July 30, 2023

A few weeks ago, Dennis Prager said, “No one understands what socialism is.”  He is right.  Even economists are confused, and for good reason.  After Joseph Stalin gave socialism a bad name, socialist journalists and historians changed its definition to dissimulate socialist activities.  They settled upon a new definition: “the government’s takeover of the means of production.”

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The new definition made socialism into something that is not likely to happen, thus concealing ongoing socialist operations.  The operations of socialism could proceed; however, the operators could no longer be called socialists.  This ruse persists today.

In the eighteenth century, the term socialism was a nebulous bromide to reference a desired perfect society.  Karl Marx codified it in the Communist Manifesto.  It was subsequently identified as “From each according to his ability, to each according to his need” and more commonly as “Take from the rich and give to the poor.”  It is the Robin Hood theory.  Perhaps that is why it sells so well.

Taking from the rich to give to the poor, or to anyone else, is an economic system.  Make no mistake: socialism is an economic system.  

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Socialism has had various monikers throughout its history, starting with the name Marxism, followed by fascism, Leninism, communism, and the Third Reich.

 Each moniker represents a different intent or method to implement socialism.  Marxism is socialism by force.  But force upon whom and by whom?  Marx envisioned force by employees upon their employers.

When he published the Communist Manifesto in 1848, the ideal of socialism spread throughout the world like a flash of light.

Marx was only twenty-nine years old when he wrote it.  He was an occasional journalist and sold op-ed articles to various newspapers.  He was impoverished his entire life, and in later years lived off pecuniary gifts from his friend Friedrich Engels.

Marx’s hatred of the wealthy and their supporters, the bourgeoisie, is obvious throughout the Manifesto.  The class warfare and hatred that he created have survived to this day in socialist philosophy.  In the 1800s, American newspapers were rife with articles and political cartoons that promoted socialism and its innate hatred.

Socialism survives on the noble ideal to help the poor but operates with a false economic assumption made a part of the philosophy by Karl Marx.  He said, “The abolition of bourgeois individuality, bourgeois independence, and bourgeois freedom is undoubtedly aimed at.”