Steve Forbes backs Trump's Mt. Rushmore warning on communism: 'He's right'
Steve Forbes has been a bold advocate for the American capitalist system, free markets and sound money for decades. As the chairman and editor-in-chief of Forbes, and a presidential candidate...
By Fox News · Fox News
Steve Forbes has been a bold advocate for the American capitalist system, free markets and sound money for decades. As the chairman and editor-in-chief of Forbes, and a presidential candidate in 1996 and 2000, he has been one of the nation's leading voices on economics. Recently, Forbes sat down with Fox News Digital at Freedom Fest in Las Vegas to discuss the state of the American economy, New York City's socialist turn, and the policies of the Trump administration. STEVE FORBES: CHUCK SCHUMER HAS A BEEF WITH BEEF, BUT DOESN'T EVEN KNOW HOW TO GRILL IT "First of all, New York City has had a reputation in the past of electing radical candidates, including the allegedly only communist member of Congress back in the late 1940s. So there is that streak there. But more importantly, I think it shows that people, a lot of people, are dissatisfied. The 78-year-old scion of a publishing empire said the left is better organized than it's freedom-loving counterparts. "We've got to get the message out," he said. "And one thing that the left has learned is that you try to occupy the high moral ground. Even if you wreck people's lives, kill millions of people under socialism, communism, your intentions were good. "So they try to play the moral card. And so it's not enough to say, ‘Well, free enterprise gives you more prosperity.’ You also have to put on the plane that free enterprise is moral. It's based on liberty, based on allowing human beings to be creative, or as Lincoln put it, improve your lot in life." Following Trump's Mount Rushmore speech and its depiction of the internal threat of communism, Forbes agrees, citing another U.S. president. "Whatever you call it, communism, socialism, extreme leftism, anti-Semitism, it's all the same disease," Forbes said. "Abraham Lincoln put it very well in the 1800s. He said, 'It won't be foreign forces that destroy the United States. It'll be things we do internally.'" Forbes suggested that many incorrectly blame problems on free ma…