We’re at @LACANetwork for the launch of “Urban Warfare: Housing Under the Empire of Finance,” by Raquel Rolnik. She was previously the U.N. Special Rapporteur on adequate housing and wrote a report on the effects of mega-events like the Olympics on housing.
@LACANetwork@ChallengeIneq Raquel Rolnik: “99% of the violations of the U.N.’s human right to adequate housing are around evictions and displacement, around the world.”
“Displacement has been seen as a problem of ‘underdeveloped countries.’ This is the language that is used, and then the solution that is propose is: give these countries money to solve the problem.”
@LACANetwork@ChallengeIneq “On my visit to the U.S., I learned the word ‘affordable’ for the first time, which we should cross out of the lexicon of housing justice, because it’s bullshit. We should be talking about social housing.”
@LACANetwork@ChallengeIneq “In Chicago, the public housing that was demolished was not the housing in food deserts. It was the housing on high-valued land, that could extract high rent for investors and developers.”
@LACANetwork@ChallengeIneq "I think we should repeat, over and over again, that one of the worst lies that neoliberalism tells us is: let's get the state out of housing and let the market do its job."
@LACANetwork@ChallengeIneq "Everybody got into homeownership as a goal, not because it's the best option but because under neoliberalism and financialization and privatization, it's become the ONLY option."
@LACANetwork@ChallengeIneq "This is part of the machinery of enforcing one way of organizing space and life, based on contracts and transactions. It's an accomplishment of colonialization, and it makes this quantified and financialized way of organizing life the ONLY way, so all others become stigmatized."
@LACANetwork@ChallengeIneq "The state is not bankrupt and incapable of providing adequate housing. There is a lot of money for these operations. It's just going to the wrong places. It's all feeding into a cloud of speculative capital that floats over the entire planet."
@LACANetwork@ChallengeIneq "There is no model where public funds are not a major part of the operation. We are talking about a massive transfer of public funds - collective funds, our funds - to private investors. For example, what is 'tax exempt?'"
"I have seen more and more organizing happen around housing and displacement. A new wave and new movement is being created. It's very important and it's growing bigger, everywhere around the world."
@LACANetwork@ChallengeIneq "We have several movements that can bring us hope. If tenant unions become an epidemic and rent strikes start happening more and more, if more people start squatting on empty land and in vacant buildings - this change will come."
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In the full leaked audio, Nury Martinez said she was making backroom deals with @LA28@RamsNFL@MayorOfLA:
The “he” she refers to in the clip is Councilmember @BobBlumenfield, who is working with the same players on Olympic development. This project is down the street from the proposed @LA28 “Valley Sports Park”:
Here’s a member of the #LA28 executive board telling Blumenfield that this project is “Super exciting.” The entire marketing pitch for LA28 has been “no build Olympics”
Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, who was instrumental in securing the 2028 Summer Olympics for his city, even proclaimed, “We will make at least a billion dollars in 2028.”
In more subdued fashion, Los Angeles City Council President Herb Wesson called the bid “fiscally responsible” and the city’s pact with the IOC, making Los Angeles responsible for Olympic cost overruns, “too good to pass up.”
However, University of Oxford researchers analyzed Olympics between 1960 and 2020 and found that every single Games ran over its initial budget, with an average cost overrun of 172 percent in real terms, notably higher than other megaprojects.
The Olympics don’t just harm black athletes — they rip apart black communities in Olympic host cities as well.
Let’s look at LA84 for an example. 🧵
The 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles are frequently trotted out as a “best case scenario” for a host city — a profitable, efficiently run showcase of American values.
This is a lie.
The ’84 Olympics caused one of the greatest periods of injustice, oppression, and social unrest in L.A. history, culminating in the 1992 Uprising.
During and after the 1984 Olympics, incidents of police brutality were on the rise.
The 7 years of traumatic prep leading up to Rio 2016 saw:
-Mass displacement
-violent police occupations in favelas
-broken promises to clean up polluted waters
-crackdowns on houselessness + street vending
-rampant corruptions
-shuttered hospitals + schools
Nearly three years ago, on August 11, 2017, Los Angeles’ City Council voted to rubberstamp bringing the 2028 Olympics to LA.
“LA is not Rio!” Councilmember Joe Buscaino huffed in response to members of the public who suggested that hosting the Olympics maybe wasn’t a great idea