Bernie Sanders Is Wrong About the American 'Oligarchs'
"Multi-billionaires like Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Richard Branson are off taking joyrides on their rocket ships to outer space. They are buying $500 million superyachts."

"Anyone who thinks we do not have an oligarchy right here in America is sorely mistaken," ranted Sen. Bernie Sanders (I–Vt.) in a speech to Congress. "Today in America, multi-billionaires like Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Richard Branson are off taking joyrides on their rocket ships to outer space. They are buying $500 million superyachts."
"The yachts that [Russian President Vladimir] Putin's friends have? Well guess what, they have them too, here in this country. [These people are] living in mansions with 25 bathrooms," continued Sanders.
"The president has proposed a 20 percent minimum tax on those who are worth at least $100 million dollars," said Sanders, referring to President Joe Biden's "Billionaire Minimum Income Tax," proposed this week, which the administration has tried to delicately portray as mere prepayment of future capital gains owed, instead of a wealth tax similar to those proposed by Sanders and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.). "We should go further, though," he finished.
Sanders' point is a bad one. We do not have oligarchs in the U.S. the way countries like Russia do. Our millionaires and billionaires are prevented from pulling political puppet strings both by custom and by campaign finance laws which cap their financial contributions to some degree and require disclosures. Though companies do sometimes successfully lobby for government contracts and subsidies—Musk's hypocrisy has been widely documented on this front—we don't have widespread, unchecked corporatism where the government always serves to further companies' bottom lines, or where companies become exempt from government scrutiny for having curried favor with the right people. And free marketeers tend to believe that the existing patchwork of subsidies and handouts ought to be stopped since they serve as market distortions, artificially propping up companies that wouldn't succeed or be competitive on their own merits.
If Sanders' point is not merely that wealthy people exercise undue influence on the political process (as oligarch implies) but rather that wealth accumulation always and everywhere ought to be prevented, as he insinuates when he mentions their superyachts, that's an even weaker critique. People accumulate extreme wealth in this country most often through inventing a product or founding a company that millions or billions of people end up valuing highly. Consider Jeff Bezos, worth $177 billion, per 2021 numbers; Elon Musk, $151 billion; Bill Gates, $124 billion; Mark Zuckerberg, $97 billion; Warren Buffett, $96 billion; Larry Ellison, $93 billion; Larry Page, $91.5 billion; Sergey Brin, $89 billion. More often than not, that process is iterative, with tons of failures before striking gold. When a company is successful, those who were involved in its founding often scatter, taking their earnings and intellect and founding new companies, starting the whole iterative process over again.
In the popular imagination, these shadowy oligarch figures inherited their money or received it through ill-gotten means. But the data don't bear this out. Financial planning firm Ramsey Solutions' 2021 millionaire study found that 79 percent of the 10,000 U.S. millionaires surveyed did not receive any inheritance from their families. Of those who did receive inheritances, who are in the top 1 percent, Federal Reserve data show those inheritances were to the tune of $719,000 on average. More than half of America's billion-dollar companies have at least one immigrant founder who came to the U.S. as a kid. Extreme wealth, by and large, isn't generated by investing inherited money, but by starting companies that bring value to millions of customers.
As American Enterprise Institute fellow James Pethokoukis pointed out on his blog Faster, Please! many of today's products and companies we now take for granted may not have even come to exist had a wealth tax been in place. "Would SpaceX and Tesla—combined value of an estimated $1.2 trillion—exist in a world of sharply higher investment taxes and a fat new levy on wealth?" he asks. Pethokoukis thinks not, citing numbers run by Steven Kaplan, an economist at the University of Chicago.
"When PayPal was bought by eBay in 2002, Musk, the largest shareholder, walked away with $250 million before taxes, leaving him with $180 million after taxes," writes Pethokoukis. "What did Musk do with that cash? Well, he didn't buy some monstrous Bel-Air mansion or pricey Picasso painting. Instead, he started SpaceX in 2002, putting in $100 million, and Tesla in 2003, putting in $80 million."
The '08 financial crisis almost brought Tesla crashing down, and disastrous Falcon 1 launches around that same time almost left SpaceX in pieces. "That historic fourth flight on September 28, 2008 made the Falcon 1 the first privately built liquid-fueled booster to reach orbit," writes Pethokoukis. "It saved the company. But would that launch have happened if Musk had left PayPal with $60 million less? Would Tesla have muddled into 2009 and beyond? Kaplan doesn't think so."
Nor does Musk, in fact.
Good point. SpaceX & Tesla would probably have died, since both narrowly escaped bankruptcy in 2008.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) March 30, 2022
Central planners like Biden and Sanders don't appreciate how fragile many of today's biggest and boldest companies—SpaceX, Tesla, and Amazon—once were. Serial entrepreneurs, who exit one venture and quickly invest their earnings in another, are oftentimes wealthy enough at exit that they would be hit with wealth taxes if the Biden plan or any of its evil twins become law. But two things must be kept in mind: Their wealth is rarely liquid, and that money often gets quickly invested into other ventures that we would lose out on if it had been taxed away.
If Biden is comfortable with those unseen losses and considers the stifling of tomorrow's innovation to be a price worth paying for wealth seizure today, he should proceed with his plan. Forgive the rest of us for having some trepidation.
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Bernie Sanders Is Wrong About the American 'Oligarchs'
"Also, Everything Else."
He does know breadlines.
Doubtful, since he's got no experience with those either.
Let's go Bernie!
I love it. 😀
I think American 'Oligarchs' are a problem, not for the same reasons that Sanders does.
The problem is with the cozy corporatism between the oligarchs, the deep state and the Democratic party, which are all becoming the same thing.
- Zuckerberg spending $250 million to bus voters into areas where the party needed votes is a problem. Him creating a fake whistleblower and pretending that there's a Facebook racism issue to get the regulations he wants is a problem.
- Soros knowingly providing purposefully fraudulent documentation to the Senate Trump/Russia inquiry was a problem. His funding of the 2020 riots is a problem. His funding Dominion's frivolous lawsuits is a problem.
- Bezos using the WaPo as his own personal political advocacy office is a problem. His pulling the rug out from under Parler on the DNC's orders was a problem.
- Steyer is a problem for his funding attacks on North American energy infrastructure, which he pretends is from altruism rather than keeping up the prices of his renewables investments.
- Buffett's financing of pipeline political attacks while owning most of NA's rail shipping for fuel is a problem.
- Bill Gates is a problem for reasons we all know.
- Jack Dorsey is a problem for reasons we all know.
- Sundar Pichai, Eric E. Schmidt, Larry Page and Sergey Brin are problems for reasons we all know.
- Bob Chapek and Bob Iger at Disney are problems.
- Rob Kapito and Larry Fink at Blackrock are world destroying threats.
Etc.
These people aren't your old fashioned billionaire, enjoying the fruits of a successful life. They're oligarchs in the truest sense who have bought their way to political power.
Some, like Bill Gates and Eric Schmidt, were WEF Young Global Leadership graduates. Others like Larry Page and Mark Zuckerberg got their start with the CIA, but all now wield political power and influence as insiders, that the unelected should not have. The situation with American oligarchy is as dire as in Russia.
Only Musk seems to be the exception. An old fashioned billionaire in the manner libertarians admire.
One is not an oligarch just because he's super wealthy, but because he uses/acquires that wealth and power as part of the State Party.
I wouldn't necessarily classify Musk as an oligarch because he seems to be outside the cabal.
Someone like Schmidt, on the other hand, is thoroughly a party creature and one of the main architects of color revolutions both here and abroad.
His notion of a domestic oligarchy seems very 'quaint old man' from the get go. Russian oligarchs makes sense. Former party members who actually are Russian and who made their money off the collapse of the SU. But, Musk? Brin? Wojcicki? They weren't born here and weren't a part of any sort of royal, political, or business lineage here. Magnates? Sure. Oligarchs? Maybe. American Oligarchs? No.
Soros, Brin and Wojcicki are American oligarchs in every sense of the word. An oligarchy is a power structure in which power rests with a number of people, distinguished by one or several characteristics, such as nobility, fame, wealth, education, or corporate, religious, political, or military control.
Their place of birth or lineage has nothing to do with it. Those three wield real political influence and power within existing American power structures and that's what makes them oligarchs.
And I never called Musk an oligarch. Nardz misread my reference to him.
Oh, I agree with what you wrote, ML.
Wasn't so much directly responding to your post but adding onto it.
American oligarchy can be bought into, as Soros and others show.
Again, they key point is that the ultra wealthy wields (and sometimes acquires, like Schmidt) his power and resources as part of the ruling cabal, both serving and shaping government policy.
So far as I know, Musk doesn't directly impact my life. He takes advantage of government swindles, but I can't think of any he's helped impose.
Zuckerberg, on the other hand, not only pushes policy directly impacting his industry, an industry we all use, but also spent $400m to swing the presidential election. Soros funds migrant caravans and puts DAs in power to do his bidding. Buffet presses for higher income taxes. These are examples of wealth being used to wield power over us, to directly impose conditions on our lives that we can neither escape nor control.
Musk doesn't directly impact my life.
Similar here, not owning a Tesla -- or sadly, a rocket ship -- but I'd go as far as to say, "and if he is somehow impacting my life, it's probably in a positive way, by making something that's making the world better". He definitely has a lot of nifty projects going.
Policy based on greed and resentment is stupid.
Imagine believing every second of your life should be spent examining other people for the crime of having something you don't.
What losers.
Its absolutely a loser mentality based on envy.
Nothing good will come of it. You cant turn a loser into a winner by stealing some money from the winners every time the loser stomps his feet and wants something because "its unfair". Just teaches the loser to keep being pathetic.
I feel the same about patents. There have been a zillion examples of patent holders spending so much time suing the copycats that they never innovate again and go bankrupt. The guy whose patent Colt or S&W bought which was for bored through chambers is an excellent example. The Wright Bros sat back and waited for orders which never came in while everybody else was moving forward. James Watt didn't know how to make high pressure steam engines, sued everybody who did, and probably set back the British steam engine industry a decade or two. Biro had a ball point pen monopoly and spent all his efforts suing and went bankrupt.
Inventing something takes insight and institutional knowledge. Anyone who is content to copy a manufactured product is already behind the curve, and the inventor is presumably already a generation or two ahead. It's another reason I don't worry about China or Russia copying US inventions.
I'm torn on the patent system. I think some changes first would be a better start. Possibly just a rule that anyone who holds a patent and is suing people for infringement have to be actually using the thing would be enough for a first tweak.
Though I am also highly amenable to the argument that "intellectual property isn't", as in, it's not real property. If Joe buys an ebook from Steve, and then Joe breaks his contract to not distribute copies and I have one, A.) I haven't broken a contract with Steve because we don't have one, and B.) Steve isn't missing anything he possessed before when I end up with a copy. It's not like a chair, where if Joe steals the chair and I end up with it, Steve has one fewer chairs.
Though I'm also amenable to arguments from authors that this is likely to fuck up an industry that I really like at least part of the output of. The implementation costs of going in a more philosophically consistent direction are not zero.
Though I'm also amenable to arguments from authors that this is likely to fuck up an industry that I really like at least part of the output of.
Much of the world's greatest literature was written long before there was any concept of 'copyright.'
As a matter of fact, the concept of 'copyright' was first legally codified in Shakespeare's time, and while all of his plays were 'copyrighted' (Stationer's Register), none were copyrighted by him.
At the risk of stating the brutally obvious, there are some slight differences between now and Shakespeare's time from several perspectives, including economic. That doesn't mean it couldn't be altered, I'm just saying that I can understand why people who are current successful authors and who are doing well from it get nervous when the subject comes up.
there are some slight differences between now and Shakespeare's time from several perspectives, including economic
Yes, and many of those difference are due to copyright law, but the fundamental principle was still there - we have no original manuscripts of Shakespeare because he didn't write them down so that he could make it more difficult for people to plagiarize them. Even so, rival theater companies sent copyists in to watch the plays and write them down live and then they would produce the same plays across town.
I can understand why people who are current successful authors and who are doing well from it get nervous when the subject comes up
Indeed, but c'est la vie.
Well, there is a reason I mentioned that aspect of the arguments I've got some sympathy towards last...
It's probably actually more that I know a bunch of authors I'm personally sympathetic towards. Though given that there are some number of authors I harbor a measure of personal animosity towards, I suppose it might end up as an emotional wash, in the end. 😉
But overall, I lean significantly in favor of reforming, reducing, or removing intellectual property law. Given that I work in IT, it's interesting to me that I have more sympathy towards authors retaining their privileges there, and care almost not at all about retaining software patent law. Maybe it's the level of personal interaction. Lots of software never interacts with people for most of its life, but books are intended to be consumed by people. I dunno.
But I remember having a conversation about the subject with my father and stepmother way back when I was either still attending university or had just recently graduated, and J. said something about how `I should be opposed to piracy, being in computers, because that's how I was going to make money' or some such, and even back then, I replied with "just because it benefits me personally doesn't mean it's right" which kinda ended that conversation...
That said, I am concerned with economic upheaval from too much change too fast. I want anarchy, not chaos... 😉 Which is why my initial suggestion is reform, not simple immediate repeal, although I could probably be convinced with the right arguments if the data worked out. It's like the immigration thing. There's an order of operations. Yes, the Libertopian Ideal is open borders, because it basically doesn't matter because any piece of land they'd be on is private property and that's between them and the property owner, and there's no welfare for them to even notional consume thereby raising other people's taxes, of which there also aren't any. But if you have "open borders" before you have "no welfare state", you have massive perverse incentives and everything gets broken. That's the sort of problem I'm concerned about Intellectual Property, that there are other parts of the world that IP law interacts with, and just pulling that one leg without altering the others is going to end up gangfucking the country.
So I guess it's probably reasonable to say, "I'm not opposed, I'm cautious". 😀
"But it was my idea first!" is not a basis for sound legal doctrine.
I thought I had thought up some very original ideas, some quite horrifying, and even a unique style to note them I'd never seen before.
Then I read Nietzsche.
*The ideas are still original, they're just not as unprecedented as I'd thought.
Still have some good ones cooking.
But voters resenting the fact that billionaires put their political puppets into power to maintain a system of crony capitalism is not stupid. You ought to resent the billionaires and their political minions.
Oh, and Sanders is one of their political minions: greedy and corrupt to the core.
You ought to resent the billionaires and their political minions.
Oh, and Sanders is one of their political minions
^
It's almost like there should be a law. Something like "You shouldn't spend your time wishing you had someone else's stuff that you don't have."
There's probably a better way to word it, but I can't think of how.
It is possible for greed to be creative. Envy is always destructive.
Fixed it, I think, but nice Freudian slip.
Bernie "I own 3 houses worth a reported $6 million on an annual salary of $174,000" Sanders can kiss my ass.
But he deserves those houses!
Bernie is lazy socialist that has lived off the public till all of his existence. He was kicked out of a commune because he was always willing to let others do the work. It is comical that all these public dole millionaires rail against billionaires. They have no shame. Any funds they would get would be wasted far more than watching billionaires squirrel money away in coffee cans and burying them in the backyard. Bernie is irrelevant and like the rest of the aging legislature should ride off into the sunset and STFU.
Bernie "its a disgrace that there are millionaires in Congress" Sanders can kiss mine too
Bernie "I own 3 houses worth a reported $6 million on an annual salary of $174,000" Sanders can kiss my ass.
I’m curious if he’ll be lifelike enough to extract even more fuck-off-and-go-away money from the Democrats in 2024. Third time’s a charm. While it would be glorious to have Bernie and Brandon debate, Bernie might not be lifelike enough on stage by himself without assistance.
Perhaps the Social Democrats can manhandle him around during the primaries, literally a “Weekend at Bernies” type scenario.
Now pull the other one. Our billionaires may not have the same influence as the Russian variety, but (a) ours pull plenty of strings, and (b) celebrating campaign finance laws is not a libertarian thing.
Yeah. If we had real oligarchs, we would see companies they control
eliminating the voices of political opponents, and working together to suppress stories unfavorable to politicians sons.
Possibly even running elections through massive purchases of "poll workers" and getting laws changed too
Why do we still pay attention to this hate filled idiot?
For two reasons:
(1) He still has political power.
(2) There is a kernel of truth to what he says.
Unfortunately, Sanders is the kind of useful idiot who doesn't realize that he is doing the oligarchs' bidding.
I think that kernel might be a null space.
Seriously? You don't think that billionaires are using their wealth to unduly influence politicians and laws? You don't think that the American middle class has stagnated due to spending, fiscal and monetary policies that primarily benefit the wealthy? You don't think that the free exchange of ideas in the US is under attack because major media platforms (YouTube, Facebook, NYT, WaPo, etc.) are controlled by billionaires with a self-serving political agenda?
There is a kernel of truth to what he says.
That is actually a kernel of popcorn stuck in the gap in his teeth, but I understand your confusion. The whistling sound it makes is very distracting.
The communists are always wrong. always. it's not that hard to understand.
Eh, they say "2+2=4" often enough for the willing to ignore the more common "2-A?Z" nonsense.
This FA is full of nonsense, but the general thrust is correct. Anyone with half a brain can see that almost all internet companies are US-based, that almost all innovative and useful companies are US-based. TikTok might be an exception, although "innovative" and "useful" have to be stretched a bit too much for my taste. Space X is genuinely both, even in its government contracts, because those do supply launches NASA is incapable of, and a lot cheaper than what the expendable competitors can offer. Even Tesla is a real product with real use and real innovation; the government rebates have dried up, but wasn't the main reason for success anyway, and it's hard to fault Musk for taking advantage of government stupidity.
"FA"?
Feature article?
Fucking asshole?
Fantastic analogy?
Who is John Galt?
The real problem is all the people who believe the shit he says like gospel.
If only one out of a hundred Americans is a dedicated socialist retard, that adds up to 3.3 million, eager for Bernie--or worse.
That's not even really the problem. A strong society can withstand dumbasses.
The problem is that cultivating socialist dumbasses is useful to those in power as they seek totalitarianism.
Socialist dumbasses are therefore promoted and bred, like cancer, to the point where the society becomes fatally unhealthy.
Bernie reminds me of longtime commenter American Socia1ist (currently slumming as "Ali Akbar" for reasons unknown). Sure, they pretend to have a chip on their shoulder about billionaires. But as long as they obediently vote exactly how billionaires tell them to, it's all good from a Koch / Reason libertarian POV. 🙂
#BillionairesForBiden
#OBLsFirstLaw
I can find anyone that can justify a wealth tax with any argument other than "The government needs that money".
Don't forget "the billionaires don't deserve it."
here in this country. [These people are] living in mansions with 25 bathrooms
And lifelong senators have 3 houses. Probably with 8 bathrooms each).
ya I bet gramps has 25 bathroom options all-told.
And yet he still pees in his rubber underwear.
People who buy big houses and yachts are feeding the families of the people who build them, and doing so much more efficiently than government programs that Bernie would rather have feeding them instead. Millions of people make very good livings supplying labor and goods to purchasers of extravagance. So every time I hear someone complaining about someone's having this or that absurdly expensive luxury, I realize I'm listening to an economic moron.
Today in America, multi-billionaires like Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Richard Branson are off taking joyrides on their rocket ships to outer space.
Did NASA develop return-to-earth rockets? Do they still do manned spaceflight?
I'm no Elon fan, but including him in the list of fatcat billionaires is lazy and wrong. Pick another example down the list.
Musk does not live in a mansion with 25 bathrooms, is not riding the rockets his company launches, and he does not own stock in other businesses. By his own admission his financial fate is directly tied to the performance of his companies.
taxation is theft.
Robbery actually because of the threat of violence.
End corporate welfare. (Sorry Elon.)
Sorry to tell you this, but Sanders is right: the US is governed by a class of oligarchs. That has nothing to do with how they spend their money (that is simply symptomatic).
Saying that someone is an "oligarch" means that they are a member of a small ruling class, and the US clearly has that. The richest 100 Americans are clearly part of that, but so are the Clinton clan, the Bush clan, Pelosi, etc. These people pass legislation and govern in a way to enrich themselves at the expense of average Americans.
Sanders recognizes the problem correctly; what he fails to acknowledge is that he is part of this oligarchy.
The Biden cabal, General; don't forget the Biden cabal.
Biden is so laughably incompetent, he didn't even manage to create a proper "clan".
Bernie Sanders is one of those oligarchs. He may not be a billionaire with a private spaceship, but when he whines the press comes running and soon enough he gets his legislation.
Don't fear the guy with money. Fear the guy with power. Fear Bernie Sanders.
It is the hatred the Aristocacy of Pull has for that of Merit.
Under the smokescreen of "fairness", Mr. Sanders, Ms. Warren, Mr. Biden, and the rest, simply want their fingers, and the fingers of their fellow traveler colleagues, in more of the pies that other people make.
It seems that Biden at least, wants his finger in other than pies.
#believeallwomen (if you know what a woman is)
What is his opinion on Will Smith?
I do not understand why these billionaires investing in space travel ventures offends the Left so much. Especially with Musk, who has at least given the United States manned spaceflight capability back and practical satellite launch capability with at least partially reusable system. How is that not a good for society?
Is this an April Fools joke? The below quoted part is absurd.
"We do not have oligarchs in the U.S. the way countries like Russia do. Our millionaires and billionaires are prevented from pulling political puppet strings both by custom and by campaign finance laws which cap their financial contributions to some degree and require disclosures. Though companies do sometimes successfully lobby for government contracts and subsidies—Musk's hypocrisy has been widely documented on this front—we don't have widespread, unchecked corporatism where the government always serves to further companies' bottom lines, or where companies become exempt from government scrutiny for having curried favor with the right people. And free marketeers tend to believe that the existing patchwork of subsidies and handouts ought to be stopped since they serve as market distortions, artificially propping up companies that wouldn't succeed or be competitive on their own merits."
How can Sanders have lived so long and not learned that wealth is created? Musk's 300 billion fortune wasn't taken from others it's new wealth that was created through his efforts. How do these idiots think the GDP grows?
Expand the thought of the article a little bit:
Elon Musk spent great amounts of money investing in and building two companies. Some similarity with other billionaires and what they did. In contrast Sen. Bernie and Sen. Elizabeth want to tax that money away and spend it on something else, like providing National Healthcare to everyone. Which do you think provides better value to the American people?
No one ever seems to mention that the "toys" and homes of the rich and famous don't just manifest out of thin air ... they all need people to construct and maintain them, providing good skilled jobs throughout the country. Myself, and hundreds of thousands of others rely on the "largess" of the wretched excess of the financial elite to make a quality living. And that's not including the entrepreneurial start-ups such as the Jobs, Musk's or Bezos' of the world I doubt that this percentage of individuals would ever achieve the economic independence achieved in the US in socialist societies such as Venezuela or N. Korea ... So Bernie, don't bite the hands that feed you because you might run out of other people's money to do your bidding!
Democrats solution to the Rich Oligarchs.....
Subsidize them MORE!!! Block their Competition!!!!
Needless to say Musk's wealth comes from EXACTLY Democrat's Nazism and Green-Energy Gov-Gun Theft/Redirection.. USA Nazism is EXACTLY what made the Rich Oligarchs. Pretending more Nazism will fix it is just another 100% contradiction that every Democrat is.
"Our millionaires and billionaires are prevented from pulling political puppet strings both by custom and by campaign finance laws which cap their financial contributions to some degree and require disclosures."
It's like looking at the dictionary entry for "delusional." Yeah custom and law exist, but they've never effectively constrained the very wealthy.
Biden is clueless….Bernie is wrong….Today’s headlines have blown my mind and shattered my belief system! <— That’s me in the spotlight, losing my religion!
I'm not sure how much reliance should be placed on one point: "79 percent of the 10,000 U.S. millionaires surveyed did not receive any inheritance from their families."
One can be lavishly endowed by family members without inheritance. Right now, the Federal gift-tax exemption is $16,000 per giver, per recipient. If both of my parents and each of my four grandparents give me gifts up to that limit, I'd get just shy of $100,000 per yer; that'd put me in millionaire territory in just over 10 years, even without allowing for growth of my investments. Halve the number of wealthy benefactors, and I could still easily be a millionaire by the time I'm old enough to vote.
Indeed, one wouldn't expect most people to receive inheritances until the death of at least one, and probably both, of their parents. So if people live to an average age of 80 years, 79% of the population would be 64 or younger—about the age at which one would expect one's parents to die.
But that point is consistent with a lot of other data that all lead to the same conclusion: most Americans who are rich worked for it.
If your family gave you $100000 per year as a gift, you wouldn't end up as a millionaire, you'd likely end up dirt poor, because you'd never learn how to earn and manage money.
On the other hand, if, against all odds, you do learn how to earn and manage money, you'll be a millionaire in ten years anyway and don't need the gifts.
Stupid worthless old coot who's never added a damn useful thing to humanity. Shuffle off already, you insufferable communist ass.
Bernie HATES the fact that successful capitalists can spend their money they way they want.
Bernie wants to spend their money the way HE wants.