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Bernie Sanders' day at Liberty


Self-declared socialist and Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders entered what his supporters must consider the belly of the beast on Monday. He spoke at the conservative evangelical Liberty University in Virginia. Some of those supporters sat in reserved seats, ensuring his remarks would be received with some applause.

Liberal and Democratic speakers at Liberty are not as rare as one might think. In 1983, Sen. Ted Kennedy visited and spoke about religious freedom, standing up for the right of conservative evangelicals to be heard in the public square. The Rev. Jesse Jackson delivered a message from Jerry Falwell’s pulpit one Sunday morning. Donald Trump has also spoken at the school.

The reception to Sanders from Liberty students was more gracious than what conservative speakers usually get on liberal campuses, if indeed they are invited. Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was disinvited as a commencement speaker at Rutgers University last year when students and faculty protested her involvement in the Bush administration’s support of the Iraq War. In 1987, Jeane Kirkpatrick, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, withdrew as the commencement speaker at Lafayette College when the faculty voted 60-34 to protest her receiving an honorary doctor of laws degree. These were victims of what passes for diversity and pluralism on too many campuses.

Sanders’ message at Liberty was familiar. He railed against “income inequality” and trashed the rich. His proposal to raise taxes, offer free healthcare, and free college for all would cost $18 trillion, according to an analysis by The Wall Street Journal. The central flaw in his socialist philosophy is that by penalizing success, you get less of it, along with less wealth to tax. And people who get free stuff often suffer diminished initiative and are robbed of a work ethic.

If the amount of available money were fixed (it isn’t) and I took more than you did, that would be unfair, perhaps immoral, though Sanders’ view of morality appears to stop at the abortion center door. Sanders said, “… I do believe that it is improper for the United States government to tell every women in this country the very painful and difficult choice she has to make on that issue. … I believe in women’s rights and the right of a woman to control her own body …”

What about the rights of the unborn? Pragmatically, fewer babies mean fewer future taxpayers for his socialist programs.

The lessons for building wealth are not a mystery. That doesn’t mean everyone can earn a CEO’s salary, but it does mean that by making right decisions one can live independent of government.

Republican presidential candidates should promote ways for people to escape poverty and for the middle class to climb the economic ladder. It is part of our history, though many may have forgotten, or never learned it in school. Building wealth built America. Tearing down the wealthy will lead to higher unemployment and economic collapse. That’s what Bernie Sanders and other leftists refuse to understand.

Listen to Cal Thomas’ commentary on The World and Everything in It.

© 2015 Tribune Content Agency LLC.


Cal Thomas

Cal contributes weekly commentary to WORLD Radio. Over the last five decades, he worked for NBC News, FOX News, and USA Today and began his syndicated news column in 1984. Cal is the author of 10 books, including What Works: Commonsense Solutions to the Nation's Problems.

@CalThomas

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