Reich chews out Republicans for 'chipping away at freedom' to 'preserve' their own power

Robert Reich, a former United States Secretary of Labor and current Carmel P. Friesen Professor of Public Policy at the Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California, Berkeley, released a new video on Tuesday explaining that Republican Party is exploiting wedge culture war issues to make Americans less free.
The two-minute spot begins with Reich saying that "Republicans love to claim they're the party of freedom," which he calls, "Bullsh*t." That cut to clips of fired Fox News host Tucker Carlson, anchor Sean Duffy, and ex-President Donald Trump respectively proclaiming, "Freedom of speech," "Free speech from America," and "Freedom is a gift from God."
Yet "in reality," Reich continues, "the Republican agenda centers on taking away freedom. They're chipping away your freedom to choose when, how, and with whom you start a family by passing ever more restrictive abortion bans. They're chipping away the freedom to discuss sexual orientation and gender identity in the classroom. Many are chipping away the freedom of trans people to receive life-saving, gender-affirming care. Many are chipping away students' freedom to learn about America's history, racism, and discrimination. They're also chipping away at the most fundamental freedom of all — the right to vote. Restricting everything from mail-in voting to ballot drop boxes. But their chipping away at freedom is even bigger than all this."
Reich wonders, "Can you really be free if you're saddled with medical debt and have to routinely pay outrageous healthcare costs? Can you really be free if you have no voice in your workplace and your employer refuses to let you organize with your coworkers for the right to collectively bargain? Can you really be free if you're not paid a living wage and have to choose between feeding your family or keeping your lights on?"
To Reich, "A living wage, the right to join a union, guaranteed healthcare, the right to vote: these are the foundations of real freedom. Yet Republicans oppose all of these. There's a reason the historic 1963 rally was called the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom — because freedom also means the ability to work in a job that pays enough to provide food, clothing, shelter, and medical care."
Reich's therefore concludes that "what Republicans want to preserve is not freedom. It's power; the power to impose their narrow ideology on everyone else, no matter who suffers. Don't let their propaganda convince you otherwise."
Watch below or at this link.
READ MORE: Robert Reich: The radical right-wing court has destroyed a crucial judicial guardrail