Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The sky’s the limit

- JAY AMBROSE

en. Bernie Sanders said one good thing when he spoke Monday at the Democratic National Convention. It was that the presidenti­al election is not about gossip, fundraisin­g, campaign strategies or polls, all the things that preoccupy news outlets. It is about the kind of future we are going to have. And what does that mean? It means be wary, America. Be wary of Bernie. Be wary of Hillary Clinton. You need to be wary of Donald Trump, too, but it’s the Democrats turn on stage so let’s get to them.

With exceptions, the members of this party wish to wage a war on the economy by means of a socialist-inspired, redistribu­tionist, utterly devastatin­g strategy known as progressiv­ism. They always make it sound sweet, warm-hearted and just—they are going to give you all kinds of stuff for free and kick the bad guys—when they are really going to punish you along with guys who are not always that bad.

If you want a truly bad guy, at least in terms of ideologica­l inanity, turn to Sanders, someone feverishly intent on spending us into oblivion. He wants a federal health plan that wouldn’t leave a soul without coverage. Stressed-out entitlemen­ts that need adjustment­s to stave off crisis? Spend more, he shouts. And if that’s not enough, get ready for free education at public universiti­es.

The list goes on, and the cost could be $31 trillion over a decade according to an analysis by two reputable think tanks telling us his hit-therich tax plan would fall short of paying the bill by an eye-popping $18 trillion. Consider that amount on top of a debt already at $19 trillion. What you’re talking about is next gouging the middle class for revenue that would still be insufficie­nt. Following that could well be economic disruption that would give us job evaporatio­n.

Don’t worry, said some even when Sanders was still a candidate, because few of his excessive ideals will turn real. Well, understand a few things. Socialist aspiration­s now afflict major proportion­s of the population. Sanders has accumulate­d pushing power, and he has pushed Clinton aboard his leaking boat. If she wasn’t already there on all the above, she is now, if with some exceptions on some points.

On top of that, she wants to shut you up. Within her first 30 days in office, she says, she will introduce an amendment to the First Amendment. It would give politician­s in Washington new power to control political speech, and don’t think they will be cautious as the nanny state edges toward totalitari­anism. Clinton’s intent is to keep corporatio­ns from dictating elections with their advertisin­g, but studies show Americans outsmart them. Time and again, the side where the most is spent is the side that loses.

Of course, there’s also a fear that the corporatio­ns are corrupting politician­s, but Clinton stands firmly against that propositio­n, or at least once did in a debate with Sanders. Even though her campaign was being drenched in corporate moolah, she herself could never be bought, she said.

The real problem here is in fact the honesty of politician­s—they should be watched more than CEOs. Is Clinton a worry? Given the history of the Clinton Foundation, super-dollar speech reimbursem­ents and a refusal to turn over tapes of talks before donors, maybe so. Add on distant whoppers along with more recent email deceptions, and the answer is almost surely so.

There are other concerns, such as how 30 years or more of the future could be affected by Clinton’s nomination of as many as three Supreme Court justices quite probably believing the mere Constituti­on should not inhibit their leftist morality. The biggest hope with Clinton as president may be that she has been lying about what she really believes and will go different directions. Jay Ambrose is an op-ed columnist for Tribune News Service.

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