What does the US House Price in 1981 have to do with Bernie? He bought his lakeside house for $600,000 after his campaign in 2016. He bought another house for $565,000, also lakefront, after his campaign in 2020.
Sanders owns THREE houses, not one, friend. And the idea that you're going to buy a house every three years is absurd. If you're making $50K a year, paying your taxes, and paying your own bills, approximately $40K of that money is gone. Especially when you have a kid to feed. Wait, you DID know he has a kid, right?
Now, you can make the argument that he's "not that rich" and that's fine. I would argue he shouldn't be rich at all. The median wage in the US is in the area of $60,000 a year, and Bernie is making nearly 3 times that AND receiving transportation, food, and housing benefits on top of it. Why?
When Bernie wants to rant and rave and claim to be representing the working man, yet he doesn't pay his own bills, and his three houses are worth a combined $2 million dollars, and he has another million to his portfolio on top of that, and his wife, who bankrupted the school she worked at is worth another two million, I start seeing issues. Show me the working people he claims to represent of the same age, who worked their career and retired, who are in his position. You can't.
Public service seems to be a damned good living. Too bad every penny of it is stolen from the working man at gunpoint. :)
I think you are being obtuse on purpose, i own 11 houses and am currently looking to buy a 12th in brisbane, i have less purchasing power than bernie sanders has had for most of his career.
Bernie could have already collected his retirement benefits which should be 7 figures easy.
Bernie should be much richer, lets look at republicans:
Senator Ted Cruz has a net worth of $40 Million US Dollars. As a United States Senator, Cruz earns a $210000 salary annually.
https://prnt.sc/LhAyGvprsYAZHere is the top 10 richest congressmen, 7 republicans, all of them at MINIMUM worth 20x bernies entire net worth.
Rick Scott was pressured to resign as chief executive of Columbia/HCA in 1997. During his tenure as chief executive, the company defrauded Medicare, Medicaid, and other federal programs. The U.S. Department of Justice won 14 felony convictions against the company, which was fined $1.7 billion in what was at the time the largest healthcare fraud settlement in U.S. history. Following his departure from Columbia/HCA, Scott became a venture capitalist and pursued other business interests.
I find that tidbit to be hilarious.
This post was edited by Plaguefear on Feb 19 2025 07:34pm