Lex Fridman Podcast - #450 – Bernie Sanders Interview
Episode Date: October 23, 2024Bernie Sanders is a US Senator from Vermont and a two-time presidential candidate. Thank you for listening ❤ Check out our sponsors: https://lexfridman.com/sponsors/ep450-sc See below for timestamps..., transcript, and to give feedback, submit questions, contact Lex, etc. Transcript: https://lexfridman.com/bernie-sanders-transcript CONTACT LEX: Feedback - give feedback to Lex: https://lexfridman.com/survey AMA - submit questions, videos or call-in: https://lexfridman.com/ama Hiring - join our team: https://lexfridman.com/hiring Other - other ways to get in touch: https://lexfridman.com/contact EPISODE LINKS: Bernie's Website: https://berniesanders.com Bernie's X: https://x.com/BernieSanders Bernie's Instagram: https://instagram.com/berniesanders Bernie's YouTube: https://youtube.com/@BernieSanders Bernie's Facebook: https://facebook.com/berniesanders Bernie's Books: It's OK to Be Angry About Capitalism: https://amzn.to/4fiIqS3 Where We Go from Here: https://amzn.to/4eUSJMj Bernie Sanders Guide to Political Revolution: https://amzn.to/3YkVAa4 Our Revolution: https://amzn.to/40cIbnf Outsider in the White House: https://amzn.to/3BSfD8u SPONSORS: To support this podcast, check out our sponsors & get discounts: Eight Sleep: Temp-controlled smart mattress. Go to https://eightsleep.com/lex Saily: An eSIM for international travel. Go to https://saily.com/lex Ground News: Unbiased news source. Go to https://groundnews.com/lex AG1: All-in-one daily nutrition drinks. Go to https://drinkag1.com/lex LMNT: Zero-sugar electrolyte drink mix. Go to https://drinkLMNT.com/lex OUTLINE: (00:00) - Introduction (08:51) - MLK Jr (11:43) - Corruption in politics (23:00) - Healthcare in US (31:33) - 2016 election (37:32) - Barack Obama (43:26) - Capitalism (51:35) - Response to attacks (56:32) - AOC and progressive politics (1:04:24) - Mortality (1:06:30) - Hope for the future PODCAST LINKS: - Podcast Website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast - Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr - Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 - RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ - Podcast Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrAXtmErZgOdP_8GztsuKi9nrraNbKKp4 - Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/lexclips
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The following is a conversation with Bernie Sanders, Senator from Vermont,
and two time presidential candidate, both times as the underdog who against
the long odds, captivated the support and excitement of millions of people,
both on the left and the right.
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Maybe you will too. This episode is brought to you by 8 Sleep and it's Pod for Ultra.
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I've been able to train really hard and enjoy doing it.
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Journey of the sport especially as you get older
somebody has better technique than you somebody has better timing than you on that particular day and together you figure out what works and what doesn't
and through that process of humbling you chip away at the ego that most human
beings have. I think it just makes you a better person when you realize that
you're somewhere in the food chain, nowhere close to the top and
you're mortal and
You kind of suck at most things and the only way to get better is by working really hard all of those truths
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And now, dear friends, here's Bernie Sanders.
I'm not a politician. I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician.
I'm a politician. I'm a politician. I'm a politician. I'm a politician. I for a politician, I would say. What's your philosophy behind that? You like talking about the issues.
Yeah, I do.
I mean, you know, everybody talks about themselves.
It's not about me.
You know, nice guy, not a nice guy.
What's what, you know, politics should be about is the issues facing
the people of our country, the people of the world and how we're going to address it.
That's what it should be.
That said, there's interesting aspects to your life story.
For example, in 1963, you are very active in the civil rights movement,
got arrested even for protesting segregation in Chicago,
and you attended the famous march on Washington where MLK gave his I Have a Dream speech.
What was that like?
It's extraordinary.
I took a bus ride down with fellow students from the University of Chicago.
And there was a zillion people there.
I'm not sure if it was the first time I'd ever been in Washington in my life.
But it was, you know, it was a very impressive moment.
And what he was talking about, what people very often forget about that, it was not only
racial justice, it was jobs.
Jobs and justice, that was the name of that rally.
And so, it's something I've never forgotten. What influence did he have on you? What would you
learn about the way he enacted change in the world? King was a very impressive guy.
More impressive, I think, than people think that he was.
And what he did is he created his movement from the bottom on up.
So he developed real organization, grassroots organization,
which put pressure on communities and officials to end segregation,
to open up voting patterns.
And I think what has to also be remembered about King,
which is really quite extraordinary, is he won the Nobel Peace Prize and everyone was,
oh, you're great, you're wonderful. But then, to the end of his life, he took on Lyndon Johnson
on the war in Vietnam. And as soon as he did that, suddenly the editorial pages throughout America,
the establishment papers, no longer thought he was so great.
In fact, the message sent out, you're black, deal with civil rights.
Don't worry about foreign policy. We'll take care of that.
But he said, you know, if I talk about peace and nonviolence,
I can't sit back and allow what's going on in Vietnam to continue without
speaking out. Incredible courage to do that. And by the way, when he was assassinated at a fighting for the rights of AFSCME workers,
garbage, guys that delivered the garbage, who were treated terribly, low wages,
bad working conditions, they went out to support their right to form a union. That's when he got
killed. So on the war front, one of the things that people
don't often talk about your work in politics,
you gave what I think is a truly brave speech
on the Iraq war in 2002, I believe.
You voted no on the Iraq resolution,
you voted no on the Patriot Act.
And you basically predicted very accurately
what would happen if we go into Iraq.
What was your thinking at the time
behind those speeches,
behind voting no on the Patriot Act
on the Iraq resolution?
And maybe ironically came out of maybe the war in Vietnam
and the ease and lies that people told. We went
into Vietnam under a lie. We lost close to 60,000 Americans, millions of people in Vietnam.
Cambodia died as a result of that. So you think twice about it. In the war in Iraq,
you had people like Dick Cheney and others telling us, oh, they have nuclear
weapons and all that stuff. It's the only way we can resolve the issue. I didn't believe it.
I didn't agree with it. And then you're right. Turns out historically, I was right.
What's the way to fight this thing that Martin Luther King tried to fight,
which is the military industrial complex? It's huge. I mean, it gets to the broader issue of where we are as a nation.
And what I almost uniquely in Congress talk about is the fact that we are moving Lex
to an oligarchic form of society. And not a lot of people are familiar with that term.
But what it means, we talk about oligarchy in Russia, Putin is surrounded by the oligarchs.
Well, guess what? What do you think is happening in the United States? So what you have right now is an
economy with more concentration of ownership than we've ever had. That means whether it's agriculture,
transportation, healthcare, whatever it may be, fewer and fewer massively large corporations
control what's produced and the prices we pay. And then you look at our political
system and it's we don't talk about it. What is the reality of the political system today?
And that is that billionaires are spending huge amounts of money to buy this election.
In Trump's campaign he got three multi-billionaires spending over 200 million dollars. Three people.
Democrats have their billionaires not quite as concentrated, but at the end of the day,
billionaires play an enormous role
in terms of electing politicians,
and in Washington in determining
what legislation gets seen and not seen.
But it's not just single billionaires,
it's companies with lobbyists.
You got it.
Let me give you one example. Lobbyists.
We pay in the United States by far the highest prices in the world for prescription drugs.
This is an issue I've been working hard on with some success.
Take a wild and crazy guess.
How many lobbyists are there from the drug companies in Washington, DC?
Over a thousand.
Over a thousand, right?
There are a hundred members of the Senate, 435 members of the House, 535 members of Congress.
There are 1800 well-paid lobbyists representing the drug companies, including former leaders
of the Republican and Democratic Party.
That is one of the reasons why we pay the highest prices in the world for prescription
drugs.
Military industrial complex, you got a revolving door. People go from the
military into the general dynamics, into Lockheed Martin and the other large companies. And what we
see there is an institution in the Pentagon. We spend a trillion dollars a year on the Pentagon.
It is the only federal agency that cannot, is not able to submit to an independent audit.
It is the only federal agency that cannot, is not able to submit to an independent audit.
So if you think there's not massive fraud and waste
and cost overruns in the Pentagon,
you would be sorely mistaken.
Do you think most politicians are corrupt
in accepting the money or is the system corrupt
or is it a bit of both?
If the corrupt means that,
hey, here's $10,000 vote this way, doesn't work like that. Very,
very rare occasionally. Very, very rare. That's corruption. What happens is that if you are in
a campaign and right now the amount of money that people have to raise, you're running for
Senate in Ohio, you took about $50, $60 million. Where the hell are you going to get that money?
It's not going to be $10 donations.
You're going to be surrounding yourself with people who have the money.
You're going to go $5,000, Platinus, et cetera.
You surround yourself with those people who say, oh, these are my problems.
This is what I need.
This is, I need a tax break for billionaires, blah, blah, blah, blah.
You live in that world.
They are your financial support. They are, in a sense, blah, blah. So you become, you live in that world, they are your financial support,
they are in a sense your political base. So you're very cognizant of what you do
in terms of not upsetting them. So it's not corruption in the sense of people, you know,
taking envelopes with, you know, huge amounts of money to vote a certain way. That very, very rarely, if ever happens.
It is the power of big money to make politicians
dependent on those folks.
And that's why, when I ran for president,
what I'm probably maybe most proud of
is the fact that we received millions and millions
of campaign contributions, averaging 27 bucks a piece,
I think, in 2016.
Have companies, lobbyists ever tried to buy you, tried to influence you?
We don't welcome them into our office.
I do deal with these guys,
but it's usually on a confrontational tone,
so they don't come into my office very often
telling me their problems.
So how do we fix the system?
How do we get money out of politics?
This is not, you know, like many other issues,
we don't have to reinvent the wheel here.
It exists in other countries.
If you go to, you know, every country has their own election system, Like many other issues, we don't have to reinvent the wheel here. It exists in other countries.
If you go to, you know, every country has their own election system, but nobody has a system where
billionaires can spend unlimited sums of money through super PACs to elect the candidates of
their choice. So first thing you got to do. And, you know, one of the things, Lex, I found that
the more important the issue, the less discussion there is.
The less important the issue, the more discussion there is.
A number of years ago, the United States Supreme Court
in one of its more pathetic decisions
passed the Citizens United decision.
What Citizens United decision said is,
you're a multi-billionaire.
You want the freedom.
You're a free person in a free country. You want the freedom. You're a free person in a free
country. You want the freedom to buy the government. And how terrible it would be to deny you the
freedom to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on a campaign to elect the candidates. And they
said that's your freedom and that's what Citizens United is about. We've got to end that. In my
view, we moved to public funding of elections.
That means you want to run for governor, you want to run for senate, show that you have some support,
get, you know, five dollar contributions from X number of people to show you you're not a flake.
You have some support and government will pay a certain amount more and there will be a limit
in the amount of money that can be spent. So it'll be a real, you can run against me
and I'm not gonna outspend you 10 to one.
That's what we should be moving toward in my view.
How do we make that happen when there's so much money
in the system and the politicians owe to the people
who paid for their election?
Does it have to come from the very top,
essentially sort of a really strong, popular,
populist president?
But you're right, you raise exactly the question.
If I am getting a huge amount of money from billionaires,
do you think I'm gonna go out and announce,
I think billionaires should not be involved
in buying elections, I doubt that very much.
So what you're gonna need, and you tell me
if I'm missing something but I pay attention,
you don't hear either of the major candidates
talking about that issue, do you?
I think what happens is when an individual politician
speaks out about it, they get punished.
But I think this is a popular idea.
So if a lot of them speak out,
that's why if it came from the top,
if a president was using a very large platform
to basically speak out, it provides a safety blanket
for the other politicians to get it out of the system.
But there has to be a kind of a mass movement.
Yes, it does.
I mean, and every place I go,
I always speak about the issue.
And it always, people understand it.
You're a Republican, you're a Democrat,
you're progressive, you're conservative.
Who really believes that we are democracy when billionaires can spend
tens and tens of millions of dollars to buy elections?
So it is a very popular issue.
It's important, you're right.
We need political leaders to be speaking out on that.
But we need a grassroots movement to say, when somebody is at a town meeting, you're
running for the Senate, you're running for the House, what's your view on Citizens United?
Are you prepared to vote to overturn that decision
and move to public funding of elections?
Extraordinarily important.
So many of your policy proposals are quite radical.
No, they're not.
I beg to differ.
Okay, great.
Go through.
Well, they're popular.
So what I mean is relative to what,
the way other politicians speak,
it's usually a little bit more moderate.
So from everything you've learned from politics,
is it better to go sort of radical,
maybe we can come up with a different word,
versus a more moderate, safe, ambiguous kind of policy.
Okay, let's talk about it, fair enough.
We talked about one issue, very important,
money in politics.
Money, yes.
Getting big money out of politics,
do you think that's a radical idea? Well, I mean, yeah, it's a popular idea. It's an idea that makes sense,
but in order to implement it and actually make it happen requires, I mean, to flip the system upside
down, right? In that sense, it's radical. In that sense, it's radical. But if you go to walk down
the street here and you say, do you think billionaires should be able to spend
as much money as they want to buy politicians?
I would say nine out of 10 people say, that's crazy.
That's not what Americans are supposed to be about.
So in that sense, it's certainly not radical.
Let's talk about healthcare.
I go out on the street, do it, we'll do a poll.
I've done the polling.
Is healthcare a human right?
Should every American be able to go to a doctor
when they need, regardless of
their income? You know what people say? I would say about 85, 90 percent of the people say, of course.
The idea that health care is a human right available to all exists, Lex, in every major
country on earth except the United States. So you're here with me in Burlington, Vermont,
right? If you got a car, go 50 miles north to Canada. Walk into Canada and ask people,
when you go to the hospital, how much does it cost you? Which kind of bill? And they'll say,
what are you talking about? It doesn't cost us anything. It doesn't cost us a nickel.
That's the case in virtually every country in Europe.
The idea that healthcare should be available to all, that there should be no out-of-pocket expense because it's a human right, is widespread around the world and very much agreed to in this country.
Bottom line is that because of our corrupt political system, we have a health
care system designed not to provide health care to all people to make huge profits for the drug
companies and the insurance companies, and that is what's happening. And we got to change that
system. So I'm a strong advocate and I've led the effort on Medicare for All.
LW Okay, let's talk about Medicare for All.
If you could snap your fingers today and implement the best possible healthcare
system for the United States of America, what would that look like?
Well, we have a pretty good system, not great, but a pretty good system in Medicare.
So it's there for the elderly.
And Lyndon Johnson passed that in the 1960s, so huge step forward.
It is being chopped away by the private
insurance companies through Medicare Advantage. But if you strengthen Medicare
and you do away with the kind of deductibles the seniors now have to pay
and you do away with other stuff and you say basically right now you're a senior
in America, go to any doctor you want, you know, when you're in the hospital
Medicare will pay the entire bill. If you expand Medicare
to cover dental, hearing, and vision, which it doesn't now cover, you do all of those things.
And then the next thing you do is say, okay, to be eligible for Medicare, now you have to be 65.
First year, we're going to lower it to 55, then we'll lower it to 45, then we'll lower it to 35,
then we'll have everybody in the system.
So I think in a four or five year period, you can strengthen Medicare and have everybody in
the system. And when you do that, and this is not just me talking, a number of studies have pointed
this out, when you take the profit motive out of it from the insurance companies and the drug
companies, you can end up providing quality care to all people at no more than we're spending right now.
Because right now, we are spending twice as much
per person in healthcare as the people of any other nation.
Incredibly wasteful system.
So the way to pay for the system is to increase taxes,
but you're saying if you cut that cost
and increase the taxes, you're saying it's going to-
Here's the story, and I've gotten my share
of 30-second ads attacking me on this. Bernie Sanders
wants to raise your taxes on healthcare. It's true, in a progressive way. But right now,
do you have health insurance? Yes.
Okay. Somebody's paying for your health insurance. It depends. If you are working,
most people get their health insurance through their jobs. So if you're working for a large company, your employer is paying your health insurance. And
by the way, that comes out of your wages. Healthcare costs in America are very high,
and your employer will tell you honestly, look, I can't give you more than a 3% wage increase
because I got a 10% increase in your healthcare costs. You want that? Or if you're a union
negotiating, you know what they'll say? Hey, you want decent want decent wages we're gonna have to cut back on your health care
that's what every union has to deal with you know every every negotiating session
so we're paying for it through employers out of pocket we pay through it to
Medicare Medicaid Veterans Administration etc what I am proposing is
really not radicals would exist in Canada and other countries.
It is publicly funded, like the police departments and like libraries are, like public education.
This is publicly funded in a progressive way. So right now, rather than paying out of your own
pocket, if you are a family, let's just say you're self-employed right now and you are,
let's just say you're self-employed right now and you are, you know,
you want to have a couple of kids and a wife,
it could cost you 15, $20,000 a year in insurance costs.
Well, that's all eliminated.
Will you have to pay more in taxes?
Of course you will.
Maybe it depends on your income level,
but it could be that you'd be paying $12,000 more in taxes,
but not $20,000 more in premiums, copayments,
and deductibles.
You save money.
So it's paying taxes rather than paying money to the insurance company.
You got a better deal through the tax system.
So the most painful thing in today's system is the surprise bills, the number one cause
of bankruptcy, and the psychological pain that comes from that, just worrying, stressed,
in debt and just basically afraid constantly of getting sick because you don't know if
insurance is going to cover it and if you're not insured, you don't know how much it's
going to cost.
So you're not going to go to the hospital even if there's something wrong with you,
if there's pain and all that.
So you just live in a state of fear, psychological fear.
That's the number one problem.
It's just not just financial, it's psychological.
Look, and I think you said it very well.
I'm chairman of the committee that deals with this stuff,
so I talk to a lot of doctors.
And doctors in Vermont and all over this country tell me
that they are astounded.
People walk into their offices
much sicker than they should have been.
And the doctor said, why didn't you come in here
six months ago when you first felt your symptoms?
And they said, well, I have a high deductible,
I have a $10,000 deductible,
I don't have any money to pay, I'm uninsured.
Some of those people don't make it.
Other people, and this is what is totally crazy,
they end up in the hospital at huge expense to the system
rather than getting the care they need when they needed it.
So that is how, give you another example of it.
We pay the highest prices in the world
for prescription drugs.
One out of four Americans can't afford the drugs
their doctors prescribe.
So you walk into the doctor's office,
they say, okay, Lex, you got this, that, and the other thing,
here's your prescription. You can't
afford to fill it. What happens? You get sicker. You end up in the emergency room,
which is an extremely expensive proposition. Okay? Or you end up in the
hospital. Rather than dealing with the problem when it occurs. And what
is not talked about, you know, I mentioned earlier how we don't talk about some of
the major issues. The estimate is that some 60,000 people in America
die every single year unnecessarily
because they can't get to a doctor when they need
because of financial reasons.
And you wanna hear even crazier,
one out of four people who get cancer treatment
in this country either go bankrupt
or deplete their financial resources or their family.
So your point is right.
You know, if somebody diagnoses you with cancer, you're scared to death,
you're worried about how you're going to live, you're going to die, what's going to happen.
And then on top of that, you've got to worry about whether your family goes bankrupt.
How insane and cruel is that?
So to me, you know, I think healthcare is what unites us all.
Everybody has family, they get sick.
We'll get born, we all die, we all want care.
And we all have gotta come together
to create a system that works for all of us,
not just the drug companies or the insurance companies.
There's just so many stories,
and not even the horrific stories,
there's countless horrific stories,
but just basic stories of cost.
Like my friend, Dr. Peter Atiyah,
has this story where he happens to be wealthy
so he can afford it, but he had to take his son
to the emergency room and the son was dehydrated
and the bill was $6,000.
They just did a basic test and gave him an IV,
a basic thing, and he has really good insurance
and the insurance covered $4,000 of it,
so he had to, at the end, pay $2,000 for a basic emergency room visit,
and there's a lot of families for whom that one visit
for such a simple thing would be
just financially devastating.
And you know what?
People know that, and you know what they say?
You know, I don't feel well today, something's wrong.
I ain't gonna go to that emergency room
because I don't want a $6,000 bill.
And what happens, he had insurance that paid two-thirds of it, right?
Yes.
So what happens if he didn't?
What happens if he didn't have money?
He'd be handed by bill collectors for the rest of his life.
It is a disgusting system.
It is an inhumane system.
But the insurance companies and the drug companies are very powerful.
They make a lot of campaign contributions, have a lot of lobbyists and we are where we are.
But I think the American people want fundamental changes there.
So that's another good example of a really popular idea that is not implemented because
of the money in politics.
You got it.
That's a wonder.
And I'll tell you that not only is, not only is it not implemented because of
money, it's not even discussed. All right. So I'm saying here, and no one disputes me,
we are spending twice as much per person on healthcare, right?
And yet 85 million Americans are uninsured or underinsured, and our life expectancy is lower
than virtually every other major
country on earth. Do you think that might be an issue that we'd be discussing?
Again, if a single politician discusses it, they get punished for it. So there needs to
be a mass movement and probably, I mean, from my perspective, it has to come from the very
top. It has to come from the president and the president has to be a populist president
where they don't care about the parties
with the rich people, they just speak out
because they know it's a popular message
and they know it's the right thing.
So speaking of that, you had a historic campaign
run for president in 2016.
And in the eyes of many people, mine included, you were screwed over by the DNC,
as especially the WikiLeaks emails showed.
What's your just looking back feelings about that? Are you angry? Are you upset?
Yeah, of course I'm angry and of course I'm upset.
But, you know, when you take on, in this case, the democratic establishment, who have controlled
that party forever, the moneyed interests of the democratic party, you're taking on
corporate America, when you're taking on the corporate media.
And when you're calling for a political revolution that creates a government that works for all and not just the few, the opposition is going to be extraordinary.
But what I am extremely proud of from that campaign in 2020 as well is that we took on
the anointed candidate of the establishment and we showed, despite the fact the entire establishment, in the Senate, I had one supporter.
There were 50 Democrats. I had one supporter. I had no governor supporting me, I think. Maybe
a few people in the House. But we took on the whole political establishment and we got millions
of votes. And the ideas that we brought forth
were ideas that they had to eventually deal with in one way or another. And
if you look at the American rescue plan, which I'm proud to have helped write
during the midst of COVID, a lot of the ideas that we fought for were implemented in that bill. And I want to make them obviously permanent. And you almost won. And a lot of people thought that you would win against Donald Trump.
I think we would have.
I think we would have.
I think Trump is a very, I think he's a little bit crazy between you and me,
but he is a smart politician.
And he's appealing to a lot of the anger that working class people feel.
And you know what? Working class people should feel angry,
but they should make sure that their anger is directed in the right direction and not against
people who are even worse off than they are, which is what demagogues like Trump always do.
So, you know, I think we had, as I went around the country then and now, we have a lot of support
from working class people who understand that there is something wrong.
And this is an incredible fact that no one talks about.
All right, I'm gonna ask you a question.
Are you ready for this Lex?
Let's go.
Here we go.
Over the last 50 years, there's been a massive increase
in worker productivity as a result of technology, right?
Everyone agrees with that.
And it's, I don't know exactly what it is,
but the worker today is producing a lot more
than the worker 50 years ago doing something similar.
Is the worker today in real inflation accounted for dollars
making more money than that worker 50 years ago?
Well, there's a lot of close arguments there,
but your point is well taken.
It's either the same or a little bit higher
or a little bit lower, depending on the statistics.
It has not increased significantly
and the wealth inequality has increased significantly.
That is the point.
So you would think that if a worker is producing a lot more,
that worker would be better off,
would be working lesser hours, et cetera.
That hasn't been the case.
And what has happened in that 50 years is according to
the Rand Corporation, there has been a 50 trillion, trillion with a T, redistribution of wealth from
the bottom 90% to the top 1%. So you've got CEOs today making 300 times more than their workers.
You've got three people on top owning more wealth than the bottom half of American society.
So that's why people are angry. And they're worried that their kids may have a lower standard of
living than they in the wealthiest country in the history of the world. So there's a lot of anger
out there. And I think we tap some of that anger in a constructive way, essentially saying, you know
what, we don't need so few to have so much in wealth and power. Let's distribute it more fairly in America.
I gotta get back to 2016,
because it's such a historic moment.
So there's a lot of fans of yours
that wanted you to keep fighting,
because you forgave in the end the establishment
and joined them in support.
And your fans wanted you to keep fighting for a takeover,
for a progressive takeover
of the Democratic Party.
If you just look back and had to do it all over again,
what would you do different?
Well, by the way, in terms of a takeover
of the Democratic Party, we did try.
We ran, do you know who Keith Ellison is?
Keith is now the Attorney General
of the state of Minnesota.
He's doing a great job, really,
one of the outstanding attorney generals in the country.
And Keith was then a member of Congress.
And we ranked Keith to become the head of the DNC and the establishment from the president
of the United States on down went crazy.
And they beat him by a few votes, not a whole lot.
So it's look, you're faced in, you know, that's the exact
same position that many of us are in right today. So people say, well, why did you support Hillary
Clinton? Yeah, what's the alternative? Donald Trump. I think Donald Trump is an extremely
dangerous person trying to undermine American democracy. So I can't support him. You know,
Hillary Clinton, obviously, his views are very, very different
than mine. But in that moment, that's where politics becomes really tricky. And it ain't easy.
And sometimes you have to do things that you're not really all that excited about.
But I think it was right to try to do what I could to prevent Trump from getting elected.
And in 2020, I did the same with Biden. We had more success with Biden than we had with Clinton.
Well, there's this interesting story about a long time coming meeting between you and Obama
in 2018, I believe. So Ari Rabenhaft, who was a former deputy campaign manager, wrote a great book,
I would say, about you called The Fighting Soul on the Road with Bernie Sanders. And
he tells many great stories, but one of them is your meeting with Obama. And he says that
Obama told you, Bernie, I wish I could do a good Obama impression, Bernie, you're an
Old Testament prophet, a moral voice for our party giving us guidance.
Here's the thing though, prophets don't get to be king.
Kings have to make choices, prophets don't.
Are you willing to make those choices?
Basically Obama's making the case that you have to
sort of moderate your approach in order to win.
So was Obama right?
Look, and again, that's why politics
is very, very fascinating.
Sometimes you can run and lose and you really win
if your goal is not just individual power,
but transforming society.
One of my heroes, you mentioned Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.,
who is one of my heroes. Another one of my heroes is Eugene Victor De. Martin Luther King Jr., who is one of my heroes.
Another one of my heroes is Eugene Victor Debs. Did that ring a bell?
Yeah, yes.
Okay.
For many reasons, yes.
All right. Debs, many listeners may not know who Debs was.
Debs was a union organizer in the early 1900s, helped form the American Railway Union,
ran for president, I think, five times,
ran the last time while he was in a jail cell
because of his opposition to World War I
and got a million votes doing that.
Debs lost badly in every race that he ran.
In 1932, Franklin Delano Roosevelt ran for president,
and much of what Roosevelt ended up doing was
at least some of what Debs had talked about. Debs helped lay the groundwork for ideas.
So sometimes you can lose and win if you're into transforming society. What my view is,
where I disagree with Obama, is I think you have got to raise consciousness among ordinary people.
And when people know what's going on and are prepared in an organized way to fight for change,
they can make incredible changes. And we've seen that in recent years.
You know, today we take for granted, we have a woman running for President of the United States, I'm supporting.
We have had other women running for President. We have women governors and senators. Not so many years ago in the United States Senate, there were 98 men,
two women. Even before that, 1920, it was when women got the right to vote. How did that change?
How did women's role in society change? It changed because women and their male allies stood up in
forts. Gay rights, old enough to remember, did anybody I knew who was gay, you think they would talk about it? Come out about it? No,
they wouldn't. That's changed. We have seen, you know, in terms of civil rights, massive changes.
Change happens when people at the grassroots level demand that. We talked about a health care
a moment ago. We will get universal Medicare for all when millions of people make it clear that's what they want.
So I believe politics starts at the grassroots level
and that's how you gotta bring about change.
So just to go back to Obama though,
in many ways he too is a singular historic figure
in American politics who has brought about a lot of change.
He's a symbol I think that will be remembered
for a long time.
What do you admire most about Obama?
Well, you know, I know him.
We're not best friends, but I know him well,
and we chat every once in a while.
First of all, don't underestimate what it was in 2008
to be the first black president
in the history of this country.
And I think few would deny that he's an extraordinarily intelligent guy,
very, very articulate, one of the best speakers that there is in America,
and that he and his family, and again, it's a lot harder than it looks,
he and his family for eight years, that's his wife Michelle and his kids, really
held that office in a way that earned, I think, the respect of the American people,
even when people disagreed with him politically. So he deserves it. And again, don't ever underestimate.
I think, you know, years ago, there were people who said,
a black president in our lifetimes, never gonna happen,
can't happen, too racist to the country.
He did it.
And that is a huge accomplishment.
And I think he has had some significant achievements
in his presidential tenure.
He and I did disagree on a number of issues.
I think he will tell you, I think his public stance is that,
yeah, if you have to start all over again,
he would do Medicare for all, single payer,
but where we are right now,
the best they could do is the Affordable Care Act.
Well, we disagree on that,
and we disagree on other things.
But, you know, I think he deserves an enormous amount
of credit
for what he has accomplished.
And he, like you, also gave a damn good speech
opposing the Iraq war before running for president,
and that takes courage.
Yes, it does.
But then it also shows that once you get into office,
it's not so easy to oppose or to work against the military
industrial complex.
It is very hard.
People do not fully appreciate how powerful the establishment is, whether
it is the healthcare industry, whether it's the military industrial complex,
whether it's the fossil fuel industry.
These people have unlimited amounts of money.
They are very smart lobbyists in Washington, DC, and they are very,
very greedy people. They want it all. I have to ask you about Washington, DC, and they are very, very greedy people.
They want it all.
I have to ask you about capitalism, the pros and cons.
So you wrote a book, It's Okay to Be Angry About Capitalism.
That is a thorough, rigorous criticism of, I would say, hyper-capitalism.
Yes, that's right.
A certain kind of capitalism that you argue that we are existing in today in the United States,
but a lot of people would attribute to capitalism all the amazing technological innovations
over the past 70 plus years that have contributed to increase in quality of life,
in GDP, in decrease in poverty, decrease in infant mortality, increase in expected life, life expectancy. So how do you see the tension, the pros of capitalism and the cons of capitalism?
You know, some of my European friends, they say, you know, Bernie, in the United States,
you're considered to be very radical. If you were here in, you know, France or Denmark or someplace, you'd be kind of mainstream
left guy. Not all that radical. So this is what I think. I mean, I think the best that we could do
right now, where we are right now, is to create a society which does two things. It encourages innovation, but at the same time, it makes sure that all people in a wealthy
nation have a decent standard of living.
In some countries, if you look at Scandinavia, and this shocks people because we don't talk
about this at all.
So in Scandinavia, it has been the case, Denmark, Finland, Norway for years,
that people have health care. That's not a big deal. You end up in the hospital, so what?
They don't pay a bill. You have, and this shocks people. In America right now, we have people who
get one week, two weeks off paid vacation. Sometimes we get nothing. There are people out
there who have no vacation at all. In Germany, you get six weeks paid vacation. Sometimes people get nothing, you know that? There are people out there with no vacation at all. You know, in Germany you get six weeks paid vacation and other holidays as well.
People are shocked by that. In America, we don't have paid family and medical leave. The only major
country not to do it. You know, other countries, you know, your wife gets sick, you stay home with
her, your kids get sick, not a big deal. You get a certain amount of paid family and medical leave. Of course, the prescription drugs are far more affordable. So what you want to
do is create what's called a social safety net. That means I don't care what your income is,
of course you're going to have healthcare as a human right. Of course you're going to have
housing that is affordable. Of course your kids are going to have great quality education from child care to university without much cost. Every country has a little bit different,
but there are countries in the world right now, I think in Germany, I think college is now tuition
free as I recall, for obvious reasons. They want to have the best educated workforce they can.
reasons they want to have the best educated workforce they can. So in terms of government playing a role in a civilized democratic society of providing all basic needs, health care, education,
housing, retirement benefits, yes, that is what we've got to do. Now, does that mean then that
the government is going to run every mom and pop store in the corner? Of course not. You want
innovation, you want, you know, you want to go out and start a business,
produce a product? Good luck to you. Make money. But on the other hand, in terms of
even making money, we want you to be able to do that, come up with good products, good
services. But do I think you should end up with a hundred billion dollars? I don't. And
you know what's funny? I had, I did an interview with Bill Gates, who is, I think, no I don't. And you know what's funny, I did an interview with Bill Gates, who is I think the third wealthiest guy
in the country, struggling behind Musk and Bezos I think.
And he's only worth 100 plus billion, but he gets by.
And I said to him, Bill, he was supposed to ask me questions.
I asked him the question, I said Bill, tell me something.
You know, you're an innovator with Microsoft
and all that stuff.
Did you know that you'd become a multi-billionaire
and was that motivated you?
That one motivated you?
And he said, no, and I believe he was honest.
He said, I love doing what I, I love programming.
You know, I was a kid, he started doing that.
He loved it, he was motivated by it.
Do you think that there are scientists out there
who work day and night trying to develop drugs
to deal with Alzheimer's or cancer, that they're motivated, oh boy, if I come up with this drug, I'm going
to become a billionaire.
So I think we want to reward success.
Fine.
But you don't need a billion dollars.
We want people to get satisfaction from what they accomplish, the work they're doing, whether
it's cleaning the street or developing a new drug.
So I think we have gone a little bit too far,
and you're right in talking about the book was an attack on,
I called it hyper-capitalism or uber-capitalism,
but right now, and this is not an American issue,
this is a global issue,
you know, it's not an accident that Musk is over there
in Saudi Arabia talking to the trillionaire families
in the mid-east.
These guys that were Putin and his friends,
you got probably not more than five, 10,000
extraordinarily wealthy families
who have unbelievable economic power,
over seven billion people on this planet.
Well, Elon Musk is actually an interesting case
because he's investing all the money
back into the businesses.
So I think there is a balance to be struck,
and you just spoke to it, which is we can still celebrate
even big companies that are bringing wealth to the world,
that are building cool stuff,
that are improving quality of life,
but we can question of why is it that the working class
does not have a living wage in many cases,
and sort of trying to find that balance.
That's right, that is the story.
Look, I am no great fan of Elon Musk,
especially in the role that he's playing right now
in Trump's campaign.
But is he a brilliant guy?
Of course he is.
Does he work like a dog?
Of course he does.
Does he come up with these incredible innovations
in companies?
Yes, he does.
Does he sell your credit for that?
Yeah, he does.
But, you know, even in terms of encouraging innovation,
I would hope that we are focusing on the important issues.
I would love to see great innovators figure out
how we build the affordable housing that we need,
come up with the great drugs that we need to solve
many of the terrible illnesses that plague people.
Climate change, for God's sakes.
All right, do we need innovation?
We're making some progress in this country. Should we do more? What kind of technologies out
there can really cut back on carbon emissions? So, you know, I hope we focus
on some of the most important issues that impact humanity. But, you know,
reward innovators, I don't have a problem with that, but I do have a problem when
three people end up owning more wealth at the bottom half of American society.
Maybe you can briefly speak to something you tweeted recently
about Donald Trump going to McDonald's
and the minimum wage, I believe, of $7.50.
Can you just speak to that tweet?
Look, nothing new.
Trump didn't invent it.
That's called the photo opportunity.
I've done one or two in my life, too.
So you go to a place, he puts on an apron,
he got old Donald Trump just another McDonald's worker.
But anyhow, he was so blind, he did his photo op,
that's fine.
Kamala Harris was in North Carolina
handing out food to people who were victims of the hurricane.
Fine, that's what politicians do.
But some reporter asked them, they said,
you know, Mr. Trump, are you for raising the minimum wage and that was a fair
question because she got I don't know how many but many many thousands of McDonald's workers and
millions of other American workers right now are trying to get by on nine ten eleven bucks an hour
federal minimum wage is seven and a quarter you have people working in McDonald's right now for
sure who are working with 12, 13 bucks an hour.
So the reporter said,
what do you think about raising the federal minimum wage?
And he's, oh, these are great workers.
I love McDonald's, so forth.
He didn't answer the question.
Well, I think that in the richest country
in the history of the world,
if you work 40 hours a week,
you should not be living in poverty.
And that means we should have a federal minimum wage,
not absurdly seven and a quarter an hour,
but in my view, $17 an hour.
Will that solve all the economic problems
for working class people?
No, it won't.
It'll help, it'll help.
Since running for president, you've often been attacked,
especially from the right, about being worth,
I believe, $2 million and owning three houses.
So from my perspective, the answer to that is
most of your wealth has been earned from writing books
and selling those books.
And you are one of the most famous politicians in the world
and so your wealth and the context in comparison
to other people of that fame level and other politicians
is actually quite modest.
So what's your response usually to those attacks?
Do I own three residences?
Yeah, I do.
I live here in Burlington, Vermont.
We live in a middle class neighborhood, nice house.
Guess what?
I'm a United States Senator
and I own a home in Washington DC as do
most senators. You know, you live there year after year. When I first went to
actually when I was in Congress for 16 years I rented all the time but I got
elected. Okay, got a six-year term. You know what? Let's buy a house. So we bought a
house and guess what? Like many thousands of people in the state of Vermont I
have a summer camp. It's a nice one on Lake Champlain. That's it. Now, how did I get the money?
You're right.
I wrote two bestselling books, including this book on capitalism.
It was New York Times bestseller for a while.
And also another book was a youth book.
And that's, and I make, I don't know, $175,000 a year.
And that's more or less how I became the zillionaire that I am.
I should also mention that sometimes
the word mansion is used, and I think your residences
are quite modest, at least from my perspective.
They're normal houses in Britain.
They're middle class houses, very nice house.
So when you started in politics,
I read you were worth $1,100.
That much?
Yeah, that much. That's right.
Has the increase in wealth changed your ability to relate to the working class?
Well, that's a good question. And obviously, growing up in a working class family has been maybe the most
singularly significant aspect of my politics.
It's, you know, I grew up without money in a family that lived in a rent controlled apartment in Brooklyn,
New York.
So that has impacted me.
I'll tell you, I don't really give a damn about money.
I drive a car that's 11 years old.
It's an old car.
And money, here's my jewelry.
It's a solar watch.
Nice.
And my wedding ring, that's about it.
I don't have a Rolex watch.
I would not be interested in it.
But I'll tell you what has impacted me.
My wife, who also grew up in a working class family, will tell you the same.
We don't worry.
You raise that issue.
If we have to go to the doctor, if our kids have to go to the doctor, we go to the doctor.
I don't want to stay up nights worrying.
I used to think there was a time I had to worry about how to pay my electric bill.
I don't worry about that anymore. So what has happened, that stress, that economic stress of not worrying
about a financial disaster, that's gone. And that is enormous. I, you know, maybe as much or more
than any other member of the Senate, work hard not only for but with working class people. I'm
chairman of the committee that deals with labor issues.
We have been involved probably in dozens of strikes
all over this country.
I've been on picket lines.
So, you know, I do my best.
It's a very easy trap to fall into.
You can get separated from ordinary people
and their struggles.
Not hard to do.
I try as hard as I can not to do that.
So sometimes people say, can money buy happiness?
I think I agree with you, that worry,
sort of being able to fill up your car
and not worry about how much it's going to cost,
or be able to get food for dinner
and not worry about how much it's gonna cost.
Or even, I've been poor most of my life,
but I've been very fortunate recently
to have enough wealth to not worry about healthcare,
to have insurance and be able to afford
an emergency room visit.
And that worry is just such a giant lift off your shoulders.
Lexi, I think you said it very well.
I remember, even to, and I saw this change in myself.
When I used to go and and I do the grocery shopping,
my wife does a lot of the cooking, I do the grocery shopping.
I used to look at the prices of everything.
I do that less now.
You know, I say, what the hell, so what?
It costs 50 cents more for this can of stuff, so what?
But that's a luxury you have
when you don't have to worry about that.
And I don't have to worry about it.
But your point is, again, to me,
I don't like big fancy cars or big fancy homes.
Don't go on, my wife will tell you
we've not been on a real vacation for God knows how long
because I work pretty hard.
But the major thing about having money,
which is enormously important, is just what you said.
I don't have to worry.
If somebody in my family gets sick, I don't have to worry about it. I don't have to worry. If somebody in my family gets sick,
I don't have to worry about it.
I don't have to worry about putting food on the table
or paying the mortgage.
So that's what money has done.
Okay, let me ask you about the future
of the Democratic Party.
So one of the biggest impacts you've had
is you've been the fuel, the catalyst
for the increase of the Progressive Caucus,
the Progressive Movement within the Democratic Party. Do you think that is the future? The progressives, even Democratic
socialist leaders will take over the party? That is the most important question regarding,
to my mind, American politics. One of the successes that we've had, and I'm proud to
have played a role in this, is that if you go to the House of Representatives right now, you will see almost a hundred members of the Progressive Caucus led very well by a woman
from Washington, Pramila Jayapal does a great job. You know, there's people like Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez,
Anilana Omar, and many others. Many of them are young, often women, people of color, and many of them
come from working class backgrounds. So what we have been able to do in recent years elect a number
of strong progressives who represent working families very, very effectively. The struggle
in the Democratic Party is between the corporate wing and the progressive wing.
party is between the corporate wing and the progressive wing. And the corporate wing takes a whole lot of money, sees its salvation in getting a whole lot of money from wealthy individuals
and large corporations, and is not very vigorous in my view in representing the needs of working
class people. If they were, we would have
healthcare for all. We would have a minimum wage that was a living wage. We would not
have a housing crisis. We would not have a tax system in which billionaires pay an effective
tax rate that is lower than a truck driver or nurse.
So I think one of the reasons that Trump has had political success is he is not so
much his ideas. Most working class people don't think we should give tax breaks to billionaires
or worry about the size of, you know, on Obama's genitalia. But they are angry, people are angry,
and the Democrats have not responded effectively to that anger. So the struggle that we are waging right now is the future of the Democratic Party.
Will it be a party of the working class and represent working class issues, whether you're
black or white or Latino or Asian or whatever you may be, or will it be a corporately dominated
party?
That's the struggle we're in right now.
Did you consider running in 2024?
From my perspective, I would have loved it if you ran. I think you would have had a great chance of winning,
not just the primary, but the presidency.
I gave it about five minutes or two.
And the reason was,
we have a slogan in the progressive movement,
it's not about me, it's about us.
And to have taken on Biden,
who in my view on domestic issues has been quite strong, would
have really split the Democratic Party and laid the groundwork for an easy Trump victory.
And that I did not want to see.
So sometimes in life, and I know that a lot of younger people don't agree with me, but
you've got to make choices which are painful.
So I strongly supported Biden
because I liked his domestic record.
He's done some good things against a lot of opposition
and I'm supporting Kamala right now.
But I'm doing my best to see that a dangerous guy
like Donald Trump does not become president.
And the hope for you is that there will be future candidates
that are popul future candidates that are
populist that are progressive.
Yes, absolutely.
Let me ask you about ALC.
She has become one of the most influential voices for the progressive
cause in the United States.
You two had a great conversation on your podcast and in general you work together.
So what's to you is most impressive about her.
I really like Alex Cheney a whole lot.
What's to you is most impressive about her? I really like Aleksandr a whole lot.
She is a young woman who comes from a working class background.
She helped a mother clean houses.
She was a bartender in the Bronx, New York.
And I'm very proud that my campaign for president inspired her to run.
She ran on a progressive working class program.
She took on one of the more powerful guys, a guy named Joe Crowley,
who was pretty high up in the Democratic Party.
She knocked on doors. She had no money.
She did a very strong grassroots effort.
I appreciate that.
So that's number one.
I like what she stands for.
She's incredibly smart.
She has that certain charisma that maybe you're born with it, maybe you developed it.
I don't know.
A couple of years ago, she came up here to Vermont.
It's a time she and her partner Riley came up.
I was out in the street and people saw her. They said, oh, came up and we were out in the street and people came to see her and
they said, oh, congresswoman, and she just smiled and she had an approach to people which
was beautiful.
I mean, it wasn't phony, it was real, but to be a politician, you got to know how to,
you know, you could be a great intellectual, but you can't relate to people.
She relates well to people.
And so I think both from a personality perspective,
from an intellect perspective,
from an ideological perspective,
she helped create the Green New Deal concept,
the need to create jobs as we transform our energy system away from fossil fuel,
strong advocate for Medicare for all workers rights.
So I'm a big fan of Alexandria.
What do you think is the most powerful, enduring impact you've had on American
politics looking back, you've been in it for quite a bit.
Well, you know, I don't know that I can give you a singular answer.
You know, I was mayor of this city and proud of what we accomplished here.
Proud of my accomplishments as a U S Senator, you know, when COVID was
devastating this country and we had a massive economic downturn
as chairman of the budget committee, I helped write
the American Rescue Plan, which put a lot of money
into people's pockets.
We cut childhood poverty by 40%
by providing a child tax credit.
We kept hospitals going, we kept colleges going,
kept people from getting evicted,
helped get public health out,
that people getting the vaccines. You know, I'm proud of that.
But at the end of the day, I think what I have shown
is that the ideas gets back to the early part
of this conversation.
The ideas that I am talking about
are ideas that are widely supported.
So Donald Trump says, oh, Bernie Sanders is a far know, it's like I'm some kind of extremist
coming up with ideas that nobody supports.
Everything that I talk about, raising them in ways,
healthcare for all, a tax system which demands
the billionaires pay their fair share.
Those are all popular ideas, but people didn't know.
You got to run for president and have 20,000 people
come out to your rallies and win 23 states.
And they say, hmm, well, maybe those ideas are not so crazy after all.
And we've got to entertain them.
The establishment doesn't like that.
They really don't.
They want to tell you, and this is their main, this is how they succeed.
What they say, Lex, is the world is the way it is.
It always will be this way.
We got the wealth.
We got the power.
And don't think of anything else. This is the way it is. You always will be this way. We got the wealth, we got the power.
And don't think of anything else.
This is the way it is.
You have no power.
Give up.
They don't say it quite that way, but that's really what the intent is.
And what we showed is, guess what?
Running an outsider campaign, we took on the democratic establishment, we came close to
winning it, and we did win 23 states.
And the ideas that we're talking about are the ideas
that working class people, young people believe in.
Yeah, you showed that it's possible to win.
And that's an idea that will resonate for decades.
And out of that came dozens of candidates
now in the House of Representatives,
people on city council, people on state legislature,
who did win.
So we mentioned about the worry of getting sick,
the worry of life that many people in the working class
are suffering from, but there's also the worry
that we all experience of the finiteness of life.
Do you ponder your own mortality?
Are you afraid of it?
Well, when you're 83, it does come across.
All right. Yeah, of course I do. Are you afraid of it? Well, when you're 83, it does come across. All right.
Yeah, of course I do.
And...
Are you afraid of it?
No, I'm not afraid of death.
What I am afraid of, I think, is infirmity.
I have been, knock on wood, this is wood, I think, reasonably healthy with an exception.
I had a heart attack five years ago.
And what blew me away was that my body failed me for the very first time in my life. That was stunning to me that suddenly I was in a hospital bed.
I have a great deal of compassion for people as we speak who are in nursing homes, having
a hard time walking, maybe your mental agility is slipping a little bit. That stuff, that's, that's what worries me.
You know, we all, we're all going to die and you know, that's that.
So I'm not afraid of that, but that aspect of getting older and, you
know, that does concern me.
That said, your mind is as sharp as any politician that I've ever heard.
And also just off mic, I should say,
just the warmth that you radiate,
and I deeply, deeply appreciate that.
Just as a human being.
So you still got it after all that,
after all those speeches, after all those houses,
after all of it, there's still the humility
and just the sharpness, the wit is all there.
So Bernie, yeah, like I said,
I wish you would have ran this year,
but I also wish that there's future candidates.
And there will be, Lex.
I absolutely do it.
I think, you know, he asked about my legacy
and the idea that they're all wonderful,
really, really wonderful people
who are now got involved in the political process and are fighting for justice. That's a great legacy.
What gives you hope about the future of this country, about the future of the world?
Sometimes one can become very cynical. You look at the terrible wars that are going on
right now. You look at the divisiveness in this country, the ugliness, the poverty.
You look at climate change. You know, you get depressed from all of that. But I am lucky
in this sense. And that I've had the opportunity. People often ask, what inspires you? How do
you keep going? And I remember it actually was in California where it really crystallized
me. I was at a rally in the agricultural area of Californiaized. We had a rally in the agricultural
area of California. We did a rally, it was sunset, thousands of people were out. You looked around
the crowd and there were young people, black and white and Latino and Asian American, huge cross
section, there were older people. They all wanted to make America a very much better country. And it really moved me.
I see that time and time again. I've just been on the campaign trail. And you see great people,
really beautiful people who are not interested in becoming billionaires. They want to improve
life for other people in this country. So, I am grateful that I, you know, it sounds like a platitude, you know, it's what
every politician says, oh, blah, blah, blah, blah. But when you go out around the country,
you know, you go to Native American reservations and you go to factories and everything, and you see
so many wonderful people. You know, I have been able to see things that many others have not,
but every state in the country. And that inspires me.
to see things that many others have not, but every state in the country.
And that inspires me.
I share their optimism, I share your optimism.
Bernie, I've been a fan for a long time.
It's a great honor to speak to you today.
Thank you so much.
Well, thank you very much for what you're doing.
Let me just say a word about what you're doing.
Okay, let's go.
As a return to the compliments here.
You know, I think there is a growing dissatisfaction
with corporate media.
And not because it's fake news that the reporters lie all the time.
That's nonsense. They don't.
But I think people want to hear folks really talk about in a calm manner
about some of the very important issues which are not discussed in corporate media.
And I think that's what you and some others are doing.
So I thank you very much. It's a very important service to the country. And thank you from a mayor perspective of creating
a wonderful town and I look forward to looking at the fall leaves walking around. I think quite
great the leaves. Yeah. I did create some other things. Okay. Thank you so much, Bernie. Thank you, Lex.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Bernie Sanders. To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now, let me leave you with some words from Aristotle.
The real difference between democracy and oligarchy is poverty and wealth.
Wherever men rule by reason of their wealth, whether they be few or many, that is an oligarchy.
And where the poor rule, that is democracy.
Thank you for listening, and hope to see you next time. you