DC gov giving $50,000 to restaurants "to remain operational"

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Downtown is dead but go into ay DC neighborhood like Shaw, Petworth, Columbia Heights and you'll see restaurants and bars thriving. But they still need help. That's what this grant is trying to do. Not help the big investors but the small business owner who employs her neighbors. $50k is a drop int he bucket to the corporate handouts that are given but everyone is up in arms. And that $50k investment gets spent in the community, employing people, buying from other local businesses, paying taxes


What an incredible waste of tax dollars. People don't go out to eat because it's expensive as fkuc and there's nowhere to park.


You don't live in the city or you wouldn't be worrying about parking. So it's not your tax dollars and not your concern. As an actual DC resident, restaurants are our neighbors and our arteries and I don't consider helping our our neighbors to be a waste of money.


This has to be the absolute dumbest comment yet.


Why? It's true. We live in DC and don't know a single DC resident who drives to a DC restaurant. Not a single one. Like, ever.

You don't live in the city and your opinion on how our tax dollars are spent is irrelevant. Worry about Maryland or Virginia.


I live in the city you moron. Either you live in an insanely tiny bubble, never leave your neighborhood, are lying, or all three. Regardless, you have absolutely no integrity or credibility.


No, you don't. Or if you do, you're not driving to restaurants and worrying about paying to park. Your post is bullshit.


Not the person you are responding to, but you are a bottom of the barrel level idiot. I live in one of the most walkable locations in DC (Logan circle / Shaw near the convention center), and I regularly drive to restraints as do plenty of neighbors. Say, if I’m craving Neapolitan pizza and want 2 Amy’s do you think I’m metro’ing and then bussing or just getting in my tiny compact car and taking a nice drive?

Also I’ve probably lived in DC longer than you, considering I’ve lived in DC my entire life with the exception of college in Virginia plus 3 years of work post college. Again, you’re a dumb person.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Downtown is dead but go into ay DC neighborhood like Shaw, Petworth, Columbia Heights and you'll see restaurants and bars thriving. But they still need help. That's what this grant is trying to do. Not help the big investors but the small business owner who employs her neighbors. $50k is a drop int he bucket to the corporate handouts that are given but everyone is up in arms. And that $50k investment gets spent in the community, employing people, buying from other local businesses, paying taxes


What an incredible waste of tax dollars. People don't go out to eat because it's expensive as fkuc and there's nowhere to park.


You don't live in the city or you wouldn't be worrying about parking. So it's not your tax dollars and not your concern. As an actual DC resident, restaurants are our neighbors and our arteries and I don't consider helping our our neighbors to be a waste of money.


This has to be the absolute dumbest comment yet.


Why? It's true. We live in DC and don't know a single DC resident who drives to a DC restaurant. Not a single one. Like, ever.

You don't live in the city and your opinion on how our tax dollars are spent is irrelevant. Worry about Maryland or Virginia.


I live in the city you moron. Either you live in an insanely tiny bubble, never leave your neighborhood, are lying, or all three. Regardless, you have absolutely no integrity or credibility.


No, you don't. Or if you do, you're not driving to restaurants and worrying about paying to park. Your post is bullshit.


Not the person you are responding to, but you are a bottom of the barrel level idiot. I live in one of the most walkable locations in DC (Logan circle / Shaw near the convention center), and I regularly drive to restraints as do plenty of neighbors. Say, if I’m craving Neapolitan pizza and want 2 Amy’s do you think I’m metro’ing and then bussing or just getting in my tiny compact car and taking a nice drive?

Also I’ve probably lived in DC longer than you, considering I’ve lived in DC my entire life with the exception of college in Virginia plus 3 years of work post college. Again, you’re a dumb person.


DC res of 30+ years. We usually walk to our neighborhood restaurants, or we uber to farther ones. But it isn't unheard of for us to drive, especially if we take in laws with us.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why is the road go hell always paved with progressive ideas?



Bail outs are always Republican ideas. Please.


Republicans typically give loans or take equity stakes in companies, and the taxpayer usually ends up making money. As of today, the government has an unrealized gain of $42 billion from its stake in Intel. Giving any shitty restaurant that asks for $50,000 in exchange for nothing at all is something else entirely.


OK, that's a lie.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why is the road go hell always paved with progressive ideas?



The problem is our current orange dictator has destroyed the local economy thanks to DOGE (all while pillaging citizens’ data, appointing drunkards and tv stars to leadership positions, and making himself and his billionaire buddies even wealthier).

And to the extent any jobs have been “gained” in this region, they’re mostly lower paying jobs that do not actually make up for the lost white collar jobs because no one in either party seems to want to reign in private equity, limit H1Bs, or regulate AI in order to salvage decent-paying knowledge jobs. Then add in a stupid war, inflation, spiking gas prices (which makes the cost of transporting food more expensive), and lack of leisure time due to strict RTO and people working multiple gig jobs, and many people just do not have the time nor money to go out to an expensive restaurant on any frequent basis.

Also the cost of everything like college, housing, etc. is through the roof. I’d rather add to my kids’ 529s than pay for a sitter to go eat a $200 dinner somewhere nice.


DC has the highest unemployment rate in the country and our government and the mayoral candidates have no plan to try to fix it, except blame Trump.


How are they supposed to fix it? They can’t bring federal jobs and contracting back. And it’s hard to bring in new high paying industries when AI is causing mass layoffs. There’s no room for data centers (thankfully) or other industries that require a lot of physical space. RTO was not the economic boon it was made out to be. And to the extent any new businesses (maybe healthcare related?) can be brought it, it will take years to fix.

Sometimes there is a villain to blame. Trump did this to DC and is now running up the national debt for his stupid golden ballroom and war.


DC is a very hostile place to employers. Maybe the government could try not being complete dicks to businesses?


In what way is it hostile?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why is the road go hell always paved with progressive ideas?



Bail outs are always Republican ideas. Please.


Republicans typically give loans or take equity stakes in companies, and the taxpayer usually ends up making money. As of today, the government has an unrealized gain of $42 billion from its stake in Intel. Giving any shitty restaurant that asks for $50,000 in exchange for nothing at all is something else entirely.


The "unrealized gain" in Intel is just a grant, corporate welfare by any other name. Complaining about 50k when you waste 42 BILLION STFU


You have no idea what an unrealized gain is, do you?

The government got 433 million shares of Intel at $20.47. Intel's current stock price is $118. The unrealized gain is the profit the government would make if it sold all of its shares.


You have literally described socialism, you know. Government owning the means of production and all that.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Downtown is dead but go into ay DC neighborhood like Shaw, Petworth, Columbia Heights and you'll see restaurants and bars thriving. But they still need help. That's what this grant is trying to do. Not help the big investors but the small business owner who employs her neighbors. $50k is a drop int he bucket to the corporate handouts that are given but everyone is up in arms. And that $50k investment gets spent in the community, employing people, buying from other local businesses, paying taxes


What an incredible waste of tax dollars. People don't go out to eat because it's expensive as fkuc and there's nowhere to park.


You don't live in the city or you wouldn't be worrying about parking. So it's not your tax dollars and not your concern. As an actual DC resident, restaurants are our neighbors and our arteries and I don't consider helping our our neighbors to be a waste of money.


This has to be the absolute dumbest comment yet.


Why? It's true. We live in DC and don't know a single DC resident who drives to a DC restaurant. Not a single one. Like, ever.

You don't live in the city and your opinion on how our tax dollars are spent is irrelevant. Worry about Maryland or Virginia.


Look, you sound simple when you suggest not a single DC resident ever drives to a restaurant.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why is the road go hell always paved with progressive ideas?



Bail outs are always Republican ideas. Please.


Republicans typically give loans or take equity stakes in companies, and the taxpayer usually ends up making money. As of today, the government has an unrealized gain of $42 billion from its stake in Intel. Giving any shitty restaurant that asks for $50,000 in exchange for nothing at all is something else entirely.


The "unrealized gain" in Intel is just a grant, corporate welfare by any other name. Complaining about 50k when you waste 42 BILLION STFU


You have no idea what an unrealized gain is, do you?

The government got 433 million shares of Intel at $20.47. Intel's current stock price is $118. The unrealized gain is the profit the government would make if it sold all of its shares.


You have literally described socialism, you know. Government owning the means of production and all that.


That's why Bernie Sanders supported the Intel stock purchase.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Downtown is dead but go into ay DC neighborhood like Shaw, Petworth, Columbia Heights and you'll see restaurants and bars thriving. But they still need help. That's what this grant is trying to do. Not help the big investors but the small business owner who employs her neighbors. $50k is a drop int he bucket to the corporate handouts that are given but everyone is up in arms. And that $50k investment gets spent in the community, employing people, buying from other local businesses, paying taxes


What an incredible waste of tax dollars. People don't go out to eat because it's expensive as fkuc and there's nowhere to park.


You don't live in the city or you wouldn't be worrying about parking. So it's not your tax dollars and not your concern. As an actual DC resident, restaurants are our neighbors and our arteries and I don't consider helping our our neighbors to be a waste of money.


This has to be the absolute dumbest comment yet.


Why? It's true. We live in DC and don't know a single DC resident who drives to a DC restaurant. Not a single one. Like, ever.

You don't live in the city and your opinion on how our tax dollars are spent is irrelevant. Worry about Maryland or Virginia.


Look, you sound simple when you suggest not a single DC resident ever drives to a restaurant.


That's putting it as nicely as one possibly can.
Anonymous
Not sure why DC taxpayers have to pay $50,000 to each shitty, overpriced restaurant in DC. Why not let them die so a better restaurant - food, service, ambience - can move in? Instead, DC taxpayers are spending millions and millions entrenching mediocrity and subsidizing wealthy restaurant owners - who, let me tell you, are not always a wonderful group of individuals.

The free market is not always wrong. A little creative destruction allows better options to emerge. Instead, DC has chose the Soviet Union model circa 1987. Which is not great if you want a decent meal in DC at a fair price.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why is the road go hell always paved with progressive ideas?



Bail outs are always Republican ideas. Please.


Republicans typically give loans or take equity stakes in companies, and the taxpayer usually ends up making money. As of today, the government has an unrealized gain of $42 billion from its stake in Intel. Giving any shitty restaurant that asks for $50,000 in exchange for nothing at all is something else entirely.


The "unrealized gain" in Intel is just a grant, corporate welfare by any other name. Complaining about 50k when you waste 42 BILLION STFU


You have no idea what an unrealized gain is, do you?

The government got 433 million shares of Intel at $20.47. Intel's current stock price is $118. The unrealized gain is the profit the government would make if it sold all of its shares.


You have literally described socialism, you know. Government owning the means of production and all that.


That's why Bernie Sanders supported the Intel stock purchase.


And that’s consistent with his ideology. It’s MAGA throwing around “socialist” as an epithet and then supporting this that’s wild.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Is $50K enough to save a restaurant? Maybe for a few weeks, or less...



There are teachers at my kids school who dont make a lot more than $50,000


Your kid's school pays its teachers like shit then.


No kidding. The DC government starves charter schools of cash, even though half the kids in this city attend them.


DC public school teachers make way more than that, even to start, and overall are the highest paid in the area. And our charter school teachers don't make much less. So what school are you talking about? It can't be a very good one.


DCPS teachers make a ton. They make fun of how much teachers at some charters make. Ours is one of the top three or four schools in the city.


Name it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Downtown is dead but go into ay DC neighborhood like Shaw, Petworth, Columbia Heights and you'll see restaurants and bars thriving. But they still need help. That's what this grant is trying to do. Not help the big investors but the small business owner who employs her neighbors. $50k is a drop int he bucket to the corporate handouts that are given but everyone is up in arms. And that $50k investment gets spent in the community, employing people, buying from other local businesses, paying taxes


What an incredible waste of tax dollars. People don't go out to eat because it's expensive as fkuc and there's nowhere to park.


You don't live in the city or you wouldn't be worrying about parking. So it's not your tax dollars and not your concern. As an actual DC resident, restaurants are our neighbors and our arteries and I don't consider helping our our neighbors to be a waste of money.


This has to be the absolute dumbest comment yet.


Why? It's true. We live in DC and don't know a single DC resident who drives to a DC restaurant. Not a single one. Like, ever.

You don't live in the city and your opinion on how our tax dollars are spent is irrelevant. Worry about Maryland or Virginia.


I live in the city you moron. Either you live in an insanely tiny bubble, never leave your neighborhood, are lying, or all three. Regardless, you have absolutely no integrity or credibility.


No, you don't. Or if you do, you're not driving to restaurants and worrying about paying to park. Your post is bullshit.


Not the person you are responding to, but you are a bottom of the barrel level idiot. I live in one of the most walkable locations in DC (Logan circle / Shaw near the convention center), and I regularly drive to restraints as do plenty of neighbors. Say, if I’m craving Neapolitan pizza and want 2 Amy’s do you think I’m metro’ing and then bussing or just getting in my tiny compact car and taking a nice drive?

Also I’ve probably lived in DC longer than you, considering I’ve lived in DC my entire life with the exception of college in Virginia plus 3 years of work post college. Again, you’re a dumb person.


I live in your neighborhood and if you feel the need to drive to 2 Amy’s, well, first of all you’re white AF as well as a little ridiculous considering the quantity and quality of places that you/I can walk to, and second you can find parking near 2 Amy’s easy enough.

To blame what’s going on with DC restaurants on the price of parking is just plain idiotic.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Downtown is dead but go into ay DC neighborhood like Shaw, Petworth, Columbia Heights and you'll see restaurants and bars thriving. But they still need help. That's what this grant is trying to do. Not help the big investors but the small business owner who employs her neighbors. $50k is a drop int he bucket to the corporate handouts that are given but everyone is up in arms. And that $50k investment gets spent in the community, employing people, buying from other local businesses, paying taxes


What an incredible waste of tax dollars. People don't go out to eat because it's expensive as fkuc and there's nowhere to park.


You don't live in the city or you wouldn't be worrying about parking. So it's not your tax dollars and not your concern. As an actual DC resident, restaurants are our neighbors and our arteries and I don't consider helping our our neighbors to be a waste of money.


This has to be the absolute dumbest comment yet.


Why? It's true. We live in DC and don't know a single DC resident who drives to a DC restaurant. Not a single one. Like, ever.

You don't live in the city and your opinion on how our tax dollars are spent is irrelevant. Worry about Maryland or Virginia.


Look, you sound simple when you suggest not a single DC resident ever drives to a restaurant.


I never said that. I said I didn’t know anybody who did. But yea I assume the DCUM Upper Caucasia Crowd has some residents who do. But those of us living in real DC neighborhoods generally don’t (the 2 Amy’s stuffed shirt notwithstanding) and we don’t believe that it’s the price of your parking that’s hurting our restaurants. We think it’s a combination of rising rents and prices, narrowing profit margins, and more recently the irrational fear that suburbanites have because of the stupid national guard.

Anonymous
It’s just so odd that DC voted well over 90 percent for Harris yet every time there’s a thread started on DCUM about something related to DC politics the thread is hijacked by rapid Republicans who insist they all actually live here and often say they have for decades. Either they’re full of shit or every Republican in the city gets a DCUM news alert.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It’s just so odd that DC voted well over 90 percent for Harris yet every time there’s a thread started on DCUM about something related to DC politics the thread is hijacked by rapid Republicans who insist they all actually live here and often say they have for decades. Either they’re full of shit or every Republican in the city gets a DCUM news alert.


Or, maybe you're just an idiot with really bad judgement.
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