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WaPo Columnist: You Know What Time It Is, Kids? Socialism Time!
Hotair.com ^ | 3-7-18 | Ed Morrissey

Posted on 03/07/2018 3:26:53 PM PST by DeweyCA

This column might have made a lot more sense if the date on it was slightly different — say, March 6, 1918, rather than March 6, 2018. At that point, the economic utopianism from Karl Marx remained almost entirely theoretical, except for the nascent socialist state emerging in Russia in the middle of the Great War. One hundred years later, this argument from Washington Post columnist Elizabeth Bruenig has long reached an expiration date, one emphasized by tens of millions of deaths from starvation and worse:

"In the United States, we’ve arrived at a pair of mutually exclusive convictions: that liberal, capitalist democracies are guaranteed by their nature to succeed and that in our Trumpist moment they seem to be failing in deeply unsettling ways. For liberals — and by this I mean inheritors of the long liberal tradition, not specifically those who might also be called progressives — efforts to square these two notions have typically combined expressions of high anxiety with reassurances that, if we only have the right attitude, everything will set itself aright.

Hanging on and hoping for the best is certainly one approach to rescuing the best of liberalism from its discontents, but my answer is admittedly more ambitious: It’s time to give socialism a try."

We’ll get back to giving “socialism a try,” but first, let’s look at Bruenig’s argument against free-market liberalism. She bases it on a basic human yearning for meaning and purpose, and notes that it “seems” to be thwarted by capitalism:

"In fact, both Sullivan’s and Mounk’s complaints — that Americans appear to be isolated, viciously competitive, suspicious of one another and spiritually shallow; and that we are anxiously looking for some kind of attachment to something real and profound in an age of decreasing trust and regard — seem to be emblematic of capitalism, which encourages and requires fierce individualism, self-interested disregard for the other, and resentment of arrangements into which one deposits more than he or she withdraws. (As a business-savvy friend once remarked: Nobody gets rich off of bilateral transactions where everybody knows what they’re doing.) Capitalism is an ideology that is far more encompassing than it admits, and one that turns every relationship into a calculable exchange. Bodies, time, energy, creativity, love — all become commodities to be priced and sold. Alienation reigns. There is no room for sustained contemplation and little interest in public morality; everything collapses down to the level of the atomized individual."

Bruenig provides absolutely no evidence for her conclusions that capitalism causes shallowness, isolation, and a lack of “public morality,” other than this same allegation was “present in earlier socialist thought.” In one sense, this is a perfect argument for Bruenig. As socialism stands on the shoulders of free-market societies and turns them into poverty-stricken mass-rationing entities, Bruenig merely stands on the arguments of predecessors without an original thought to advance the “socialism now” project.

This argument is full of fallacies, but let’s just point out one in particular. It is indeed possible for bilateral economic arrangements to benefit both parties. That is precisely how wealth is created. If that were not the case, then the wealth of the world would have remained fixed throughout time. Few may get rich off one transaction, but that’s because wealth and capital usually accumulate over time. In the exchange of goods and services and the innovation that competition incentivizes, free-market societies have not just expanded wealth but made it far more egalitarian than in the top-down societies that preceded and coexisted with it. The rapid improvement in the Western and especially American standard of living corroborates this, especially when compared to the standard of living under other economic systems since Marx first offered his theories for Utopia.

With that in mind, let’s talk about the socialist experiment over the last century, an experiment that is still ongoing. In the major socialist nations of the twentieth century, millions of people starved to death, sometimes just because of famines resulting from incompetent, top-down “five-year plans,” and sometimes from more deliberate intent. For instance, Joseph Stalin deliberately set out to starve Ukrainians in 1932-33 by stripping the Kulaks of their land. Stalin was determined to apply the socialist model of food distribution and ruthlessly wiped out the people who had been farming for centuries in one of the best areas for food production in Eurasia. Millions starved, but Stalin got what he wanted: a population dependent on the central government for food distribution. For decades, people in Russia had to queue up for their food quotas rather than produce it for themselves, a situation that only changed with the collapse of the Soviet Union.

But that’s just one example. In China. Mao Zedong also killed off millions of people to impose his socialist vision. One historian granted access to official Communist Party records in China estimates that Mao killed forty-five million people in his Great Leap Forward. “It ranks alongside the gulags and the Holocaust as one of the three greatest events of the 20th century,” Frank Dikötter wrote. “It was like [the Cambodian communist dictator] Pol Pot’s genocide multiplied 20 times over,” which brings us to another brutal socialist utopia in the 20th century.

As if history wasn’t enough, how about current events? Hugo Chavez adopted Cuban-style socialism more than a decade ago in Venezuela, which at the time was one of the most self-sufficient economies in South America. They had access to vast reserves of petroleum, excellent food distribution, and a thriving middle class. What has been the result of the Chavista “time for socialism” decision? Starving Venezuelans are trying to flee across the borders, creating a refugee flood that the WaPo’s editors called “Latin America’s worst-ever refugee crisis” just two weeks ago. Meanwhile, oil exports keep plunging (thanks in large part to socialist nationalization) and the nation experiences profound medicine and food shortages.

In spite of consistent failures in the application of Marxist economics, people keep insisting that socialism is the wave of the future. Its failures, advocates claim, come from having the wrong people in charge. Unfortunately, as F.A. Hayek explained so well in The Road to Serfdom not long after Stalin’s dealings with the Kulaks, is that socialism’s inherent utopian contradictions inevitably require more and more brutal leadership to counteract the failures that result. When five-year plans fail in socialist nations, it’s never the fault of the plan but of the people who put them in place, or the general population that requires “re-education.” Both get purged and new leaders arise to conduct those purges. It’s almost literally a strategy of “the beatings will continue until morale improves,” only beatings have hardly been the worst of it.

The reason that well-regulated free markets succeed and socialism fails is this simple: free markets account for human failures. The failings of human nature that Bruenig points out existed well before capitalism; there’s a reason why selling “bodies,” which Bruenig blames on capitalism, is called “the world’s oldest profession.” A free market society governed in a classically liberal style provides self-governance to deal with those issues, imperfectly to be sure, but while still granting agency to the human beings who make up those systems as individuals as well as in communities and free-association interest groups.

Utopian socialism strips that agency away on the assumption that it can remake human nature. The Soviets often referred to this process as creating the New Soviet Man, one in whom selflessness was pre-eminent and all individual desires and need sublimated to the good of the State. Any failures could then be attributed to something akin to treason and dealt with accordingly. In order to impose that utopian vision, socialism generates a brutal, oppressive, top-down leadership because it has to do so to survive. Thanks to the political systems required to impose socialism, people have little recourse but to flee when things go bad — as the Venezuelans are only the latest to discover. The historical results make Bruenig’s complaints about the “shallow” nature of people in free-market societies utterly laughable, if not an example of unintended irony.

One century of mass murder, starvation, oppression, and brutality is enough. It’s not time to consider socialism as an economic system for anything other than an object lesson on the reasons why limited government and free choice are necessary for human flourishing.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: communism; socialism
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The amount of incoherent liberal logic is amazing. After more than 100 years of failure, adults still will not give up on their fantasy of a utopian socialism. It shows that this really is a religion for them, and, unlike Christianity, they have NO basis for believing it. It is simply blind faith driven by their emotions.
1 posted on 03/07/2018 3:26:53 PM PST by DeweyCA
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To: DeweyCA

“In order to impose that utopian vision, socialism generates a brutal, oppressive, top-down leadership because it has to do so to survive.”

One sentence, nails it.


2 posted on 03/07/2018 3:32:19 PM PST by Huskrrrr
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To: DeweyCA

It’s not time to consider socialism as an economic system for anything other than an object lesson on the reasons why limited government and free choice are necessary for human flourishing

Maybe College kids should be required to spend a semester in a utopian paradise like Venezuela, Cuba, or North Korea....


3 posted on 03/07/2018 3:35:13 PM PST by eyeamok (Tolerance: The virtue of having a belief in Nothing!)
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To: DeweyCA

Fantastic. Why don’t we start by nationalizing Amazon.com and redistributing the $100 billion+ fortune of the guy who owns your crappy rag?


4 posted on 03/07/2018 3:35:36 PM PST by NohSpinZone (First thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers)
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To: DeweyCA

Ask them what time it is in Venezuela..


5 posted on 03/07/2018 3:39:13 PM PST by blueunicorn6 ("A crack shot and a good dancer")
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To: DeweyCA

“She bases it on a basic human yearning for meaning and purpose, and notes that it “seems” to be thwarted by capitalism:”

Finding your meaning in the poverty of soul and spirit that socialism produces is like finding what is pleasant in pig poo.


6 posted on 03/07/2018 3:40:17 PM PST by Rurudyne (Standup Philosopher)
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To: DeweyCA

7 posted on 03/07/2018 3:42:27 PM PST by OttawaFreeper ("If I had to go to war again, I'd bring lacrosse players" Conn Smythe)
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To: DeweyCA

8 posted on 03/07/2018 3:45:51 PM PST by RightGeek (FUBO and the donkey you rode in on)
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To: DeweyCA

If you want Socialism, and only speak English there are a few countries to try out. Can’t get in ? Welcome to Socialism.

There is simply no need to change the only place on earth that isn’t Socialist. If you don’t like it, LEAVE


9 posted on 03/07/2018 3:46:20 PM PST by Celerity
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To: DeweyCA

I’ve been around real socialists.

They live in cold water apartments and walk picket lines.

Bill de Blasio and Hillary and Jerry Brown and Bernie Sanders are pretend socialists.

They pretend to be socialists to get access to the public treasuries so they can loot them.


10 posted on 03/07/2018 3:49:54 PM PST by blueunicorn6 ("A crack shot and a good dancer")
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To: DeweyCA
Explain, again, why all Socialists shouldn't be gassed, in the Eternal Struggle to eliminate genetic stupidity.

They are big fans of Eugenics, so they should easily understand why the bottom end of the IQ bell curve must be snipped off...

11 posted on 03/07/2018 3:52:59 PM PST by jonascord (First rule of the Dunning-Kruger Club is that you do not know you are in the Dunning-Kruger club.)
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To: DeweyCA
...that liberal, capitalist democracies are guaranteed by their nature to succeed and that in our Trumpist moment they seem to be failing in deeply unsettling ways...

How are capitalist democracies failing? Venezuela is failing; many of the quasi-socialist democracies of Western Europe are failing; in fact, socialism has failed everywhere it has been tried.

The ignorance is strong with Ms Breunig.

12 posted on 03/07/2018 3:55:59 PM PST by Rummyfan (In any war between the civilized man and the savage, support the civilized man. Support Israel.)
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To: DeweyCA
"In fact, both Sullivan’s and Mounk’s complaints — that Americans appear to be isolated, viciously competitive, suspicious of one another and spiritually shallow; and that we are anxiously looking for some kind of attachment to something real and profound in an age of decreasing trust and regard — seem to be emblematic of capitalism, which encourages and requires fierce individualism, self-interested disregard for the other, and resentment of arrangements into which one deposits more than he or she withdraws. (As a business-savvy friend once remarked: Nobody gets rich off of bilateral transactions where everybody knows what they’re doing.) Capitalism is an ideology that is far more encompassing than it admits, and one that turns every relationship into a calculable exchange. Bodies, time, energy, creativity, love — all become commodities to be priced and sold. Alienation reigns. There is no room for sustained contemplation and little interest in public morality; everything collapses down to the level of the atomized individual."

Are they talking about an economic system, or religion?!

13 posted on 03/07/2018 4:00:24 PM PST by Rummyfan (In any war between the civilized man and the savage, support the civilized man. Support Israel.)
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To: DeweyCA

Hey I dunno, maybe we should listen to her. She majored in religion, and she has been out of college for THREE whole years. She a grown up now!


14 posted on 03/07/2018 4:04:46 PM PST by DesertRhino (Dog is man's best friend, and moslems hate dogs. Add that up. ....)
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To: DeweyCA
The rapid improvement in the Western and especially American standard of living corroborates this, especially when compared to the standard of living under other economic systems since Marx first offered his theories for Utopia.

The USA, 1776 and still thriving...

The USSR, 1917 - 1991. RIP.

QED.

15 posted on 03/07/2018 4:05:09 PM PST by Rummyfan (In any war between the civilized man and the savage, support the civilized man. Support Israel.)
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To: DeweyCA

This Bruenig b*tch should live for a month or two in either Venezuela or Cuba, then let us know if she still likes her precious socialism.


16 posted on 03/07/2018 4:05:55 PM PST by july4thfreedomfoundation (No DACA Caca....Send the Nightmares home. "Americans are Dreamers, too." President Trump)
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To: DeweyCA

The fact that some people still put value in Marx’s economic theory, and other follow radical islam, makes me realize the devil is still among us.


17 posted on 03/07/2018 4:06:55 PM PST by Rummyfan (In any war between the civilized man and the savage, support the civilized man. Support Israel.)
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To: DeweyCA

“Socialism Cargo Cult”


18 posted on 03/07/2018 4:08:08 PM PST by kiryandil (Never pick a fight with an angry beehive)
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To: DeweyCA

Liberalism is a cult!


19 posted on 03/07/2018 4:14:09 PM PST by EdnaMode
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To: DeweyCA

To this generation fresh out of the imbecile factory, “socialism” means “being nice and caring about others”.


20 posted on 03/07/2018 4:16:50 PM PST by DesertRhino (Dog is man's best friend, and moslems hate dogs. Add that up. ....)
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