JD Vance Brags About His Cushy Life as Americans Struggle to Buy Food [View all]

The vice president is thrilled to have private chefs and a new ability to skip TSA lines.
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American wages have stagnated, while the cost of livingaffected by rising inflation and the unending Iran warcontinues to climb. Yet the vice president has not been shy about the fact that he is, comparatively, living very large. JD Vance
joined Dirty Jobs star Mike Rowes podcast Thursday to chat about faith, family, and the future of America. But amid the pairs sprawling conversation, the vice president offered a bit of insight into how his new role has offered him a completely new lifestyle. My life isdude, totally transformed, Vance said, eliciting laughter from Rowe.
Vance earns a base official salary of $235,100 per year as Americas second-in-command, but of course the accoutrements of his high-powered office provide a litany of other perks. I dont go to the grocery store anymore. People go to the grocery store for me. Most of my mealslike, when I cook a mealI love to cook, actually. Big baker. I like to cook for my kids as a special occasion, but I dont have to cook anymore because I have an army of people willing to cook my food, he continued. My life is so weird. I fly around on a 757, no more TSA lines for me and the kids. Its so weird, but it can become the sort of thing that if you internalize it, you start to become an entitled asshole, Vance said.
Maybe that executive branch dissonance could explain why Donald Trump
claimed that Americans need to provide identification in order to go to the grocery store, or why the president has repeatedly insisted that groceries is an old-fashioned word. We have a term groceries, Trump
told the leaders of the United Arab Emirates last year. Its an old term, but it means basically what youre buying, food, its a pretty accurate term but its an old-fashioned sound.
Affordability is the chief concern for Americans heading into the midterm elections, according to an April
Gallup poll. In January, a
New York Times/Siena
poll found that 65 percent of American voters felt that a middle-class lifestyle was out of reach, while 77 percent said that a middle-class life was more difficult to attain than it was a generation before. All in all, a majority of Americans feel that theyve been priced out of a broad range of necessities, including education, health care, and having a family.
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