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(Great op-ed. Too bad its message is undermined by him running as a
Democrat.)
NY Times Op-Ed, June 2, 2019
Bernie Sanders: I Know Where I Came From. Does President Trump?
By Bernie Sanders
Mr. Sanders is a senator from Vermont and a Democratic candidate for
president.
My father came to this country from Poland at the age of 17 with barely
a nickel in his pocket. I spent my first 18 years, before I left home
for college, in a three-and-a-half-room, rent-controlled apartment in
Brooklyn. My mother’s dream was to own her own home, but we never came
close. My father’s salary as a paint salesman paid for basic
necessities, but never much more.
As a young man I learned the impact that lack of money had on family
life. Every major household purchase was accompanied by arguments
between my parents.
I remember being yelled at for going to the wrong store for groceries
and paying more than I should have. I’ve never forgotten the incredible
stress of not having much money, a reality that millions of American
families experience today.
We are the wealthiest nation in the history of the world and, according
to President Trump, the economy is “booming.” Yet most Americans have
little or no savings and live paycheck to paycheck.
Today our rate of childhood poverty is among the highest of any
developed country in the world, millions of workers are forced to work
two or three jobs just to survive, hundreds of thousands of bright young
people cannot afford to go to college, millions more owe outrageous
levels of student debt, and half a million people are homeless on any
given night. Over 80 million Americans have inadequate health insurance
or spent part or all of last year without any insurance, and one out of
five cannot afford the prescription drugs they need.
While wages in the United States have been stagnant for over 40 years,
we have more income and wealth inequality than at any time since the 1920s.
Today, the wealthiest three families in the country own more wealth than
the bottom half of the American people and the top 1 percent owns more
wealth than the bottom 90 percent. Millions of workers earn starvation
wages even as nearly half of all new income is going to the top 1 percent.
I am running for president because we must defeat Donald Trump, the most
dangerous president in the modern history of our country. But, if we are
to defeat Mr. Trump, we must do more than focus on his personality and
reactionary policies.
We must understand that unfettered capitalism and the greed of corporate
America are destroying the moral and economic fabric of this country,
deepening the very anxieties that Mr. Trump appealed to in 2016. The
simple truth is that big money interests are out of control, and we need
a president who will stand up to them.
Wall Street, after driving the United States into the worst economic
downturn since the 1930s, now makes tens of billions in profits while
forcing working-class Americans to pay usurious interest rates on their
credit card debt. The top 10 American drug companies, repeatedly
investigated for price fixing and other potentially illegal actions,
made nearly $70 billion in profits last year, even as Americans paid the
most per capita among developed nations for their prescription medicine.
Top executives in the fossil fuel industry spend hundreds of millions on
campaign contributions to elect candidates who represent the rich and
the powerful, while denying the reality of climate change.
Major corporations like Amazon, Netflix, General Motors and dozens of
others make huge profits, but don’t pay federal income taxes because of
a rigged tax system they lobbied to create.
Back in 1944, in his State of the Union speech, President Franklin
Delano Roosevelt reminded the nation that economic security is a human
right, and that people cannot be truly free if they have to struggle
every day for their basic needs. I agree.
We must change the current culture of unfettered capitalism in which
billionaires have control over our economic and political life. We need
to revitalize American democracy and create a government and economy
that works for all.
Yes, the government should guarantee a decent paying job for all
Americans and universal health care through a single-payer system. Yes,
we should raise the minimum wage to a living wage of $15 an hour, make
it easier for workers to join unions, provide free tuition to public
colleges and substantially lower student debt. Yes, we should wean
ourselves off of fossil fuels, reform a racist criminal justice system
and enact comprehensive immigration reform with a path toward citizenship.
As the working-class son of an immigrant, I know where I came from. My
values as a candidate were shaped by the experiences of my youth — and
by the realization that many Americans face the same struggles today.
Conservatives dishonestly try to link the policies I favor with those of
authoritarian regimes. But I am calling for a true democracy, one that
abides by the principle of one person, one vote, and that doesn’t allow
billionaires to buy elections.
F.D.R. did it. We can do it again.
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