The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sanders’ economic notions pose risks

- Mona Charen She writes for Creators Syndicate.

You won’t hear young Democrats deride Bernie Sanders with the “OK, boomer” dig. At 78, he’s actually too old for the cohort, but that’s not why he won’t get dinged. He’s the most popular Democrat among the under-35 crowd, and judging by recent polling, he’s the second-most popular Democrat overall. Sanders has raised nearly twice as much money as the front-runner, Joe Biden, and seems to have scooped up support from a declining Elizabeth Warren in the past 60 days.

Sanders’ appeal, the experts explain, is founded on “authentici­ty.” Is he humorless, repetitive, cloying and rigid? Sure. But these are signs that he really believes something!

Let’s concede that Sanders is sincere, and that he is, with some small hypocrisie­s — did you know he was a millionair­e? — honest. But what people actually believe is kind of important, and Sanders professes and sells a series of prejudices that do him no credit.

Sanders claims to be a democratic socialist in the European mold, an admirer of Sweden and Denmark. Yet his career is pockmarked with praise for regimes considerab­ly to the left of those Scandinavi­an models. He has praised Cuba for “making enormous progress in improving the lives of poor and working people.” In his memoir, he bragged about attending a 1985 parade celebratin­g the Sandinista­s’ seizure of power six years before. “Believe it or not,” he wrote, “I was the highest ranking American official there.” At the time, the Sandinista regime had already allied with Cuba and begun a large military buildup, courtesy of the Soviet Union. None of that appears to have dampened Sanders’ enthusiasm.

Sanders was impatient with those who found fault with the Nicaraguan regime:

“Is (the Sandinista­s’) crime that they have built new health clinics, schools, and distribute­d land to the peasants? Is their crime that they have given equal rights to women? No, their crime in Mr. Reagan’s eyes and the eyes of corporatio­ns and billionair­es that determine American foreign policy is that they have refused to be a puppet and banana republic to American corporate interests.”

Sanders now calls for a revolution in this country, and we’re all expected to nod knowingly. Of course, he means a peaceful, democratic revolution. It would be outrageous to suggest anything else. Well, it would not be possible for Sanders to usher in a revolution in the U.S., but his sympathy for the real thing is notable. As Michael Moynihan reported, in the case of the Sandinista­s, he was willing to justify press censorship and even bread lines. The regime’s crackdown on the largest independen­t newspaper, La Prensa, “makes sense to me,” Sanders explained, because the country was besieged by counterrev­olutionary forces funded by the United States.

Sanders stopped learning about economics and politics about the age of 17. He still believes that corporate “greed” is responsibl­e for human poverty and that the world is a zero-sum pie. The more billionair­es there are, the less there is for everyone else. “I don’t think billionair­es should exist,” he told The New York Times.

So in the Bernie ideal world, we non-billionair­es would be deprived of Amazon, personal computers, smartphone­s, fracking (which reduces greenhouse gases), Uber, Walmart, “Star Wars” movies and very possibly our jobs. Millions of children would be deprived of school scholarshi­ps, while the arts, medical research and poverty programs would be that much poorer.

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