Condo board maintains purity of bloodline through generations of intermarriage
The Onion
09 January 2015
Members
of the Oakwood Terrace condo board, all of whom are pure of blood.
BLOOMINGDALE, FL—Citing the need to safeguard their highborn pedigree,
the board of directors at local condominium development Oakwood Terrace
told reporters Friday they have successfully maintained the purity of
their bloodline through generations of intermarriage.
According to residents, strict rules of peerage mandate that children
of the five presiding condo board members must marry into one another’s
households, a practice that ensures that the oversight and proper
maintenance of the 235-unit gated complex falls exclusively to
legitimate offspring of strong stock.
“We of the Oakwood Terrace Condominium Association will defend the
integrity of our rule against all pretenders to the board,” said
sitting treasurer Norma Klein, who boasts heritage dating back to the
original owners of Lot 1003 in Building Zone 2. “Years ago, my
forebears accepted certain responsibilities when they paid the 20
percent preconstruction deposit on our ranch-style duplex. Today, it is
our duty to preserve the chain of dynastic succession, and to justly
enforce pet-leashing regulations and the one-vehicle-on-street parking
rule.”
“Since the time of our founding, I’m proud to say that only a rightful
heir has ever been granted the power to distribute keys to the pool
area,” Klein added.
According to reports, the board’s pristine lineage has largely been
upheld through the arranged betrothal of marriageable sons and
daughters, a process that involves intricate negotiations typically
brokered at elite gatherings such as the subdivision’s Fourth of July
cookout, its annual golf tournament, and Saturday morning water
aerobics.
Through the strategic selection of spouses for their children, condo
board directors are said to consolidate their grip on the interests
they deem most vital, including who has access to the “OakTerr-Master”
Excel spreadsheet that tracks dues payments, monitors the garbage
pickup schedule, and records picnic pavilion reservations.
“We married our firstborn to the Freeland clan of the Pine Court
cul-de-sac near the tennis courts, and together we have forged a
powerful alliance,” said board vice president Loretta Shaw, a mother of
three daughters who has been seen eyeing one of Walt Foreman’s boys, a
son of pure breeding with an uncle on the landscaping committee. “But
relations between our two houses have been strained since last spring,
when [condo board secretary] Sarah [Freeland] sabotaged my motion to
have the front gate and mailbox station repainted.”
“Regardless, my daughters must have husbands with only the most
honorable blood in their veins,” she continued. “A lesser match would
not befit a family who wields control of the neighborhood sinking fund
and appoints judges to preside over the holiday lighting contest.”
Sources confirmed the engagement of a child to any lowborn spouse who
cannot trace his or her lineage back to at least the development’s
third phase of construction would be social suicide for a board member.
By all accounts, Oakwood Terrace was scandalized six years ago, when
the scion of the recreation coordinator’s family eloped with a
“usurping harlot” from a timeshare property on the other side of Route
640.
The clubhouse where the directors convene every other Thursday to
discuss pressing matters of the condo association has long been full of
intrigue, according to minutes-keeper Allan Snyder, whose family has
for multiple generations recorded the most minor detail of every
meeting in a word-processing document that dates back to the reign of
legendary board president Bruce Dalton.
“As you might well expect, the power to schedule routine lawn pesticide
treatments does not change hands peaceably,” Snyder said. “May God
protect the ruling families of Oakwood Terrace and their sacred right
to decree that each unit—whether detached home or multifamily
dwelling—be painted only in the colors of the realm!”
“Tan with white trim,” he added in clarification.
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