Wall Street Journal showing how daddies money can buy you a cool pad

   Baxter Lomax
   The Wall Street Journal had a story about how some rich young man whose father was a fabulously wealthy investor was able to acquire the property in Bucktown that use to be the Get me high lounge. This young prick who had every job handed to him through family and was a failed rocker showed the Journal readers the refurbishing and additions that this man made to his 5000 square feet home in one of Chicago's trendy neighborhoods and historic buildings.
He developed a taste for upscale homes after working for his wealthy step mother who was in the real estate trade. Eric Chez's home looks brilliant and wonderful but the guy would be a street bum if his family hadn't benefited and been on the right side of the inequality crisis this country faces. If more people realized how unequal opportunities for wealth are and how some little shit like Eric Chez can be given property like this as a fixer upper then I think there would be more of an outcry how these yuppie son of a bitches actually do take over urban spots across America. This Wall Street piece is a good read to see the children of the spoiled and privilege get to benefit from a society that rewards their parents so much more in income compared to the average person.  This article shows where the economy is headed and why so few jobs are being created by the upper classes who save millions from tax breaks so they can invest in the property of their kids. This article pretty much shows why were are in this inequality mess especially in these days where power and influence by investors and politicians is not used to help the public but the private and their own class or families. This place was better when it was a dive bar as it didn't have a spoiled brat owning it and. As never as pretentious inside as it is now that this prick eater Eric Chez is the flamboyant owner of this building in Chicago.

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