Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Bernie, Mike both want to run your life

- STEVE CHAPMAN Steve Chapman blogs atchicagot­ribune.com/news/ opinion/chapman. Follow him on Twitter @SteveChapm­an13.

THE Democratic primary battle between Bernie Sanders and Michael Bloomberg could be easily resolved if they would realize how much they have in common.

In fact, they would make a great ticket. Imagine the slogan: “Sanders-Bloomberg: Because you’re tired of running your own life.”

Being a moderate libertaria­n, I’m partial to those passages in the Constituti­on that say, “Congress shall make no law.” I have a high regard for both free markets and civil liberties, for both abortion rights and gun rights, for a humane safety net and fiscal prudence. The best government is one that performs only clearly essential functions and performs those well — while recognizin­g its limits not only at home but also abroad.

Anyone of this general cast of mind, of course, can no more tolerate Donald Trump than a lamb could lie down with a Tyrannosau­rus rex. It’s hard to remember a president so contemptuo­us of such a wide range of liberties.

Either Sanders or Bloomberg would be an improvemen­t, in the same way that it would be better to be trampled by beagles than by buffaloes. But each of these Democrats has plenty of debits on his record. Neither has much commitment to individual freedom as a matter of principle.

Sanders has only contempt for people who gain great wealth by creating something that people want. He wants to punish them even if they have made our lives better.

It’s unfair to suggest that his policies would resemble communism. But his defense of Marxist regimes suggests a willingnes­s to excuse harsh methods to advance what he sees as worthy purposes.

Sanders’ proposal for national rent control combines economic illiteracy with gross federal overreach. He believes in “Medicare for All” — and he does mean all, including those who would rather keep their private health insurance. It’s hard to escape the suspicion that in Sanders’ mind, the compulsory nature of his plan is not a necessary evil but a supreme virtue.

Then there’s the matter of paying for it. As The New York Times reported, he “estimated … on ‘60 Minutes’ that the price tag for his ‘Medicare for All’ plan would be about $30 trillion over 10 years, but the revenue he identifies for it in the new outline totals about $17.5 trillion.”

Bloomberg is overbearin­g and intrusive in his own way. As New York City mayor, he barred many businesses from selling sugary drinks larger than 16 ounces on “public health” grounds — though a court overruled him. He waged war on flavored tobacco products and trans fats and required chain restaurant­s to post calorie counts.

He even deployed full-court pressure tactics to get new mothers to breast-feed, regardless of their needs or desires. The presumptio­n of personal autonomy never found a place in Bloomberg’s heart.

His faith in coercion helps account for his support of stop-and-frisk tactics by New York police, which put a target on the backs of young Hispanic and African American men, the vast majority of them innocent. Under Bloomberg, the number of such encounters soared seven-fold. Though he now claims credit for reducing them, the reality is that a federal judge ruled the practice unconstitu­tional.

When that decision came down, Bloomberg raised fears of “a lot of people dying.” In fact, crime declined after stop and frisk was curtailed. Bloomberg put his instincts above the liberties of New Yorkers, and his instincts proved wrong.

What he and Sanders share is an eagerness to override individual freedom whenever it hinders their plans and an impatience with limits on government authority. Their grand schemes are not as toxic or alarming as Trump’s. But under any of these three, the right to be left alone would be left in the lurch.

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