'Anyone with brains, common sense, and an educated background in the
'isms' knows exactly the kind of Kool aid Bernie's selling'
Dave Urbanski
New York Times op-ed writer Paul Krugman — a
lauded economist — has been with greater frequency of late delving into
political punditry, albeit with varying degrees of success.
![]() |
Op-ed writer Paul Krugman (left) and Sen.
Bernie Sanders (Left, Photo by Arun Sharma/Hindustan Times via Getty Images;
Right, Photo by TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP via Getty Images)
|
And now Krugman threw down a gauntlet that few
could ignore: That Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders — who just
won the New Hampshire primary — isn't a socialist. Check the
headline of his Thursday op-ed if you doubt it: "Bernie Sanders Isn't a Socialist."
That's right. And be damned the mountain of
evidence indicating that Sanders not only is one but, er, refers to
himself as one.
What are the details?
What's Krugman's rationale? Let's have a look.
Krugman indeed is hip to the fact that Sanders
calls himself a socialist — except he apparently just doesn't buy it, noting
that the 78-year-old Vermont senator "isn't actually a socialist in any
normal sense of the term. He doesn't want to nationalize our major industries
and replace markets with central planning; he has expressed admiration, not for
Venezuela, but for Denmark. He's basically what Europeans
would call a social democrat — and social democracies like Denmark are, in
fact, quite nice places to live, with societies that are, if anything, freer than our own."
So why does Sanders call himself a socialist?
Krugman is glad you asked: "I'd say that
it's mainly about personal branding, with a dash of glee at shocking the
bourgeoisie. And this self-indulgence did no harm as long as he was just a
senator from a very liberal state."
But now that Sanders is the unofficial
Democratic front-runner and has his sights set on South Carolina, we're talking
about a whole new ballgame. Krugman knows this and added in his Times' piece
that "if Sanders becomes the Democratic presidential nominee, his
misleading self-description will be a gift to the Trump campaign. So will his
policy proposals. Single-payer health care is (a) a good idea in principle and
(b) very unlikely to happen in practice, but by making Medicare for All the
centerpiece of his campaign, Sanders would take the focus off the Trump
administration's determination to take away the social safety net we already
have."
What do others have to say about Krugman's
Sanders-ain't-no-socialist mantra?
The pickings were so easy on this one that you
have to wonder if Lucy is preparing to snatch the ball from the grass to watch
Charlie Brown land on his ... behind.
— CM (@itoldyoumonsoon) February 14, 2020
David Harsanyi, senior writer for National
Review Online, riffed off Krugmans's piece and opined that "by November, these
guys will be referring to [Sanders] as a moderate Democrat."
Others on Harsanyi's Twitter thread saw things
similarly:
·
"He's
a Marxist. Anyone with brains, common sense, and an educated background in the
'isms' knows exactly the kind of Kool aid Bernie's selling."
·
"The
media is working overtime trying to paint a more moderate picture of all the
candidates. Unfortunately for them, the candidates don't stop talking &
pandering to the voters every chance they get — promising an everything for
'free' Utopia...ya know like Venezuela."
·
"Perhaps
when AOC and Omar are running we will look back on the good old days of
moderates like Sanders!"
·
"Some
of them are saying Obama is actually a moderate conservative, so I wouldn't be
surprised."
·
"Paul
Krugman is skillfully eradicating the very last traces of his credibility."
Dave Urbanski, The Blaze, 14-2-2020
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