 I'm here to confirm that New York will be home to one of Amazon's new headquarters and more than 25,000 new, high-paying jobs over the coming decade with room to grow. I'd like... Well, you know who isn't sharing? Newly elected Democrat Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Slamming the tax breaks, Amazon's getting in a series of tweets. Democrat strategist Robin Biral thinks she's right to be a little skeptical of this deal while market watcher Melissa Armo thinks this is a great deal, period. Melissa, why? Well, first of all, I live in New York and this will provide more revenue for the city. The city needs money coming in so badly. Mayor de Blasio has spent so much money since he's been mayor in the city and we need tax revenue coming in. It also will provide jobs and I have to laugh, Charles. She thinks that people are going to get pushed out of Queens that are regular people, working people, because all of a sudden all these high-end people are going to buy luxury condos and all these luxury condos are going to come up in Queens. That is show laughable, Charles. People will live in Manhattan that make a lot of money and they will commute to their jobs in Queens. It doesn't mean all the people that work and live in Queens are going to lose their homes. That's crazy town. Robin? It's so easy to dismiss this Congresswoman-elect because she's the youngest ever to be elected to Congress at, I believe, 29 years old and I've been a frequent critic of hers but she brings up some valid points. This does put a drain on the local municipalities. Let me explain why. These tax cuts are enshrined for sometimes 15 to 20 years and they present a huge impact to the local infrastructure. That's specifically what she's talking about. You've seen large-scale developments of subdivisions and big boxes where they just absolutely destroy the roads and they often don't pay for those with environmental impact fees and development impact fees and yet they're getting tax breaks. She's right to criticize it but when you look at it from a cost of benefit analysis in the long term it does pay off but I get where she's coming from, Charles. Melissa, there are neighborhoods in New York that I never thought would be quote-unquote gentrified where I never thought a brownstone that may have been a hundred grand, not even a hundred grand in 1980 would be gone for $10 million now. People feel like they do get pushed out eventually and we know in the journal today saying that there was almost a 300% explosion at inquiries for condos in that Queens area so ultimately if people start to who make 150 grand start to buy homes there could that do something with respect to income and equality could push out people who've lived there and by the way $1.5 billion that's a lot of money and it could haunt someone politically at some point. All you have to do is look at the economy right now in Seattle where Amazon has its headquarters and look at how much that's helped that city. I mean seriously it's going to help New York, it's going to help Virginia, that's where the other second headquarters is and they were all ecstatic about it down there. Bloomberg is for this, Mayor de Blasio is for this, Governor Cuomo is for this and they're all Democrats and they're for it and I'm telling you it's good for New York. I hear what you're saying about sometimes there will be people that come in and but the property values might rise a little bit but it's never going to be so much that the negatives overweigh the positives. It is good for New York, it is huge for New York City. I'm telling you I live here and I'm telling you right now people are not going to get pushed out of their homes. People that own real estate right now Queens are jumping up and down because their real estate is going to increase. Robin do you find it interesting though there are a lot of conservative groups who have actually come out against this deal you know they love the idea that maybe Amazon will build in New York but the $1.5 billion tax credits that $300 million cash credits you know they think this could be a form of corporate welfare. Yes and that's my concern as well and you know in some respect she almost sounded like a Republican here because she's talking specifically about the tax burden. Libertarian probably. Well libertarian you're correct in that but she's talking about the tax burden and it's a little unfair to some of the adjacent property owners who are paying basically to subsidize all of these development impact fees that are going to be incurred because of this immense large-scale development. So and what we're seeing basically are just growing pains they'll experience growing pains they won't reap the financial benefits for at least five years but look at what it's done for Nikki Haley when she was governor of South Carolina with Boeing and BMW she got a lot. Of course some people think Scott Walker was hurt a little bit politically because of Foxconn. Hey thank you both very much great seeing you. Well we got growing concerns over President Trump's shake up at the Justice Department and we'll discuss that next.