When Goldman Sachs C.E.O. Lloyd Blankfein officially passes the baton to his successor, David Solomon, next month, he’s got big plans for how he plans to spend his retirement. Namely, he’s suggested that, free from the shackles of his corporate overlords, he’s going to start trolling the shit out of Donald Trump. We’re talking snarky re-tweets, getting all up in Donny Jr.’s mentions—the works. To do so, he’ll obviously need an office, and like any investment bank worth its salt, Goldman is providing Blankfein—who will serve as an “adviser” to the company—with luxe, spacious accommodations approximately three times the size of most New Yorkers’ apartments. And the twentysomething worker bees at the firm are pissed.

According to Fox Business’s Charlie Gasparino, Goldman’s decision to construct a new office for the soon-to-be former C.E.O. with a “coveted view of the Hudson River,” rather than off-load in some rubber room on the fourth floor looking out at the Conrad Hotel, has “touched off a quiet, populist revolt” among analysts and associates, who pull down six figures just out of college and view themselves as the “have-nots” of the firm. To them, the space is a slap in the face, and a symbol of their struggle:

The controversy over Blankfein’s post-C.E.O. arrangement is emblematic of the growing disparities inside the firm where a program of severe cost cutting has focused almost exclusively on the backs of the average Goldman worker . . . They point to the firm’s rarefied class of partners and managing directors—the upper echelon of the bank, which accounts for less than 8 percent of the firm’s 37,000-member workforce—who maintain both their lofty salaries and perks, these people tell Fox Business.

While people like Blankfein are practically rolling in cash, analysts and associates—who might as well be bricklayers, were it not for all the money they’re making—are forced to endure conditions that human-rights watchdogs would undoubtedly describe as inhumane and beyond comprehension.