Ocasio Cortez Expensive Clothes

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A lot of people seem to be sick and tired of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez already, but I think she provides a valuable service to all sane Americans. For decades the Democrats have kept moving further and further to the left, all while denying it. “Nah, we don’t really want to ban all the airplanes because we think our weather gods are angry. Don’t be ridiculous, we don’t actually believe that everyone who makes more money than we do is evil and deserves to be destroyed. Do you seriously think we want to control every aspect of your daily lives, you silly rubes?”

Ocasio Cortez Expensive Clothes

Clothes

Ocasio-Cortez, 29, who said in November that she was concerned about being able to afford rent in D.C., now earns a $174,000 annual salary and is living in a newly built high-rise in the city’s. Ocasio-Cortez wore a number of outfits in her multi-page spread for Vanity Fair. Per a tweet by Sunanda Vashist, a political commentator, the sum total of the wardrobe, including accessories, was. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, our favourite politician (Jacinda Ardern aside) is on the cover of Vanity Fair‘s December issue. And as expected, without any delay, AOC’s critics have come out to play. This time their attacks are aimed at the fact that she was wearing (borrowed) designer clothes which cost a total of $14,000. Both Fox and the Post seized on the total cost of the outfits she borrowed to wear on the magazine's photoshoot — $14,000 — with Fox not-so-subtly adding that Ocasio-Cortez wore the loaned clothes.

They do want all those things, and more. And now AOC has come along and proven it. She just blurts it right out. Whatever else you want to say about her (and I have, and will), at least she’s honest about being a communist.

Just look at her latest venture:

As always, made in the US with dignified, union jobs paying living wages ✨

— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) December 2, 2020

Ocasio

That’s right, just in time for Christmas, you can get your very own “Tax the Rich” sweatshirt at the official AOC merchandise shop. And the price just can’t be beat — $58.

Note the details:

  • Please note this is a Pre-Order
  • Made in USA
  • Union printed
  • 100% cotton
  • Gender neutral fit

“Union printed.” And it’s a good thing, too. Just imagine how much more expensive it would be otherwise!

And it’s gender-neutral, just like everything else in 2020 should be. (Except, of course, when you need to remind everybody that you’re a woman and therefore a victim. You’ll be hearing a lot of that under President Kamala. And it’s also why actress Ellen Page — sorry, I mean actor Elliot Page — is brave for coming out as transgender, but also evil for being a straight white male. It can get pretty confusing, but only if you stop and think about it. So don’t do that.)

Wearing a “Tax the Rich” shirt helps everybody. If you’re a liberal, it makes you feel like you’re actually accomplishing something. You’re signaling your virtue to the entire world: Wealthy people are bad, without exception, other than the people who say things you agree with and promise to give you free stuff.

And if you’re not a liberal, spotting somebody in such a stupid, overpriced shirt tells you everything you need to know and you can steer clear before they start talking to you.

I’m not rich enough to be able to afford a $60 shirt just to try to impress people who aren’t worth trying to impress. But I also don’t want to take stuff I haven’t earned from the people who’ve earned it. I’m one of those guys. AOC is never going to make a shirt for jerks like me, because nobody ever became powerful by leaving people alone.

Never let it be said that this isn’t the land of opportunity, though. Less than three years ago, all you could buy from AOC was an overpriced mixed drink. Now she’s got her own clothing line, just for winning an election and saying a bunch of nonsense that liberals want to hear.

Using capitalism to sell anti-capitalism. God bless America!

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Fox Nation host Rachel Campos-Duffy discusses Joe Biden floating the idea of rotating Supreme Court justices.

Freshman Democratic congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio Cortez of New York wore thousands of dollars worth of outfits and jewelry for her spread in Vanity Fair magazine's December issue while attacking President Trump for not paying his taxes.

The progressive lawmaker from New York -- whose policies often sway far to the left of more centrist Democrats -- has in the past condemned politicians that she says are beholden to Wall Street, even as she was gifted a $2,850 suit from Loewe for the shoot, according to reports by the Daily Mail.

The total estimated retail cost of her outfits is more than $14,000, the site reported.

AOC lambasted Trump in the magazine interview saying: “These are the same people saying that we can’t have tuition-free public colleges because there’s no money,” she says, “when these motherf*****s are only paying $750 a year in taxes.”

She also defended herself as a powerful woman against right-wing attacks that have painted her as a socialist and a villain.

“It’s very dehumanizing in both ways, strangely, both the negative and the positive,” the congresswoman said. “It’s not an accident that, every cycle, the boogeyman of the Democrats is a woman,” Ocasio-Cortez said. “A couple of cycles ago, it was Pelosi. Then it was Hillary, and now it’s me.”

Ocasio Cortez Expensive Clothes

Ocasio-Cortez wore a white suit by Aliétte to grace the cover of the magazine, her outfit choice an homage to the women's suffrage movement.

Photographs dispersed throughout the magazine with her interview include multiple outfit changes, including a polka dot Wales Bonner dress and a black suit with multicolored tassels by Loewe. She also sported a pair of black Christian Louboutin heels, iconic for their red bottoms.

Alexandria Ocasio Cortez Expensive Clothes Pic

'It's legitimately hard being a first-generation woman . . . and being working class, trying to navigate a professional environment,' she said in the interview. 'It continues to take me so long to try to figure out how to look put-together without having a huge designer closet.'