being punished for screwing the public though? They aren't. I would say that makes them corrupt smart people.

    45. Re:Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is odd. I can't stand Feinstein, but there was no way I wanted to send a more progressive candidate to the Senate. Feinstein is the lesser evil.

    46. Re:Buy your condo or house by Strider- · · Score: 1

      This is why you need to stop this silliness and run elections the way we do up north. Government is dissolved, we have an election 40 to 80 days later, new government is sworn in within a week of being elected. Easy peasy.

      --
      ...si hoc legere nimium eruditionis habes...
    47. Re:Buy your condo or house by Kyr+Arvin · · Score: 1

      That is odd. I can't stand Feinstein, but there was no way I wanted to send a more progressive candidate to the Senate. Feinstein is the lesser evil.

      I don't get it either. It's like Conservatives who vote for Bernie. Yeah yeah, there are a few issues where they align, but they're totally ignoring all the left-of-mainstream-democrats stuff he talks about as well.

    48. Re:Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      republican mayor. while the entire state govt was democrat.

      gee. i wonder why he didn't get anything done?

      i can't figure it out...

    49. Re: Buy your condo or house by An+Ominous+Cow+Erred · · Score: 1

      Well, bike lanes do make it a little *MORE* livable at least. If they're not blocked by homeless tents/boxes. =/

    50. Re: Buy your condo or house by The+Cynical+Critic · · Score: 1

      The way I see things it's more like: "Most Americans either want either better benefits or lower taxes, but neither wants to actually pay for it". Those wanting more benefits, primarily poor people, want it paid by increasing taxes on particularly the rich and the people who want lower taxes, primarily rich people, want it paid by cutting benefits.

      As much as people in the U.S don't want to talk about class struggles, the reality is that much of U.S politics is pretty much exactly that. The main thing that limit's the extent to which it is the case one of the parties in the two party duopoly is a Country Club party pure and simple while the other sits somewhere in the middle between a Country Club party and a European-style Socialist party.

      --
      "Why should I want to make anything up? Life's bad enough as it is without wanting to invent any more of it."
    51. Re: Buy your condo or house by The+Cynical+Critic · · Score: 1

      Smart or dumb depends on what they're trying to achieve while holding public office. If the goal is for the benefit of the people living there then they're obviously morons, but it's pretty clear that like most U.S politicians the goal is self-enrichment in which case they're doing a very good job at it and can't really be called morons.

      --
      "Why should I want to make anything up? Life's bad enough as it is without wanting to invent any more of it."
    52. Re: Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even Medicare-For-All friendly sites like Vox admit it will cost about $32T over 10 years. Last year tax revenue was about $3.3T so it would take a doubling of tax revenue to pay for it.

    53. Re: Buy your condo or house by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Poor people complain about taxes, too.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    54. Re: Buy your condo or house by The+Cynical+Critic · · Score: 1

      I'm not fully convinced that's because of the taxes they actually pay and not because the politicians in the Country Club party that pretend to be on their side tell them to.

      --
      "Why should I want to make anything up? Life's bad enough as it is without wanting to invent any more of it."
    55. Re: Buy your condo or house by butchersong · · Score: 1

      The trick with that is that "our current system" is privately funded for most folks. So if we're being truthful, the "how will you pay for it?" response will be to raise taxes on either businesses or citizens. Now in the end this might be a better deal but it isn't like all the money is currently in the same pool. You have to shift it to the government first before it (hopefully) becomes cheaper.

    56. Re:Buy your condo or house by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      The problem with rising property prices is that, sure you can sell your house for 5 times what you paid for it, but unless you're moving out of the areas, you're probably overpaying for your next house.

      Which a lot of people are doing. Looking around, your primary residence should be about 20-40% of your net worth. That being ideal, most people are probably worse, say 50% if they own a house. If you can get five times that, you possibly have a nest egg large enough to move away, get a cheaper house and even a different job. Friends in Seattle are looking at this scenario right now. They got a good house at a good price years ago. It's now valued at almost three times what they paid for it. If it should reach five times, they're thinking about selling, moving to the peninsula to a nice but cheap house, getting a new jobs that pays less, but the leftover amount they invest could more than make up the difference in the long run.

    57. Re:Buy your condo or house by whitroth · · Score: 1

      Go fuck yourself, libertarian prick.

      The majority of people who buy a house are buying a HOME, NOT and "investment property". They want to stay there, in that neighborhood, not go somewhere else.

      I strongly supported candidates here in Montgomery Co, MD, that were against Amazon's locating here, and they won.

      You don't care about bad traffic becoming worse, you don't care that they avoid paying taxes, you don't care that WE, the taxpayers, have to pay for what they don't, and as far as I know, the tax breaks given to huge companies *NEVER* get made up by the jobs they provide.

    58. Re:Buy your condo or house by bblb · · Score: 2

      Direct quote from her "I don't know how I'm going to afford rent in DC"... That's ignorance, surprise, and a failure to plan. Another direct quote "There are many little ways in which our electoral system isn’t even designed (nor prepared) for working-class people to lead" Implying she believes the electoral system is responsible for ensuring she can afford rent or has a place to live. And no one is saying that only the wealthy can govern... I have friends who went from modest incomes to serve in office and spent those first months on cots in their offices or on friend's sofas living like poor college kids. The difference is that they accepted that reality and planned for it, they weren't crying about it when it came. I know others who had enough income to start saving funds a year in advance and were able to secure apartments. The key difference here is that she feels entitled to more than all the men and women who came before her and that's the key issue with her generation as a whole. Bottom line, she failed to plan for a victory that was fairly obviously going to happen and no one with that level of poor planning has any business planning for a nation. Lil Miss "You Just Pay For It" needs to figure out how she's gonna pay for it before she starts telling the country to. Or, she needs to pipe down and get a blow up mattress for her office like the men and women who came before her have done.

    59. Re:Buy your condo or house by bblb · · Score: 1

      ...and I love the way you want to paint her as a poor food service worker while she's wearing $4000 outfits and $600 shoes. Priorities... her's are wrong.

    60. Re:Buy your condo or house by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      I'm definitely not a Liebartarian, I'm pro-transit, pro-bike, and pro-walking, and I live in Seattle.

      Not disagreeing that tax giveaways are bad.

      My advice still stands.

      --
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    61. Re: Buy your condo or house by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      You must not talk to many poor people. You privileged fuck.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    62. Re:Buy your condo or house by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      What makes no sense is that California has an open primary for Senators, which means that there's a single ballot with all the people from every party on it. So either a fairly large percentage of Democrats flipped or everybody who didn't vote for Feinstein the first time, including all the Republicans, preferred to keep a strong Democrat in power, rather than someone progressive who would have had no seniority. It seems counterproductive to me.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    63. Re:Buy your condo or house by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      And I love the way you think she owned the clothes in that photo shoot.

    64. Re:Buy your condo or house by bblb · · Score: 1

      Funny that you think I was talking about a photo shoot... way to dig deep trying to find excuses. White knight harder bro, maybe she'll notice you.

    65. Re:Buy your condo or house by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      Funny that you think I was talking about a photo shoot

      Oh, it's that other time when it happened that you can't quite remember the details about. But it totally happened.

    66. Re:Buy your condo or house by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      Direct quote from her "I don't know how I'm going to afford rent in DC"... That's ignorance, surprise, and a failure to plan.

      Yes, I understand. Only the wealthy should run for Congress.

      Implying she believes the electoral system is responsible for ensuring she can afford rent or has a place to live

      Ah, yes, Time for more mind-reading instead of the sentences surrounding that statement.

      And no one is saying that only the wealthy can govern... I have friends who went from modest incomes to serve in office and spent those first months on cots in their offices or on friend's sofas living like poor college kids.

      Yes, she should sleep in her office that she doesn't get until January.......oh wait, that won't work. Ok, she should leverage her business and government connections to get a room/couch....but it's totally true that anyone with no money and connections can do this!!

      they weren't crying about it when it came

      Stating a problem is exactly the same as sobbing in a corner, totally distraught and unable to function. Sure.

      I know others who had enough income to start saving funds a year in advance and were able to secure apartments

      So again, only the wealthy should run for office.

      The key difference here is that she feels entitled to more than all the men and women who came before her and that's the key issue with her generation as a whole

      Because stating a problem exists is exactly the same as a demand that someone else fix it.

      Bottom line, she failed to plan for a victory that was fairly obviously going to happen

      She was widely expected to lose the primary by double-digits. So no, this was not obviously going to happen.

      Or, she needs to pipe down and get a blow up mattress for her office

      That she will not have until January.

      It's always entertaining running into old folks like you who are so terrified of change that you insist on the worst possible interpretation of anyone's statements. I can't wait 'till you're out of the voting pool so we can actually start fixing all the things you broke.

    67. Re:Buy your condo or house by bblb · · Score: 1

      Yeah... that other time, as in literally every public appearance she's had or been out in public. But it's pretty great that you actually think she doesn't buy any of her own clothes. You do realize that every politician doesn't get a free wardrobe like hollywood elites and the first lady... right? When someone bumps in Ocasio-Cortez at Starbucks and she's wearing $3500 worth of wardrobe, that's not a staged interview, that's her closet. But hey, you keep on telling yourself whatever helps you sleep at night kiddo.

    68. Re:Buy your condo or house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What should be done is public funding of elections and call lobbying what it is, bribery. The reason so many politicians get rich is due to massive amounts of bribes, make the bribes illegal again and up the pay for elected office with a stipend for reasonable housing in various parts of their district and have the campaigns themselves paid for by tax dollars. Why? Where exactly do you think the bribery money comes from? You are paying for it in the products and services that you use every day at a much higher rate than necessary to run campaigns and rent a few apartments.

    69. Re:Buy your condo or house by bblb · · Score: 1

      There's a difference between being wealthy and being able to plan financially. It's kinda sad that you think someone who's best job prospect to date was apparently in food service is fit to govern first of all... but that you think everyone who isn't wealthy lacks the capacity to plan for future finances or the means to do so is downright pathetic. I saved the down payment for my first home while working as a cook in restaurants and going to school full time... as a black man... by your standards, I should've just been huddled up crying to everyone who would listen about how oppressed I am and and how mean the whole world is to me, especially rich people. And yes... her office she gets in January... when this will actually become a problem that needs to be dealt with. It's simple, she failed to plan and thinks that her failure to plan is a problem with the electoral system that she needs to fix... the same chick who couldn't "fix" herself a better job or "fix" herself a savings plan is gonna fix the political system that created the most successful nation on earth. You know, idiots like Ocasio-Cortez running for office aren't the real problem with this country today... it's the entitled idiots like you who think she's got it figured out and idolize her idiocy that are ruining this country. We don't need to demand more of our elected officials, we need to demand more of our voting public and the quality of the elected will naturally follow.

  2. You've heard of the Golden Rule, haven't you? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whoever has the gold makes the rules.

  3. Prepare to be gentrified, Seattle Style by OffTheLip · · Score: 1

    It's now happening in areas more willing/able to resist. Too bad the game is rigged.

    1. Re:Prepare to be gentrified, Seattle Style by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      South Lake Union was a place to avoid before Amazon came. I'd rather have a row of gastro pubs than the hovels that were there before.

  4. How much do you want to stay in the neighborhood? by Ichijo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "We're worried about our ability to stay in the neighborhood," Dixon said.

    Then maybe you should allow more density. Restricting supply is a great way to make things unaffordable!

    --
    Any sufficiently unpopular but cohesive argument is indistinguishable from trolling.
  5. How terrible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Their property values will sky rocket and thousands of new people will be in walking distance to their businesses.

    1. Re:How terrible by GonzoPhysicist · · Score: 1

      Doesn't help if you're renting

      --
      horror vacui
    2. Re:How terrible by jythie · · Score: 1

      great for slumlords, not so great for people actually living there.

  6. Absolutely. Same goes for olympics, stadiums, etc by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Anyone who thinks these giveaways to big corporations for supposed reward (jobs, media exposure, etc.) needs to listen to the Citations Needed Podcast, particularly Episode 20, "How Sports Are Used to Fleece Public Trusts".

    There's a good reason Amazon's HQ search was often called Bezos' "quest to find America's Dumbest Mayor". Looks like he found more than one.

    My heart goes out to the people. Maybe it's not too late to replace your representatives and undo this.. :(

  7. Amazons need haircuts, too by Shotgun · · Score: 4, Interesting

    He is going to have a business with a large number of well paid workers right next door. Why would he be upset? Instead of protesting, he should clean his shop and get ready for the influx of new business.

    --
    Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
    Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    1. Re:Amazons need haircuts, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Try reading what he has to say instead of just blurting your retarded non-reading version of it, see if that works better eh kid?

    2. Re:Amazons need haircuts, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was my first thought too.

    3. Re: Amazons need haircuts, too by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1

      Maybe he's worried it will be knocked down to build Scumazon HQ.

    4. Re:Amazons need haircuts, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Most likely his rent will skyrocket and a artisanal coffee house and yoga studio will take his place.

    5. Re:Amazons need haircuts, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The article says he owns the business - it doesn't say anything about him owning the building. My guess is that he expects his rent to rise faster than his profits.

    6. Re:Amazons need haircuts, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He is going to have a business with a large number of well paid workers right next door. Why would he be upset? Instead of protesting, he should clean his shop and get ready for the influx of new business.

      The problem is this hasn't panned out as much in places like Cupertino and Sunnyvale. Those towns are home to the biggest tech companies like Apple and Facebook, but because they offer so many amenities such as free bus rides (Including wi-fi), onsite lunches, etc., that most of those highly paid workers are spending their salaries buying stuff from their company, and not in the community, going to restaurants etc. Hence the local communities suffer, because property values increase but the locals not working at those companies see higher cost of living that becomes more difficult to afford.

      It's not guaranteed to go that way, but it's also not guaranteed that Amazon putting a facility there will benefit the community either.

    7. Re:Amazons need haircuts, too by Nidi62 · · Score: 2

      He is going to have a business with a large number of well paid workers right next door. Why would he be upset? Instead of protesting, he should clean his shop and get ready for the influx of new business.

      It's more likely that Amazon will offer free haircuts as a perk, or most of those people will commute to work meaning they get haircuts near their house. Either way, his rent goes up but his clientele doesn't.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    8. Re:Amazons need haircuts, too by CodeInspired · · Score: 5, Interesting

      This reminds me of the Californians who sold their properties for 10x, 20x, 100x investment and moved to Arizona. As they sit beside their pools, drinking their fine wine, enjoying their financially stress-free lives, they reflect on how they once had a locally owned, mediocre coffee shop that was paradise. The charter schools their kids now go to cannot compare to the raw, cash-strapped public schools they previously attended. Escalating their status from average neighbor to Country Club Elite, they mourn the good old days when times were tough and they didn't have a landscaper. Damn those Silicon Valley companies moving in!! Ahh yes... the struggles of wining the real-estate lottery.

    9. Re: Amazons need haircuts, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True, but somehow I doubt the people working at Amazon HQ2 will want GTA haircuts.

    10. Re: Amazons need haircuts, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That only works if you have enough money and credit to actually buy some piece of property. Many people and businesses don't have that luxury. Instead they simply get priced out of renting and have to leave their lives and businesses behind and start anew. Only now they are worse off. Do you really think the barber shop in the story actually owns their store location?

    11. Re:Amazons need haircuts, too by george14215 · · Score: 1

      But he's probably renting his store. And that rent will go up...

    12. Re:Amazons need haircuts, too by jbn-o · · Score: 1

      I'm noticing a lack of numbers in your claim. How many people experienced this?

    13. Re:Amazons need haircuts, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you live in Kamchatka? Big Tech brings barbers in their buildings. If it were not true, you'd see dozens of booked-full barbershops in SLU.

    14. Re:Amazons need haircuts, too by psycho12345 · · Score: 1

      Pretty much anyone who bought a house in the 70's, 80's or 90's. My grandfather bought his in the early 70's for 75k. It is now worth 12 times that. He could easily sell it, pay the sales taxes and what not, and be left with 400-500k. In most states, you can just buy a damm near mansion with acreage outright with cash, for that amount.

      Multiple states bitch about Californians doing this, cashing out of California and setting themselves up for retirement as virtual kings (Oregon, Washington, Colorado, parts of Texas, Arizona, Nevada, Tennessee all have happen).

    15. Re:Amazons need haircuts, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In a nutshell? He won't be able to afford it once the rich people move in.

    16. Re:Amazons need haircuts, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Example: 10 Woods End Ln Springfield, Illinois is listed for sale at $519,900. This is a 7,220sqft home with 6 bedrooms and 5 bathrooms. It sits on 5 acres.

  8. Re:How much do you want to stay in the neighborhoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It can't have more residential space than 12 times its lot space? Then how the hell are they able to build those giant towers on central park that have been going up for the last 5 years? Seems like when you're making ultra luxury condos that start at 10 million that law is not enforced.

  9. Re: Absolutely. Same goes for olympics, stadiums, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The lack of schools and public transit will vanish because of the new HQ. The only issue will be skyrocketing property values due to demand, and the local government could address that if they chose to.

    I hope Amazon looks at this and goes all-in at the Virginia location instead. Then NY can sit and cry as they watch their property value crash as all the speculators dump property at a loss.

  10. In other words... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... New Yorkers opposed to new jobs! Gee what a surprise.

    1. Re: In other words... by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1

      Opposed to predators moving in...Amazon's entire business model is based on destruction of human privacy and abuse of employees.

    2. Re:In other words... by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 2

      ... New Yorkers opposed to new jobs! Gee what a surprise.

      Perhaps some people are mad about that, but many others are just mad about the tax subsidies.

      Why should Amazon get a special sweetheart tax deal? In the eyes of the law, Amazon Inc. and Maggie's Pie Shop should be treated exactly the same. The government should not be favoring one over the other.

    3. Re:In other words... by GonzoPhysicist · · Score: 1

      Exactly, sweetheart deals are what got Apple into so much trouble in Ireland, the EU actually has rules against this kind of thing.

      --
      horror vacui
    4. Re:In other words... by h4ck7h3p14n37 · · Score: 1

      Cities make these deals because they bring in revenue. How much will Amazon and its employees generate for the city versus Maggie's?

    5. Re:In other words... by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

      Cities make these deals because they bring in revenue.

      Why do you believe that Amazon will bring in more revenue than the businesses that are displaced?

      How much will Amazon and its employees generate for the city versus Maggie's?

      Stupid comparison. The only important metric is the revenue, PER EMPLOYEE, which would be roughly the same.

      If it was my neighborhood, I would prefer the pie shop. Nevertheless, it should be left to the market, not to bureaucratic whim.

  11. Re: How much do you want to stay in the neighborho by Type44Q · · Score: 1
    Increase NYC's density and you get Shinjuku without the politeness or cleanliness.

    I'm no fan of cities in general, much less New York, but one of "The Rotten Apple's" biggest attractions is all the open space (relatively speaking).

  12. Re:Absolutely. Same goes for olympics, stadiums, e by Shotgun · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The problem is that it is a tragedy of the commons situation. If New York doesn't give an incentive, then maybe Raleigh, NC will. Then, as in all markets, it comes down to what will the market bear. I think there needs to be a few court cases of unfair taxation that go up to the Supreme Court. The other answer is that people fight to reduce the role of government everywhere, but then they'd have to give up their rent-controlled apartments and cheap subway tickets.

    --
    Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
    Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
  13. Love it by bblb · · Score: 2

    Gotta love the irony of the same folks who shit on Trump for cutting corporations a modest tax break going all out rolling out the red carpet to give money to Amazon... and then ignoring their constituency when they realize what happened.

    1. Re:Love it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gotta love the irony of the same folks who shit on Trump for cutting corporations a modest tax break going all out rolling out the red carpet to give money to Amazon... and then ignoring their constituency when they realize what happened.

      For some reason marked "Troll".

      I fail to understand why the post was marked that way.

      Oh DOH! Millenial moderators that have no realistic concept of reality. Yep, that's the reason.

      They fail to realize the fake world they believe in where everything is free and/or given to them is happening right here in the case of Amazon in NYC.

      Ask the people in the NYCHA projects right next door to the new Amzon HQ2 in NYC if they have ANY CHANCE of getting a job at Amazon HQ2. They will tell you, "Nope. No way. Not gonna help us a d@mn bit."

  14. What are you investing? by goombah99 · · Score: 1

    Where does this wealth come from that you are investing? The areas Amazon is moving into are actually zoned as economically distressed and needing re-investment incentives. So you can't just Invest if you are also not making money too.

    On the otherhand, I think Ocasio-hyphen got it right when she said Displacement is not urban renewal.

    That'a totally correct. But it'a the model that Seattle, and San Francisco and other areas use. You gentrify the ghetto. As the Bus Boy's famous song said "Oh Boy, There goes the Neighborhood/ The whites are moving in/ they'll bring their next of kin".

    In places like Santa Fe however, this sort of thing has led to cultural displacement too. Instead of houses with 300 year old family casas with poor tenants fighting over access to the Acequia waters, you have kambucha guzzling prius owners fighting over parking places in the Whole foods parking lot. The poor can't pay the rising taxes, sell off their water rights and thus extinguishing the historical wealth of the lands, and eventually move out so another condo-casita cand go up.

    But that's also the story of the Bronx too. It's populace has changed over the years in immigrant waves.

    So it's not so sad. It's just urban renewal and re-invention. And to invest money you need to make money.

    --
    Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
    1. Re: What are you investing? by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1

      LI City hasn't actually been "distressed" for 15 years or so. More like hipster/yupster paradise built on former toxics sites.

    2. Re: What are you investing? by PPH · · Score: 1

      More like hipster/yupster paradise

      The hipsters are mainly renters. So they won't be profiting from the increase in property values. In fact, they will be moving out.

      It's an upscale version of what light rail did in Seattle. Colored folks got pushed out by hipsters. But the hipsters think they define the culture of a place. And if they get pushed out, there will be hell to pay.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    3. Re: What are you investing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Landlords increase the rent to what the market would stand. There wasn't any favoritism involved.

  15. Jobs Not More Quality Of Life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    It's very telling that Amerikuk politicians are all JOBS JOBS JOBS but never talk about your quality of life, time off work, and how little American workers get compared to even Canadians (nevermind a real people like Germany who universally get atleast THREE WEEKS PAID VACATION because theyre better than Americans.. lol!)

    1. Re: Jobs Not More Quality Of Life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Basically, most European Union's countries guarantees 3-4 weeks of paid holidays a year

    2. Re:Jobs Not More Quality Of Life by dk20 · · Score: 1

      As a Canadian who has lived and worked in both the US and Canada for many years, your statement about "even Canadians" is confusing.

      The only real substantial difference between the US vs CA that i was aware of was the shockingly low MAT leave, but otherwise things seem to be on par.

    3. Re:Jobs Not More Quality Of Life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not very impressive, i am american and i get 4.5 weeks vacation plus 9 paid holidays. does that mean i am better than the germans?

    4. Re:Jobs Not More Quality Of Life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm American and I get 5 weeks of vacation. I don't know any professional people that only get 3 weeks.

  16. rant by zlives · · Score: 2

    I don't know about the rest of the rant but
    "By the way, Amazon was coming here without all this money anyway"
    this part is true, other places offered more incentives but amazon moved there because of talent, so yeah they didn't need to throw the money.

    1. Re: rant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      does Amazon have a department listening to these concerns? Other than this particular conflict, is the protesters mood about âoewhat ifsâ or simply that they want amazon to stay out?

    2. Re:rant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      talent

      Amazon moved to NY because of financial services and markets. They will supply cloud computing to banks, brokers, and whoever in finance wants Amazon running their backend.

      Amazon moved to NoVA because of the federal government. They will supply cloud computing to the Pentagon, intelligence agencies, and whoever in government wants Amazon running their backend.

      The two cities were inevitable. It had nothing to do with talent (easily imported) and everything to do with access to customers.

  17. Well by nightfire-unique · · Score: 1, Informative

    but what I'm against is giving away all this money to one of the richest companies in the world

    Not to argue for or against Amazon in NYC, this argument itself is somewhat weak. Tax incentives aren't "giving" a company money, they're just not taking it. And, if that incentive brings the business, then even without any direct taxation, it means more money for the city: higher paid workers pay higher taxes and spend more money.

    It's fine to say "we don't want to entice that company to setting up shop" or even "they would come without the incentives, so we shouldn't offer the incentive," but not "we shouldn't be giving away money."

    --
    A government is a body of people notably ungoverned - AC
    1. Re:Well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is total bs. Tax incentives are giving HUGE #s of resources-- road infrastructure, more policing, increased demand for public services in all areas, etc-- to the invading corporation. WHy do you think the corporation puts their HQ in a town rather than building from scratch in the desert? They want to take advantage of the existing institutions. The argument that this necessarily attracts business, tourism, etc has been disproved again and again, in city after city. In rare cases where there actually is an arguable benefit, that benefit often goes exclusively to the richest citizens-- the poorest are displaced and end up paying for stadiums and events which they can't afford to attend. The NYTimes has an article about it today. Bigger corporate chains push out small mom-and-pop stores, and studies consistently show a net harm to most people when local governments often naively sell out their poorest constituents with these giveaways to the corporations and their big-ticket projects. Rich corporations win with free money and services. They're never held accountable when all of their pie-in-the-sky promises of jobs and economic stimulus don't happen.

      The typical citizen-- who pays for this in taxes to support the sweet corporate deal-- loses, big time.

      Americas dumbest mayors indeed.

    2. Re:Well by nightfire-unique · · Score: 1

      Hey, I've got no love for megacorps.

      But, you have to be careful when you try to couple infrastructure with the act of tax paying. You don't need to pay taxes to use infrastructure; you need to pay taxes against your income. If someone makes no income, and pay not taxes, they're still entitled to use the infrastructure.

      At some point you have to be pragmatic: a large company that pays its workers well (think Costco more than Amazon) entering a city means lower unemployment, higher wages, and often less crime. It can also have some seriously negative effects, such as unwanted gentrification and massive increases on housing prices.

      Point is: it's all a balance. If offering tax incentives is what it takes to get a wanted business to enter the state/province/city, then it can be justified.

      --
      A government is a body of people notably ungoverned - AC
    3. Re:Well by Zontar_Thing_From_Ve · · Score: 1

      It's fine to say "we don't want to entice that company to setting up shop" or even "they would come without the incentives, so we shouldn't offer the incentive," but not "we shouldn't be giving away money."

      I'm guessing you didn't read that article about 2 weeks ago that got some national attention about what a disaster Wisconsin's Foxxconn deal has been. Go read it. That pretty much qualifies as "giving away money". Best case estimates are that the Foxxconn plant, which as always with Foxxconn is already reduced in size and scope from what they originally promised to build, might be profitable by 2050. Maybe. There's some thought that Scott Walker lost his re-election bid as a direct result of the bad deal with Foxxconn. I know that NY threw almost double the amount of money Northern Virginia did at Amazon and it's not all just tax breaks. The joke is on both of them - I'm pretty sure their subsidies won't go down but they're getting half the number of jobs they offered subsidies for.

    4. Re:Well by smoot123 · · Score: 1

      Tax incentives aren't "giving" a company money, they're just not taking it.

      I guess that's a technically valid way of looking at it.

      Let's try this: I'm against giving Amazon or any other company special privileges not available to all companies and taxpayers. If the tax rules are good enough for all the rest of us, they're good enough for Amazon. If a tax break is good for Amazon, it ought to be good for all us schmucks too.

    5. Re: Well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They were going to move there regardless of incentives. That's why they are so pissed. The HQ charade was a scam to receive inducements for locations they were going to choosing regardless.

      If a restaurant is taking reservations for 3 months and filling every table every night, they don't need to go on groupon to give half away when they don't need to.

      There's cities and states in serious financial trouble for giving away the store for nowhere near the return on investment.

  18. Re:How much do you want to stay in the neighborhoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They are buying the building right of other buildings in the same area.

  19. Re: Absolutely. Same goes for olympics, stadiums, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As the NYTimes reports today...

    That tax break was pitched as a benefit for distressed communities. But critics fear it could primarily help wealthy investors and speed gentrification in parts of the United States that were already likely to draw investment.

  20. Agreed,, Housing not horse shit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is crap...

    How exactally does the Amazon thing, directly and positively impact the area?

    It doesnt.

    oh yea, it creates jobs, etc, but whats a job worth if you cant put a roof over your head???

    Bezos This is lame, as the one of ritchest man in the werld why the fuck do you need govt subsidizes??

    I have ambtiious dreams but dont want to pay for them, I'll look to the govt's and tax payer money to further perpetuate my needs.
    PARASITE

    1. Re:Agreed,, Housing not horse shit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh yea, it creates jobs, etc, but whats a job worth if you cant put a roof over your head???

      Erp? A job pays you money, with which you can buy a roof to go over your head.

      Amazon's HQ jobs pay very well. These are not $7.50/hr min-wage stuff we're talkin here.

    2. Re:Agreed,, Housing not horse shit. by terrycarlino · · Score: 1

      This move of Amazon will create no jobs. They will move workers in from other areas, or hire college educated workers from other companies. they might pick up a few high GPA university students, who they would have hired anyway and who probably have a number of top flight Big Tech companies looking at them.

      No unemployed New Yorker will get a job out of this. Even the janitors and cafeteria folks will be from contract companies who already have workers on the hook other places.

  21. The argument is by mobby_6kl · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The argument is, I think, that the present value of Amazon and their employees' future investments, tax payments, and spending outweighs the incentive the city provides. So if they want more funding for schools and other stuff, well, that's how you get the money to do it. The calculations might be wrong, but I kind of doubt it, the HQ will be dumping a ton of money in to the local economy.

    1. Re:The argument is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      And the incentive is not cash anyway, but simply taxes not levied for a period of time, which wouldn't have been collected anyway unless some other entity has now been squeezed out of that area.

    2. Re:The argument is by smoot123 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The argument is, I think, that the present value of Amazon and their employees' future investments, tax payments, and spending outweighs the incentive the city provides.

      Yes, that's the argument. My understanding is it often turns out to be incorrect. It's hard to say for certain. The poster child tends to be sports stadiums. They often get subsidized and virtually never live up to their promises.

      I don't live in the Big Apple so I don't have a dog in this fight. What I object to is Amazon and other large developers getting special treatment. If the tax laws are good enough for normal businesses, then they should be appropriate for Amazon. I don't buy the argument that big deals are somehow special.

  22. Re: Absolutely. Same goes for olympics, stadiums, by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1

    So. Let them move to North Carolaaaahna.

  23. FTFY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Their property taxes will skyrocket and thousands of new people will be in walking distance to the starbucks, mcdonalds or other chains that take their place.

    1. Re: FTFY by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1

      Not even chains. Commercial kitchens get up by UberEats or the Amazon equivalent. Going out or ordering by phone is so 1995, and techrobots are antisocial.

    2. Re:FTFY by magarity · · Score: 1

      Their property taxes will skyrocket and thousands of new people will be in walking distance to the starbucks, mcdonalds or other chains that take their place.

      What chains, exactly, is the guy in the article worried about? Do you think managerial level people are going to pass his boutique barbershop to go look for a SuperCuts?

  24. Re:Absolutely. Same goes for olympics, stadiums, e by mobby_6kl · · Score: 1

    This is nothing like the Olympics. The issue there is that you build a bunch of expensive stadiums and other crap that nobody ever uses again but it requires a lot of expensive maintenance so it either continues to drain money or just decays into a wasteland.

  25. Re: How much do you want to stay in the neighborho by Ichijo · · Score: 1

    There's no need to convert parks to condo towers in order to achieve Barcelona's level of density (about 2x Queens').

    --
    Any sufficiently unpopular but cohesive argument is indistinguishable from trolling.
  26. Better you than us... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Boston sure dodged a bullet on that one

  27. Re: Absolutely. Same goes for olympics, stadiums by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    NY property is already crazy expensive.

  28. I don't get it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everyone is talking about all this money, presumably from the taxpayers, being handed over to Amazon, or whatever the corporation of the day happens to be. I thought that they are just getting initial tax breaks for moving in. Are the host cities actually "giving" anything at all? It's not like Amazon was already there paying taxes and is now suddenly being allowed to stop paying them for a while. Before Amazon moves in, they are getting NOTHING from them, so what's the big deal?

    1. Re:I don't get it by MachineShedFred · · Score: 2

      Well, the city has to do a bunch of stuff not to make the whole situation a giant clusterfuck - road expansions, mass transit lines, new traffic signals, changing of traffic patterns to match the estimated traffic increases, all the water works / sewer work to be able to service all this new stuff, build fire stations, police stations, schools for the new housing, parks, waste disposal services, etc.

      You know that Amazon won't be footing the bill for any of that. The current citizens will be, and there won't be any tax revenue coming from Amazon for several years after it's all done, because of the tax breaks being handed over, so the current citizenry will have to foot the bill disproportionately for some time.

      Somewhere down the road, the city will start collecting on all this new shit when the deal expires; by then Amazon will threaten to leave and some idiot politician will ram through an extension just on the threat. This is the same game that urban renewal advocates play with "tax increment financing."

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    2. Re:I don't get it by ScentCone · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The whole point is that there will thousands and thousands of new, well compensated professionals with incomes to tax and a giant surge of personal spending in the entire area surrounding the activity. That's exactly the sort of activity that funds the infrastructure in the first place. None of that would happen without attracting the entities that employ all of those people and stimulate all of those billions of dollars in activity. I haven't heard anyone report that the barber shop in question won't continue to pay taxes and fees on its surging new business activity, or that every restaurant for miles around that will get a huge jump in business will somehow fail to pay their taxes.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    3. Re:I don't get it by jeff4747 · · Score: 2

      The whole point is that there will thousands and thousands of new, well compensated professionals with incomes to tax and a giant surge of personal spending in the entire area surrounding the activity

      That's the theory.

      It doesn't always work out that way in practice. MA got screwed by some pharmaceutical giants who didn't quite expand as they said they would. And Foxconn is currently fucking over Wisconsin, with $60k/year jobs costing the state $250k/year each in incentives.

      As for that barber shop, his landlord is going to jack his rent through the roof, forcing him to close and/or move. A new Starbucks will pay more rent, but it'll be bad for that barber.....and a huge portion of the restaurants for miles around.

    4. Re:I don't get it by The+Cynical+Critic · · Score: 1

      The issue here is not what the local government can pull in terms of taxes, but the effects for the people already living in the area. It's pretty easy to find textbook examples of this going badly wrong as you only need to look at all of the big tech hotspots and areas with a manageable commute to them. Tech workers pay a lot of taxes, but because of the massive increase in housing cost a lot of particularly lower class people have had no choice but to leave the area they grew up in.

      This is also neglecting the issue that workers may end up commuting from outside of the area that's giving them the tax break Boise-style to save money or be able to buy a bigger house, meaning that they obviously don't get any additional tax revenue from these people. In this case all they're getting from the deal is more wear and tear on their infrastructure.

      --
      "Why should I want to make anything up? Life's bad enough as it is without wanting to invent any more of it."
  29. Re: Absolutely. Same goes for olympics, stadiums, by pgmrdlm · · Score: 1

    It's NYC. You really think it will be more expensive? Maybe in Virginia, but NYC? Shitttttt.

    --
    Anonymous comments are as pathetic as the anonymous "sources" that contaminate gutless journalism from the New York Time
  30. Housing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't understand why corporate housing isn't a thing.

    1. Re:Housing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In reality, company-owned housing ends up putting workers in an even WORSE position, unless the company is merely an arm's-length landlord who doesn't restrict tenancy to current employees only.

      Imagine getting laid off and being told that you not only have to find a new job... you ALSO have at most 30-60 days to find a new place to live... at a point when your ability to get a rental application approved is in the toilet (because you're now unemployed), your near-term finances are somewhere between "uncertain" and "dire", and moving is practically a full-time job of its OWN for a month or two under NORMAL circumstances, so NOW you have to BOTH hunt for a new job AND find a new place to live.

      Something almost as bad happened to a friend who worked for a bank. His mortgage was through the bank, and had a really fucked up clause that he had to refinance within 90 days of ceasing to be an employee or he'd officially be in default & facing foreclosure. Yeah... right... so, in the middle of the worst economy since the Great Depression... while unemployed himself... he had to somehow get approved for a new mortgage on a house that was, at that point, underwater by approximately $80,000... a point in history when it was damn-near impossible for someone with a pristine credit, a stable job, and a 20% down payment to get approved for a mortgage. He had to cash in his 401k [at horrific loss, since the stock market was in the toilet at that time] and pay penalty taxes in order to raise enough to cover the amount his house was underwater AND increase his equity to 20%. He was fairly wealthy to begin with, and BARELY managed to avoid foreclosure over it. Most people in that position would have lost both their job AND their house over a situation like that.

      The most completely absurd thing is that it was even LEGAL for a bank to do mortgages like that in the first place. I mean, sure... take away the discounted interest rate he got as an employee and make it whatever it would have been if he hadn't been... but Jesus H. Christ, telling him he literally had to refinance within a few months or be in technical default facing foreclosure? That's insane.

      And it goes to show why you really don't want to have things like that tied to your present employment. At best, it makes ceasing to be employed there enormously more disruptive. At worst, you could go from "ok" to "financially ruined, at risk of becoming homeless" within a matter of weeks.

    2. Re:Housing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting, thanks for relating this.

      It occurs to me that the argument you make for employer-independent housing can likewise be made for health care.

      Sometimes, you need a parallel example to see how messed-up the status quo is...

  31. Re:Zach Patterson/ZIP "Greatest Hits" (lol, not) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To hell with that guy, right?

    Who does he think he is, messing with APK?

    Keep on rolling with your software man. You will stop all the malware, all the portsmash, all the Spectre/Meltdown. We're behind you 100%. Believe it.

  32. Re:Absolutely. Same goes for olympics, stadiums, e by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 2

    I think there needs to be a few court cases of unfair taxation that go up to the Supreme Court.

    Would that apply to "enterprise zones" tax breaks designed to boost poor areas too?

    Or does it just apply to incentives for disliked tech companies?

  33. He's probably renting by KalvinB · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If he doesn't actually own the space he's in then with Amazon setting up shop, the lease payments are going to go up substantially to capture some of that sweet rich people money. He's going to have to decide whether his business can support the higher rent. If he decides he can't take the risk, the person who owns the building will find plenty of businesses that are willing to take the risk.

  34. Pennies don't stop trains by KalvinB · · Score: 1

    New York state collects 76 billion in revenue every year.

    The few million they're tossing Amazon to encourage development will be paid back far more with income taxes and all the other taxes the customers, employees, etc will be paying for the foreseeable future.

    Crooked politicians always blame a penny for collapsed bridges while they squander dollars. The citizens should be smarter than to let them get away with such nonsense.

    1. Re:Pennies don't stop trains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is closer to 2B, not millions. 2B is over 2% of ALL the taxes NY collects in a year. Color me crazy, but I think 2% is a buttload for one company to get.

    2. Re:Pennies don't stop trains by sunking2 · · Score: 0

      All that shows is that everyone in NYC is getting a subsidy. Which they are or else they'd move across the river to Jersey.

    3. Re:Pennies don't stop trains by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      Uh....no. NYC is where the money is. It's subsidizing the rest of the state (though not very well). Utica isn't paying much in taxes.

  35. Re:Absolutely. Same goes for olympics, stadiums, e by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

    Apparently Long Island City's mayor is extra dumb, because Amazon is getting about double the incentives to build there, that they are in Alexandria, VA.

    Is anyone really surprised that they chose New York and DC? Talk about the most obvious choice they could have made...

    --
    Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  36. Re:How much do you want to stay in the neighborhoo by Shaitan · · Score: 1

    Not a chance, let the prices go up and those high paid employees move in. Not only will the neighborhood start looking a hell of a lot better higher home prices mean more taxes and nicer schools.

    It's the opposite direction of increased density and reduced prices we all want to avoid. If you see that happening in your neighborhood bail while there is still a chance.

  37. Re: Absolutely. Same goes for olympics, stadiums, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The bottom half of Florida is already a joint colony of New York and Cuba.

  38. Because Amazon would have come anyway by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    we don't need to be giving the richest man on earth free Helipads. He came to New York because one of his houses is nearby. He never intended to put it anywhere else.

    Invest in your workers (demand side) and the businesses will follow. They'll have to, because otherwise they won't get workers. America is where business wants to be because our military protects their ass(et)s. We're an incredibly safe and secure place to live.

    And as always, if they want to leave, fine. Go. Get out. Don't let the door hit ya where the dog shoulda bit ya. But you don't get to take the ball. That's what eminent domain is for.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  39. Yes, they are. You've fallen for Trickle Down by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    Tax "incentives" are the most insidious type of trickle down economics. The assumption is that without these "Job Creators" all labor would stop. Nothing could be further from the truth. Bezos was a right time/right place guy. He didn't build Amazon, the engineers did. Bezos is going to go where those engineers are. He has to. He couldn't build the company by himself. He's clever and well educated, but he's one man. There's only so much one man can do/learn.

    Instead of tax incentives we should be investing in America and the American worker. Demand side economics. Let them come to us instead of us bowing and begging to them. That's what makes this feel so wrong. We're all begging Jeff to give us a little bit of his money. We've been reduced to peasants. That's what that sinking feeling in your gut means.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:Yes, they are. You've fallen for Trickle Down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was more than just the right place, right time with Amazon, Amazon wouldn't be what it is today without Bezos' management. Not that I like him, the way Amazon treats its warehouse staff is really shitty. I don't disagree with the rest of what you said though.

  40. They are correct... by Archfeld · · Score: 1

    The local government should be building out the underlying infrastructure and ensuring good schools and good housing opportunities. Residents and businesses would both flock to the area to take advantage of that instead of feeding the giant corporations tax breaks at the expense of residents, aka potential workers. Far too often the corporations move into an area collect the tax benefits then leave the area to move on and harvest more handouts. Developing economic opportunities should benefit the tax payers directly, not the corporate tax dodgers.

    --
    errr....umm...*whooosh* *whoosh* Is this thing on ?
    1. Re:They are correct... by smoot123 · · Score: 1

      The local government should be building out the underlying infrastructure and ensuring good schools and good housing opportunities.

      Well, if you modify that to "ensure there is good infrastructure, housing, schools, dining, and quality of life", I'm with you. I don't think local government necessarily can or should actually build and run all that stuff.

    2. Re:They are correct... by Archfeld · · Score: 1

      I think that if you have good infrastructure, and schools, that housing, dining and general quality of life will follow.

      --
      errr....umm...*whooosh* *whoosh* Is this thing on ?
  41. Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Isnt Bezos liberal? I thought lib business guys couldnt do any wrong? How about tax breaks for existing businesses? Its not like Amazon cant afford to do this on theur own..good grief. I thought we wanted higher taxes on businesses...hypocrites

  42. Oh please. by sunking2 · · Score: 0

    Amazon is a drop in the bucket of NYC. At least go back to protesting Wallstreet.

    1. Re:Oh please. by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      It's 2% of the taxes collected by the entire state benefiting one company. This is not small change.

  43. Re:Zach Patterson/ZIP "Greatest Hits" (lol, not) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    lolololol.

    If you're interested in not installing poorly written unprotected software on your system, you can install a hosts file manually. It's not hard to do yourself. Here's one that works fine.. If you want something self-updating, adding an RBL to your router's DNS works wonders. (easy to set up with DNSmasq, and better performance than a hosts file! can cache for performance but still receive hourly updates)

    ZIP

    P.S. => My last name isn't Patterson. So hopefully APK doesn't do something regrettable to some innocent dude.

  44. Incentives make sense... by Radical+Moderate · · Score: 1

    ...for a city with underutilized housing stock and severe unemployment. But New York is packed and not hurting for jobs, there's no reason for them to bend over backwards to attract investment.

    --
    Never let a lack of data get in the way of a good rant.
  45. Re:How much do you want to stay in the neighborhoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Have you ever been to Long Island City? It's nothing but high rises now. I don't see how it could get any more dense.

  46. Re:Absolutely. Same goes for olympics, stadiums, e by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Long Island City is a neighborhood in NYC. It doesn't have a mayor.

  47. That's pretty much it. by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

    New Yorkers Protest Amazon HQ2: 'We Should Be Investing in Housing ... Not in Helicopters'

    "Sorry, the libs you vote for already bent over for us."

    "Why are businesses fleeing cities? It can't be business-unfriendly politicies!"

    "Oh no, businesses are coming back. They should give lots more money for the honor of providing jobs and increasing the tax base!"

    --
    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  48. Re: Absolutely. Same goes for olympics, stadiums, by Isaac-Lew · · Score: 1
    That part of VA is already expensive. I remember driving on Route 1 (aka Jefferson Davis Highway) 3-4 years ago & seeing condos for sale starting at $500K.

    On Zillow, the "cheapest" listing for Crystal City is a 716 sq ft 1 bedroom, 1 bath for $230K. If you search for Arlington, the prices seem better (good luck getting anything at the listed price tho).

  49. Re:How much do you want to stay in the neighborhoo by alvinrod · · Score: 2

    That still wouldn’t work because they’ll continue to insist on rent control. No developer wants to put up an expensive new apartment building if it means that they can’t charge market rates. That’s usually why all new development in cities by private investors is for luxury condos. Those are typically immune from any rent control ordinances.

  50. ZIP but you're a "better programmer" (not) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You said it so where is your work everyone can see/use? It's not. It's HOTAIRWARE/NOTWARE (lol) "I'm a much better programmer than APK" - by Anonymous Coward ZIP on Monday October 08, 2018 @11:27PM (#57449082) FROM https://yro.slashdot.org/comme... ?

    The BETTER PROGRAMMER w/ no programs, lol - @ least you can say your "code" has NO BUGS - of course, it also does ZERO (like you) since it does nothing @ all, lol!

    You hotair BLOWHARD talker, lol... you f'd up https://tech.slashdot.org/comm...

    Yet 100,000++ users of my ware & dozens of even REGISTERED /.ers like/use/praise MY work (even the guy you replied to you LITTLE weezil do-NOTHING "ne'er-do-well" BULLSHITTER I totally annihilated easily).

    * LMAO!

    (Let's see how YOU take it when I publicly SHIT ALL OVER YOU by letting FACTS of YOUR FUCKUPS vs. ME do the job for me, lol!)

    APK

    P.S.=> You STUPID & LAZY all talk chimpanzee... apk

  51. Registered /.ers make you EAT YOUR WORDS ZIP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your software is just fine - well written, functional... I'm going to continue using the Host File Engine by mmell February 17, 2017

    Your premise that hostfiles are a good way to deal with advertising and malvertising is quite valid - by JazzLad April 20, 2016

    his hosts program is actually pretty good by xenotransplant August 10 2015

    his hosts tool is actually useful for those cases in which one does indeed want to locally block stuff outright while consuming minimum system resources by alexgieg September 25 2015

    I like your host file system by Karmashock September 09 2015

    that APK guy, I use his host file by rogoshen1 Tuesday March 03, 2015

    I personally use a HOSTS file blocker produced from a genius called APK by 110010001000 October 27 2017

    * Want more "ZIP"? Ask - & "ye shall receive"!

    (Along w/ me EXPOSING your fuckups https://slashdot.org/comments.... )

    APK

    P.S.=> I've DOZENS of registered /.ers liking/using/praising my work & 100,000++ users - YOU have ZERO, lol... apk

  52. Zach Patterson / ZIP "Greatest Hits" (lol, not) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See how STUPID "ZIP" (Zach Patterson) the CHIMP is (tried to take credit for what I solved before him) https://tech.slashdot.org/comm... (he needs to LEARN TO READ)!

    I even SHOW ways to do it YOURSELF https://tech.slashdot.org/comm... (he couldn't).

    Delphi/FreePascal/ObjectPascal HAS no issue w/ null-term'd string bufferoverflows - C does, C++ can UNLESS you do what I said 1st loser.

    Tell us about CODE SIGNING (which has been STOLEN & ABUSED) https://www.helpnetsecurity.co... MY METHOD CAN'T BE (upmodded +2 INTERESTING in CODING FOR DEFCON no less) https://it.slashdot.org/commen...

    "I'm a much better programmer than APK" - by Anonymous Coward ZIP on Monday October 08, 2018 @11:27PM (#57449082) FROM https://yro.slashdot.org/comme...

    BIG TALK - Yet ZIP has nothing to show in programs. I can from registered /.ers liking/using/praising my work (& 100k users worldwide too). He can't.

    LIAR ZIP says he has no account "I don't have an account, so I don't have mod points" https://news.slashdot.org/comm...

    Yet LIAR ZIP says he downmods my posts (IMPOSSIBLE MINUS AN ACCOUNT on /.): "I down-modded a few of your post on other threads" - by Anonymous Coward "ZIP" on Thursday October 11, 2018 @11:31AM (#57461058) FROM https://yro.slashdot.org/comme...

    APK

    P.S.=> KEEP PLAYING PUSSY GAMES IMPERSONATING ME YOU CHIMP - this comes out every time, lol!... apk

  53. Re:Because Jeff has a house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really?? You don't think the "richest man in the world" could have bought a house anywhere? You think he's letting the locations of the houses he already own dictate where he put's his company's next HQ... seems backwards doesn't it.

  54. Who's "we"? by melted · · Score: 1

    I suspect there's plenty of "investment in housing" going on in one of the hottest real estate markets in the world.

  55. Re:How much do you want to stay in the neighborhoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not really, we're barred by state law here in Seattle from having rent controls and virtually all the housing being put in is expensive. Developers put in the most expensive housing they think they can sell because it's the most profit they can get.

    Putting in a bunch of housing for poor people is far less attractive and tends to rely upon subsidies to a much greater extent.

  56. Re:Absolutely. Same goes for olympics, stadiums, e by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why does Amazon need these subsidies? They're massively profitable and the locations they chose are already doing well. It's not like they decided to move into Detroit where the increased activity could help turn things around.

  57. Ocassio-Cortez brown nosers incoming! by Chas · · Score: 1

    Yes. Because the JOBS such things bring in WON'T add money to the local economy and fuel investment in housing...

    I swear to God. Some people are so fucking stupid I just want to nuke the planet and be done with it...

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  58. They took 'er... by turp182 · · Score: 1

    They took 'er, wait, hold on, gave 'er jobs?

    Mid-sized markets never had a chance, this is known. And Bezos already owns mansions in DC (the Obama's are neighbors) and New York (Manhattan).

    https://www.cheatsheet.com/mon...

    --
    BlameBillCosby.com
  59. Re:How much do you want to stay in the neighborhoo by larryjoe · · Score: 1

    "We're worried about our ability to stay in the neighborhood," Dixon said.

    Then maybe you should allow more density. Restricting supply is a great way to make things unaffordable!

    There's a reason that places like California have laws to encourage development of affordable housing, and that reason is that developers on their own will not build affordable housing unless they happen to be philanthropists. Simply building housing in non-affordable areas with no other constraints on that development often results in more units of unaffordable housing. While it's true that restricting supply often raises prices in a free, fluid market, increasing supply in constricted markets with other constraints (e.g., too many people with high incomes) may not put any downward pressure on prices.

  60. New York and Virginia paying $5.5B for ~5k jobs? by jbn-o · · Score: 1

    Richard Wolff did a good job of concisely making the points on just how bad a deal this is for New York and Virginia (which are together funding over half of the costs of this project -- $5.5B versus Amazon's $5B according to the New York Times)—and all for an estimated 2,500 jobs in New York (I don't know how many jobs are projected for the Virginia site but I'm guessing it's comparable totaling around 5,000 jobs). Here's some of what he said:

    This is a shocking display. What they are calling a government-private partnership is nothing of the sort. It's a public subsidy to Amazon. The New York Times reported $5 billion in this project will be invested by Amazon. $5.5 billion dollars will be invested by New York and Virginia. That is a subsidy of over 50% of the cost of this project. We the taxpayers will be either paying higher taxes to fund this private company, among the richest in the world, or, if we don't get our taxes raised, the government will deliver fewer services to us because it has given this enormous subsidy to a company. $5 billion from Virginia and New York where Mr. Bezos, the owner of Amazon, is himself the owner of $160 billion. He didn't need it, the company doesn't need it. We are being asked to subsidize. All of the profits will go to the private companies and their shareholders. We, the public, will be funding more than half of this project. Shame is what Mr. DeBlasio ought to feel rather than posing in the PR as if he has delivered something. [...]

    The projected number of jobs in the New York area from this is 2,500. That's a very small number and will have no effect on the unemployment problem of this city [New York City] it's just too small and that's not a surprise [...] because the kind of work Amazon does is highly automated; it uses machines for 90% of what it does. And half of the people it's likely to have working in New York will be brought in from other parts of the Amazon empire.

  61. Damn this gentrification by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, you have an entitlement to be biased and prevent whomever you want from moving into your neighborhood
    .
    Funny how this bias shows up in NYC area and not in some rural backwater.

  62. Re:Absolutely. Same goes for olympics, stadiums, e by mea2214 · · Score: 1

    Drivers will have to give up the cheap roads and bridges they drive on.

  63. Re:New York and Virginia paying $5.5B for ~5k jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Richard Wolff did a good job of concisely making the points on just how bad a deal this is for New York and Virginia (which are together funding over half of the costs of this project -- $5.5B versus Amazon's $5B according to the New York Times)—and all for an estimated 2,500 jobs in New York (I don't know how many jobs are projected for the Virginia site but I'm guessing it's comparable totaling around 5,000 jobs). Here's some of what he said:

    This is a shocking display. What they are calling a government-private partnership is nothing of the sort. It's a public subsidy to Amazon. The New York Times reported $5 billion in this project will be invested by Amazon. $5.5 billion dollars will be invested by New York and Virginia. That is a subsidy of over 50% of the cost of this project. We the taxpayers will be either paying higher taxes to fund this private company, among the richest in the world, or, if we don't get our taxes raised, the government will deliver fewer services to us because it has given this enormous subsidy to a company. $5 billion from Virginia and New York where Mr. Bezos, the owner of Amazon, is himself the owner of $160 billion. He didn't need it, the company doesn't need it. We are being asked to subsidize. All of the profits will go to the private companies and their shareholders. We, the public, will be funding more than half of this project. Shame is what Mr. DeBlasio ought to feel rather than posing in the PR as if he has delivered something. [...]

    The projected number of jobs in the New York area from this is 2,500. That's a very small number and will have no effect on the unemployment problem of this city [New York City] it's just too small and that's not a surprise [...] because the kind of work Amazon does is highly automated; it uses machines for 90% of what it does. And half of the people it's likely to have working in New York will be brought in from other parts of the Amazon empire.

    Yeah, but what you’ve failed to account for, what EVERYONE fails to account for is this:

    Having one of Amazon.com’s (now) several headquarters facilities will FINALLY put the backwards, previously unknown little jerkwater known as “New York City” on the MAP! Finally, people from farther away than Newark, New Jersey will know the name, “New York City!”

    They’ll have to come up with a nickname for it, what with Amazon taking a giant bite out of the taxpayers’ coffers to pay for all the free stuff they’re giving the richest man in the known universe and all of human history. Some kind of sweet, soft, juicy fruit, and a big one. Perhaps the “Large Orange”. Or maybe the “Great Peach.”

    Awww... I’m sure they’ll come up with SOMETHING.

  64. Re:How much do you want to stay in the neighborhoo by terrycarlino · · Score: 1

    Chicago once put up high density housing for low income people. It was called the projects and resulted in places like Cabrini Green. It resulted in places plagued by crime, gang violence and generally deplorable living conditions. This is what you get when you make high density low income housing.

    The problem is that, as K said, individuals are smart, people are stupid. When you get groups of people in these kinds of environments you end up with the tragedy of the common.

    Conversely when people pony up a good deal of money to live in a high end condo, apartment, townhome, they have an interest in looking after their investment. Likewise the owners of businesses in the area, who would lose revenue if they don't keep their businesses clean and in good working order, invest in doing so.

    There's really no way around it. Slums will always be slums as long as the same people live there. Cities succeed in urban renewal only when they displace the poor with higher income workers. It ain't fair but it's how it works.

  65. Re:Absolutely. Same goes for olympics, stadiums, e by terrycarlino · · Score: 1

    Amazon doesn't need these subsidies, but its a classic supply and demand situation. There are literally hundreds, if not thousands of places that Amazon can put its HQ. Any place they do will see some level of influx of higher wage workers and jobs. If you want them then they're damading that you, as the locale, pay by giving them tax breaks. You, as the locale, can refuse to pay, but somewhere else will, and Amazon will go there.

    People also overlook the obvious. Local politicians almost always come from the upper half of the economic scale. They are upper middle class moving on upper class. No locality actually wants to have poor people. Gentrification is something that almost all localities want, not something they try to avoid. If the courts didn't prevent them cities would still have vagrancy laws the police and sheriffs offices of just about everywhere would still be telling the homeless "Be on the other side of the county line by sundown."

  66. Why would barber shops matter? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't care about barber shops. I'm bald.

    What I do care about are the additional 2 House seats that we just flipped. Splooooooooooooosh!!!! Surfin' in big blue wave, baby.

    Oh, and this is always nice, too. I love seeing that piece of shit TOTALLY INFURIATED!!! . It puts a big goddamn smile on my face. YMMV.

    I wonder why Faux-"News" isn't reporting on it. I'm beginning to think their reporting is biased.

    P.S. - Thank god for Jeff Flake!!

  67. Re:Absolutely. Same goes for olympics, stadiums, e by Shotgun · · Score: 1

    Where I live, the fuel taxes cover the cost of road building and maintenance. It's even enough to fund some bus systems that are mostly empty every time I see them.

    --
    Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
    Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
  68. Re:How much do you want to stay in the neighborhoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Buisness rentals in most major metros are renter pays all maintenance and gets no discount on rent and often has to return the property to "white box" when they vacate, as such they rarely ever put a cent into building maintenance or upgrades that are not 100% essential to their ability to operate. As such the properties get progressively more run down.

  69. Re: How much do you want to stay in the neighborho by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Rent control is a trade off for those seeking government subsidies in the form.of tax credits. If you want to pay cash and build your place, no rent control is needed.

  70. Re:Absolutely. Same goes for olympics, stadiums, e by mea2214 · · Score: 1

    Fuel taxes are a mere drop in the bucket where I live.