European World Cup fans have been gaping at ordinary American life and the things that make it fun and easy, from road trips to air conditioning, and those very comforts are exactly what radical left candidates in the Democratic Party want to curtail. This piece argues that the marvels tourists love are products of free markets and everyday capitalism, and that the Marxist strain gaining influence would strip away those pleasures. The contrast between tourists’ delight and the agenda of candidates like Darializa Avila Chevalier and elected figures such as Zohran Mamdani could not be starker.
What Europeans notice first is our open road culture and affordable driving. Cheap gas, long-distance road trips, and the freedom to drive where you please are cultural treasures, not luxuries, and they stand in sharp contrast to proposals like congestion pricing and tight restrictions on private vehicles. Politicians who push to limit car use are effectively reshaping how ordinary Americans live, trading mobility for a version of urban planning that many find suffocating.
When the debate turns to energy, the rhetoric is revealing. The idea that everyone should switch to expensive electric cars or rely on public transit ignores economic reality for millions, and the populist taunt “Drill baby, drill” still captures the frustration of those who see energy affordability as essential. If policymakers force energy prices up or favor one technology over accessible options, they strip away a cornerstone of middle-class life: the ability to choose how you get around and what you spend on it.
Big box stores are another wonder to visitors and a target for the radical left. The size and variety in places like Walmart, Costco and regional favorites are astonishing to foreigners because they represent consumer abundance and choice at scale. Politicians who demonize these outlets or aim to ban them from cities misunderstand what they provide: jobs, low prices and access to goods for families on tight budgets.
WORLD CUP SOCCER FANS ARE DISCOVERING AMERICA’S GREATNESS. IT’S TIME AMERICANS DID, TOO
That headline captures a simple truth: people are noticing the tangible benefits of a market that rewards entrepreneurship and scale. Tourists do not come to be impressed by regulations and rationing, they come to see variety, convenience and the chance encounters that free markets create.
The charm of small towns, the quirky roadside stops and independently owned shops are all wrapped into the same economic story. Marxist policy tends to centralize planning and standardize life, which flattens the distinctiveness that draws visitors and supports local economies. When cities block chains or clamp down on development, they think they are protecting character, but too often they just make life harder for everyday families.
DEMOCRATS REPORTEDLY FORCED TO ‘GRAPPLE UNCOMFORTABLY’ WITH WORLD CUP SUCCESS UNDER DONALD TRUMP
The political reaction to Americans’ success abroad says more about internal struggles than reality on the ground. Rather than celebrate a moment that highlights cultural and economic strengths, some politicians scramble to reinterpret success through ideological lenses that blame markets or demand heavier regulation.
Air conditioning might sound trivial, but to visitors it’s almost miraculous, and it matters for quality of life and public health. Calls to limit thermostat use and impose blanket austerity during heat waves are a reminder that some policy proposals trade comfort for ideology. Advocates who insist everyone set thermostats to 78 degrees miss how basic amenities support work, leisure and dignity for families across the country.
MAMDANI RIPPED FOR CLAIMING VICTORY OVER CAPITALISM AFTER NYC’S MULTI-BILLION DOLLAR TAXPAYER FUNDED BAILOUT
That criticism speaks to a deeper tension: leaders who rail against capitalism but rely on taxpayer bailouts reveal an uncomfortable hypocrisy. The push to make America more like socialist Europe ignores that much of what visitors adore here would not survive heavy-handed policies and high taxes that choke growth and choice.
What European visitors are really witnessing is the creative chaos of free markets at work, where companies innovate and consumers benefit from competition. The joy and surprise on tourists’ faces are not accidental; they are the byproduct of a system that prizes experimentation and rewards success. If radical candidates gain control and impose top-down rule, those spontaneous discoveries and everyday conveniences could be the first casualties.
Many of the ambitious left-leaning primary contenders come from privileged backgrounds and entrenched institutions, and they appear to lack appreciation for the practical gifts of capitalism that visitors find so dazzling. They champion grand theories while neglecting the small, concrete things people rely on: the stores, the highways, the cooling systems and the freedom to drive. If Americans outside urban bubbles value those things, the World Cup’s bemused tourists have already chosen sides by preferring a life of abundance and mobility over austerity and control.

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See what Mandami has done to NYC