mrswdk wrote:Dukasaur wrote:It's not unusual for a middle class family to have one house where they live, a second house as an investment property, and a cottage or vacation home somewhere. Regardless of the price. Stop grasping at straws to prove a point that can't be proven and just admit you were wrong. Owning a $750,000 vacation home does not place you among the elite of any nation.
There are a bit more than
124 million households in the United States.
7.3 million, or 6 per cent, own a second home.
Of those who own a second home, roughly 8-10 per cent have a summer home. That's 8-10 per cent of 7.3 per cent of all Americans (less than 1 per cent) owning a summer home.
And Bernie owns not just a comfy summer home, but also a second home somewhere else in the US.
Bling bling!
You just gave evidence against yourself. 7.3 million households, at an average of perhaps 3 people per household, is something like 22 million people. These 22 million are not on the Board of Directors of the Chase Manhattan. I hear the boardroom of the Chase Manhattan is pretty big, but I doubt there's room for that many!
These are ordinary, middle-class people. Comfy, yes. Not part of the ruling class. Well-to-do, you might say. Not elite.
These are doctors, lawyers, computer programmers, professors, engineers. Middle class. Maybe above average even within the middle class, but nowhere near ruling class status.
I'll bet occassionally even a vacuum-cleaner salesman who's really good at his job manages to get a vacation home.