New York Daily News

YOUR VOICES

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people vulnerable to political snake-oil salesmen touting simple solutions and utopian outcomes. It opens the door to the aggressive­ly uninformed authoritar­ianism of Trump as well as to Bernie Sanders and his siren song of socialism. (I’m sorry, Bernie fans, but I lived it, and the failures of capitalism are still better than the successes of socialism.)

It’s hard to imagine the quality of Trump’s campaign improving with the recent addition of political fixer Paul Manafort, a connection to Putin more direct than The Donald’s dictatoria­l rhetoric and fascist fear-mongering. Manafort worked most recently for Viktor Yanukovych, Putin’s puppet president in Ukraine, who was literally chased out of Kiev in 2014 while the scope of his corruption and allegiance to the Kremlin were being exposed.

When the protesters reached Yanukovych’s residence, its interior revealed garish riches on a scale that can only be described as Trumpian. Imagine the letter of recommenda­tion Manafort received from Yanukovych, currently in hiding in Russia under Putin’s protection. As any Mafia boss, Putin doesn’t respect leaders who get along with him, as Trump has promised to do, only those who stand up to him.

New York has plenty of representa­tives to turn to in order to align our moral compasses. Alexander Hamilton may now be doomed to be remembered only as a character in a musical, but he championed a strong government that protected liberty instead of smothering it. Teddy Roosevelt went after rising inequality the American way, by busting up the trusts to create more competitio­n and opportunit­y. Contrast them with Trump, a bully who targets the most

Readers sound off on Hillary Clinton, Donald Trump and the march to primary day Page 32

vulnerable.

Perhaps the clearest break with the best New York values is on immigratio­n. New Yorkers are open to the world and to its tempest-tossed citizens, not afraid of them. It has been said that immigratio­n is the sincerest form of flattery, so now that I live in New York City you don’t have to rely only on my past statements to believe that my admiration for the United States of America is genuine.

In 1989, I told an interviewe­r from Playboy that Americans were “very close to true human nature” and that working hard to be rewarded for winning, for achieving, as in America, was normal and that it was only in the Communist USSR that everything was backwards, like a house of mirrors. The collapse of the USSR in 1991 shattered the mirrors once and for all. No one could have been happier than me about this historic shift, but there were long-term consequenc­es for America, not just for Russia. The removal of an existentia­l threat allowed complacenc­y and a risk-averse mentality to set in.

Main Street demands both lower taxes and more services and the government is happy to guarantee it all. Globalizat­ion and the internet opened the entire world to American business, but investment and jobs also went abroad, contributi­ng to stagnant wages and rising inequality. The problems of capitalism are usually best met by more capitalism: less regulation, more risk, more investment, more innovation.

Instead, the U.S. and its flagship and bellwether, New York City, have gone largely in the other direction. Capital booms while labor slumps, overregula­tion strangles entreprene­urs and feeds bureaucrac­y, and in the span of a generation, the symbol of American innovation went from the moon landing to a slightly larger iPhone.

Trump represents the worst of it all. He is an Angry Bird instead of an Apollo mission. He is a symptom of fake values who trades in false promises and divisivene­ss. He attacks the immigrants that built this great city and this great country, dodges the taxes the working class can’t avoid and claims to represent the hard-working New Yorkers he exploits. Most alarmingly, he imitates Putin and other dictators by conjuring enemies against whom only he can protect us, the most dangerous type of fascist propaganda.

That Trump rightly boasts of the courage of New Yorkers after 9/11, only to then say we must be afraid of everything, is the height of cynicism.

I believe in good and evil. I believe that the values of the free world are indeed under attack and must be defended. But the greatest threat comes from profiteers of fear, ignorance and hatred like Trump.

He believes that the rights and ideals expressed by the American Constituti­on are expendable. He tells us that the American experiment of freedom and inclusiven­ess is over. New Yorkers should tell him that he is very wrong on both counts.

Kasparov is the chairman of the NYC-based Human Rights Foundation and the author of “Winter is Coming: Why Vladimir Putin and the Enemies of the Free World Must Be Stopped.”

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