Via FB // A few hours ago on the floor of the Senate, Bernie Sanders torched billionaires, scorched Trump, and burned every shred of political cowardice in his path.
A few hours ago on the floor of the Senate, Bernie Sanders torched
billionaires, scorched Trump, and burned every shred of political
cowardice in his path.
Here is his fiery speech, word for word:
Mr. President,
In
the last couple of weeks, I've had the opportunity to travel in many
parts of our country. And I have been able to talk to folks in Nebraska,
in Iowa, Wisconsin, Michigan, Nevada, Colorado, and Arizona. And what I
am hearing from in all of these states and in fact all over the country
is that our nation right now faces enormous crises, unprecedented
crises in the modern history of our country.
And how right now at
this moment we respond to these crises will not only impact our lives,
it will impact the lives of our kids and future generations. And in
terms of climate change, the well-being of the entire planet.
And
Mr. President, what I have to tell you is that the American people are
angry at what is happening here in Washington, DC and they are prepared
to stand up and fight back. In my view and what I have heard from many,
many people is that they will not accept an oligarchic form of society
where a handful of billionaires control our government, where the
wealthiest person on Earth, Mr. Musk, is running all over Washington, DC
slashing the Social Security Administration so that our elderly people
today are finding it extremely difficult to access the benefits that
they paid into.
Where Mr. Musk and his friends are slashing the
Veterans Administration so that people who put their lives on the line
to defend us will not be able to get the health care that they are
entitled to or get the benefits that they are owed in a timely manner.
Slashing the Department of Education. Slashing USAID.
And why is
all of this slashing taking place? It is taking place so that the
wealthiest people in this country can receive over $1 trillion dollars
in tax breaks.
Now, I don't care if you are a Democrat, a
Republican, or an Independent. There are very few people in this country
who think that you slash programs that working families desperately
need in order to give tax breaks to billionaires.
Mr. President, I
am the former chair of the U.S. Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs,
and I have had the honor of meeting with veterans in my own state of
Vermont—all over Vermont—but all over the country. These are the men and
women who put the uniform of this country on and have been prepared to
die to defend our nation and American democracy.
And these
veterans and Americans all over our nation will not accept an
authoritarian form of society with a president who undermines our
Constitution every day. Every day there's something else out there where
he's undermining our Constitution and threatening the very foundations
of American democracy. That is not what people fought and died to allow
to happen.
Mr. President, I am not a historian, but I do know
that the founding fathers of this country were no dummies. They were
really smart guys. And in the 1780s, they wrote a Constitution and
established a form of government with a separation of powers.
A separation of powers—with an executive branch, the president; a legislative branch, the Congress; and a judicial branch.
These
revolutionaries in the 1780s had just fought a war against the imperial
rule of the King of England who was an absolute dictator, the most
powerful person on Earth. And these revolutionaries here in America
forming a new government wanted to make absolutely sure that no one
person in this brand new country that they were forming would have
unlimited powers.
And that is why we have a separation of powers.
That is why we have a judiciary, a Congress, and an executive branch.
In other words, way back in the 1780s, they wrote a Constitution to
prevent exactly what Donald Trump is trying to do today.
So, let
us be clear about what is going on. Donald Trump is attacking our First
Amendment and is trying to intimidate the media and those who speak out
against him in an absolutely unprecedented way.
Mr. President, he
has sued ABC, CBS, Meta, the Des Moines Register. His FCC is now
threatening to investigate NPR and PBS. He has called CNN and MSNBC
“illegal.”
In other words, the leader—or the so-called leader—of
the free world is afraid of freedom. He doesn't like criticism. Well,
guess what? None of us like criticism. But you don't get elected to the
Senate, you don't get elected to the House, you don't become a governor,
you don't become a president of the United States unless you are
prepared to deal with that criticism.
And the response to that
criticism in a democracy is not to sue the media, is not to intimidate
the media. It's to respond in the way you think best.
But Mr.
President, it is not just the media that Trump is going after. He is
going after the constitutional responsibilities that this body, the
United States Congress, has. And I will say it amazes me, it really
does, how easily my Republican colleagues here in the Senate and in the
House are willing to surrender their constitutional responsibilities.
Give it over to the president.
Trump has illegally and
unconstitutionally withheld funds that Congress has appropriated. You
can't do that. Congress has the power of the purse. We make a decision.
We argue about it here. Big debates, vote-aras, the whole thing. Make
that decision. That money goes out. The president does not have the
right to withhold funds that Congress has appropriated.
Trump has
illegally and unconstitutionally decimated agencies that can only be
changed or reformed by Congress. You don't like the Department of
Education, you don't like USAID, fine. Come to the Congress. Tell us
what reforms you want to see. You do not have the right to unilaterally
do away with these agencies.
Trump has fired members of independent agencies and inspectors general that he does not have the authority to do.
But
Mr. President, it is not just the media that he is trying to
intimidate. It is not just the powers of Congress that he wants.
Now,
in an absolutely outrageous, unconstitutional and extraordinarily
dangerous way, he is going after the judiciary. His view is that if you
don't like a decision that a judge renders, you get rid of that judge.
You try to impeach that judge. You intimidate judges so that you get the
decisions that you want.
You know, I'm thinking back now as
someone who is not a supporter of the Roberts court, and I'm thinking
about one of the worst Supreme Court decisions that has ever been
rendered—that is Citizens United. I'll say more about that in a moment.
And I'm thinking about the Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v.
Wade, taking away American women's right to control their own bodies.
In
my view, these were outrageous decisions, unpopular decisions. But it
never occurred to me, because maybe I'm old-fashioned and conservative,
and I believe that you live by the rule of law, to say, “Hey, look at
the decision Roberts made. We're going to impeach him.”
No, we
try to elect a new president who's going to appoint new Supreme Court
justices. That is the system that people have fought and died to defend.
But
it's not just the movement toward oligarchy, which is outraging
millions of Americans—Democrats and Republicans, by the way—and it's not
just the movement toward authoritarianism that we are seeing. The
American people, especially with Mr. Musk and 13 billionaires in the
Trump administration running agency after agency...
The American
people are saying as loudly as they can that they will not accept a
society of massive economic and wealth inequalities, where the very
richest people in our country are becoming much richer while working
families are struggling to put food on the table.
Having gone all
over this country, I can tell you that the American people are sick and
tired of these inequalities and they want an economy that works for all
of us—not just the 1%.
You know, Mr. President, we deal with a
whole lot of stuff here in the Congress, and you know, virtually all of
it is important in one way or another.
But let's do something,
you know, fairly radical today. Let's try to tell the truth—the real
truth—about what is going on in our society today. Something that we
don't talk about too much here in the Senate. We don't talk about it too
much in the House. We don't talk about it too much in the corporate
media.
But the reality is that today we have two Americas. Two very, very different Americas.
And
in one of those Americas, the wealthiest people have never ever had it
so good. In the whole history of our country, the people on top have
never ever had it so good as they have it today.
Today, we have
more income and wealth inequality than there has ever been in the
history of America. Now, I know we don't discuss it. You don't see it
much on TV. You don't hear it talked about here at all. But the American
people do not believe that it is appropriate that three people—one,
two, three—Mr. Musk, Mr. Bezos, and Mr. Zuckerberg, three Americans, own
more wealth than the bottom half of American society. 170 million
people. Really? Three people own more wealth than 170 million people?
Anybody here think that is vaguely appropriate?
And by the way,
those very same three people—the three richest people in America—were
right there at Trump’s inaugural, standing right behind the president.
So, you want to know what oligarchy is? I know there's some confusion
out there. What is oligarchy? Well, it starts off when you have the
three wealthiest people in the country standing right behind the
president when he gets inaugurated.
The top 1% in our country now own more wealth than the bottom 90%.
CEOs make 300 times more than their average worker.
And
unbelievably—real inflation-accounted-for wages today—the average
American worker, if you can believe it, despite a massive increase in
worker productivity, is lower today than it was 52 years ago. And during
that period, there was a $75 trillion transfer of wealth that went from
the bottom 90% to the top 1%. That is the reality of the American
economy today. And you know what? Maybe we might want to be talking
about that.
And in our America today, in that top America, that
one America, the 1% are completely separate and isolated from the rest
of the country. You think they get on a subway to get to work? Think
they sit in a traffic jam for an hour trying to get to work? Not the
case.
They fly around in the jets and the helicopters that they
own. They live in their mansions all over the world in their gated
communities. They have nannies taking care of their babies. They don't
worry about the cost of child care. And they send their kids to the best
private schools and colleges.
Sometimes they vacation not in a
Motel 6, not in a national park, but on the very own islands that they
have. And on occasion, for the very very richest—just to have for a
kick, have a little bit of fun—maybe they'll spend a few million dollars
flying off into space in one of their own spaceships. Sounds like fun.
But
it is not just massive income and wealth inequality that we're dealing
with today. We have more concentration of ownership than ever before.
While the profits on Wall Street and corporate America soar, a handful
of giant corporations dominate sector after sector—whether it's
agriculture, transportation, media, financial services, etc., etc.
Small
number of huge corporations—international corporations—dominating
sector after sector. And as a result of that concentration of ownership,
they are able to charge the American people outrageously high prices
for the goods and services we need.
Mr. President, we don't talk
about it too much. Maybe we should. But there are three Wall Street
firms—BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street—that combined are the major
stockholders in 95% of our corporations. Got that? Three Wall Street
firms—three—are the major stockholders in 95% of American corporations.
So,
Mr. President, that is one America. People on top doing phenomenally
well. Not only do they have economic power, they have enormous political
power. That’s what’s going on there. They live like kings. That’s one
America.
But there is another America.
And in that other
America, 60% of our people are living paycheck to paycheck. And millions
of workers from one end of this country to the other are trying to
survive on starvation wages.
And unlike Donald Trump, I grew up
in a family that lived paycheck to paycheck. And I know the anxieties
that my mom and dad had, living in a rent-controlled apartment. Can we
afford to buy this? Why did you buy that?
And that’s the story taking place all over America.
What does living paycheck to paycheck mean?
It
means that every single day, millions of Americans worry about how
they're going to pay their rent or their mortgage. All over the country,
rents are skyrocketing. And people are wondering: What happens—what
happens to me and my kids if rent goes up by 20% and I can't afford it?
Where do I live? Do I have to take my kid out of school? Where do I put
my kid? In worst case scenario, do I live in my car?
Let’s be clear. There are many people who are working today who are living in the back of their cars.
How do I pay for child care?
I talked to a cop, a guy the other day—a police officer—spending $20,000 a year for child care.
How do I buy decent food for my kids when the price of groceries is off the charts?
What
happens if I get sick or my kid gets sick or my mother gets sick and I
got a $12,000 deductible and I can’t afford to go to the doctor?
How,
at the end of the month, am I going to pay my credit card bill—even
though I am being charged 20 or 30% interest rates by the usurious
credit card companies?
People are worrying about simple things.
What happens if my car breaks down and the guy at the repair shop says
it’s going to cost $1,000 and I don’t have $1,000 in the bank? And if I
don’t have a car, how do I get to work? And if I don’t get to work, how
do I have an income? And if I don’t have an income, how do I take care
of my family?
Those are the crises that millions of Americans are experiencing today.
But it’s not just working-age Americans.
Today,
in our country, half of older workers—older workers—have nothing in the
bank as they face retirement. And they’re watching TV and they’re
saying, “Mr. Musk is firing Social Security workers,” and actually
worrying whether Social Security will be there for them.
And it’s
not just older workers with nothing in the bank wondering what happens
when they retire. Twenty-two percent of seniors are trying to survive on
$15,000 a year.
I dare anybody in this country—let alone
somebody who’s old, who needs health care, needs to keep the house
warm—try to survive on $15,000 a year. And there are people here, by the
way, talking about cutting Social Security.
Mr. President, it is
not just about income and wealth inequality. It is about a health care
system which everyone in the nation understands is broken, is
dysfunctional, and is outrageously expensive.
I hear my
Republican friends—you know, I don’t know where they are today—wanting
to destroy the ACA. And my Democratic friends say, “Oh, we got to defend
the ACA.” ACA is broken. It doesn’t work.
In my state, the cost of health care is going up 10, 15%. In America today, you got 85 million people uninsured or underinsured.
Function
of the health care system today is not to do what a sane society would
do—guarantee health care to all people in a cost-effective way—something
which, by the way, every other major nation on Earth manages to do.
The
function of our health care system, as everybody knows, is to make
billions of dollars in profits for the insurance companies and the drug
companies.
So I say to my Democratic friends: It’s not good
enough to defend the Affordable Care Act. It’s a broken system. You got
to have the guts to stand up and allow us to do what every other major
nation does—guarantee health care to all people as a human right—not
allow the drug companies and the insurance companies to make massive
profits every year.
And Mr. President, I want to touch on an
issue that gets virtually no discussion, but I think it is enormously
important—and it says a hell of a lot about what’s going on in our
society today.
In America, according to international studies,
our life expectancy—how long we live as a people—is about four years
lower than other countries. Most European countries—people there live
longer lives. Japan—they live even more longer lives than in Europe.
So, question number one: Why is that happening?
We
spend $14,000 a year per person on health care—almost double what any
other country spends. And yet people around the world are living, on
average, four years longer than we do.
But here is the really ugly fact—even worse than that.
And
that is that in this country, on average, if you are a working-class
person, you will live seven years shorter lives than if you're in the
top 1%. If you’re a working-class person, your life will be seven years
shorter than if you are wealthy.
In other words, being poor or working-class in America today amounts to a death sentence.
Mr. President, it's not only a broken health care system.
We
have got to ask ourselves a simple question—and the Biden
administration began a little bit of movement in this direction—and that
is: Why are we living in a nation where one out of four people can't
even afford the prescription drugs their doctors prescribe?
Why are we in some cases paying ten times more than our neighbors in Canada or in Europe? How does that happen?
And
the answer of course has to do with the greed of the pharmaceutical
industry and their power right here—all of the campaign contributions
that they make—which has prevented us from negotiating prices.
But it’s not just health care or prescription drugs.
When
we look at what’s going on in America—in Vermont and throughout this
country—we have a major housing crisis. Here we are, the richest country
on Earth: 800,000 people sleeping out on the streets, and 20 million
people are spending more than 50% of their limited incomes on housing.
Can
you imagine that? You’re a working person, spending 50% of your income
on housing. How do you have money to do anything else? And the cost of
housing is soaring.
Do not tell me, Mr. President, that in a
nation which could spend a trillion dollars on the military—a nation
that gives massive tax breaks to the rich—that we cannot build the
millions of units of housing that we desperately need.
So, Mr. President, why is all of this happening?
Why
do we have a health care system that is broken? Prescription drugs that
are the most expensive in the world? A housing system? Education in
deep trouble?
Talked to educators in Vermont, all over the
country. Talked to a principal the other day from Vermont. Their
starting salary at a public school? $32,000 a year. But don’t worry—they
can’t afford to even bring people in because they can’t afford the
housing in the community.
Why have we let education sink to the level that it has?
So
I think the bottom line of all this is: The American people, I think,
are catching on. And Mr. Musk—I must thank him—because he has made it
very clear we are living in an oligarchic form of society.
If
anybody out there thinks that Mr. Musk is running around out of the
goodness of his heart trying to make our government more efficient, you
have not a clue as to what is going on.
What these guys want to
do is destroy virtually every federal program that impacts the
well-being of working people—Social Security, Medicare, postal service,
public education, you name it—so they can get huge tax breaks for the
rich and eventually make government so inefficient that they will have
the ability, as large corporations, to come in and privatize everything
that is going on.
So, Mr. President, this is a pivotal moment in American history. And I sense that the American people have had it up to here.
They are prepared to fight back.
They do not want a government run by billionaires who have it all—whose greed is uncontrollable.
You
know, we have in Vermont—and I think a lot of this country—serious
problems with addiction, with drugs. People drinking too much alcohol.
People smoking too many cigarettes.
But the worst form of addiction that this country now faces is the greed of the oligarchy.
You
might think that if you had 10, 20 billion dollars, it would be enough.
You know—kind of enough to let your family live for the next 20
generations.
But it’s not.
For whatever reason—whatever
compulsive reason they have—these guys want more and more and more, and
they are prepared to destroy Social Security, Medicare, nutrition
programs for hungry people in order to get even more.
That, to me, is disgusting.
So,
Mr. President, we are at a pivotal moment in American history. But
having been all over this country—or many parts of this country—I am
absolutely confident that the American people (and I'm not just talking
about Democrats, who are as complicit in the problems that we have right
now as our Republicans, because we got a two-party system which is
basically corrupt)...
You got Mr. Musk over on the Republican
side saying to any Republican who dares to stand up and defy the Trump
agenda, we are going to primary you.
And on the Democratic side,
you got AIPAC and you got other super PACs saying, you stand up for
working people—you’re in trouble as well.
We got a corrupt
campaign finance system in which billionaires are able to buy elections.
And that’s why all over this country, people are not happy with our
two-party system—the Republicans and the Democrats.
So, Mr. President, this is a pivotal moment in American history.
But
we have had difficult moments before. And I am confident, from the
bottom of my heart, that if we stand together, and we do not allow some
right-wing extremists to divide us up by the color of our skin, or our
religion, or where we were born, or our sexual orientation...
If
we stand together, we can save this country. We can defeat oligarchy. We
can defeat the movement toward authoritarianism. And in fact, we can
create an economy and a government that works for all—not just a few.
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