As comedian Larry David reminded Saturday Night Live viewers over the weekend, many people by now know how proud the Bernie Sanders campaign is for having built its entire campaign war chest by securing nearly 3.5 million individual donations, mostly from small donors averaging gifts of about $27, while refusing the support of super PAC contributions.

Meanwhile, according to a new independent analysis of campaign finance data published Monday by Politico, the 100 biggest spenders during this campaign season—many of them individual billionaires—have donated a combined $195 million to super PACs supporting the other presidential candidates.

The math is easy, but compared to the average donation celebrated by Sanders, the contrast is stark: $27 vs. $1,950,000.

As the news outlet notes, these 100 top donors have given significantly more in total than “the $155 million spent by the two million smallest donors combined.” This display exemplifies exactly what Sanders and other critics of the current campaign finance system say when they describe how a “rigged economy,” which has fueled such an unequal distribution of wealth, is also corrupting the U.S. democratic system.

With only Sanders opting out of the super PAC system for the 2016 election, it has been his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton and the numerous members of the Republican field which have reaped the financial rewards of these mega-donors.

As Politico reports:

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