Las Vegas Review-Journal

Piling on

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Lweek, we noted how Costco stores in Seattle refused to play along when local Nanny Staters imposed a massive new tax on soda. The retailer explicitly began itemizing the new levy on its price tags, ensuring that consumers were fully informed regarding the soaring cost of their favorite sugary beverages.

In that same spirit, a Seattle small-business owner has begun his own protest over the city’s hyperactiv­e regulatory apparatus.

David Jones owns a Subway restaurant in Seattle, where progressiv­e local pols have outlawed most jobs that pay less than $15 an hour. The chain recently started a national ad push touting a handful of foot-long sandwiches for $4.99.

But Reason magazine reports that Mr. Jones won’t be participat­ing in the promotion. A sign inside his store explains: “The cost of doing business in the city of Seattle is very high” thanks to “the highest minimum wage in the nation, paid sick leave, ACA, secure scheduling, soda tax and much more.”

Liberals have deluded themselves into believing that the government can pile mandate after mandate upon the entreprene­urial class with no ill effects. But, as Reason observes, “if the cost of doing business continues to climb, workers will be hurt, not helped.”

That’s why it’s difficult not to conclude that today’s progressiv­es would much prefer to wallow in smug self-satisfacti­on than ponder the real-world ramificati­ons of their destructiv­e edicts.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

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