Category Archives: Socialism

Socio-Feudalism’s War on the Individual

by Daniel Greenfield

The transformation of the medieval world into the modern world came about with the idea that man could and should transform his lot in life.

The liberal individualism of the Enlightenment however was soon countered by reactionary movements, feudal and socio-feudal, seeking to put the genie of individual autonomy back in the box through collectivist movements.

  • Socialism postured as progressive when it was reactionary. Its leaders, most often hailing from the upper class and upper middle class, reverted newly liberated societies in Russia and China back to feudalism under the guise of liberating them. The Bolsheviks took Czarist feudalism and rebranded it as collective farming, forbidding the “liberated” farmers from owning property or livestock, and even from leaving their farms to seek a better life in the big cities.
  • The empowerment of the individual had given way to the enslavement of man in the service of an ideal society. Individuals were once again worthless, except as they fit into a larger plan.
  • The ultimate struggle will be less about movements and more about individuals. The more the system fails, the more repressive it will become. And only millions of individuals can defeat it.

Socio-feudalism has the destruction of individual autonomy as its central goal.

The transformation of the medieval world into the modern world came about with the idea that man could and should transform his lot in life.

The liberal individualism of the Enlightenment however was soon countered by reactionary movements, feudal and socio-feudal, seeking to put the genie of individual autonomy back in the box through collectivist movements.

Among the most prominent of these was what would eventually be called socialism.

While early socialist movements had been a radical Christian heresy emphasizing communal living, these experiments invariably failed on a local level, leaving behind a trail of wrecked lives.

Nineteenth-century radical theorists began laying out plans for the communal transformations of entire societies.

Fourier’s socialist “phalanxes” which would influence everything from Soviet communal farms to hippie communes in the United States, were feudal mass communities with no private property and everyone assigned a role in life under the rule of a centralized “omniarch”.

Socialists had to justify the elevation of the collective over the individual through fatalism about the role of man.

All evidence to the contrary, man has no ability to change his lot in life. He is only an atom in the larger phalanxes of life. As Robert Owen, the father of British Socialism, told the US Congress in an address in 1825, man “never did, nor is it possible he ever can, form his own character,” but is “universally plastic” and socialists could make him over into anything at all.

The US Declaration of Independence asserted that man was born free, but to the socialists he was born a slave and the best that he could ever hope for was to be a slave to the right cause.

Ralph Waldo Emerson insightfully critiqued Fourier:
“He treats man as a plastic thing, something that may be put up or down, ripened or retarded, moulded, polished, made into solid, or fluid, or gas, at the will of the leader… but skips the faculty of life, which spawns and scorns system and system-makers, which eludes all conditions, which makes or supplants a thousand phalanxes and New-Harmonies with each pulsation.

Was man a “plastic thing” or the bearer of the mystery of the “faculty of life”?

Leftist revolutionary movements might begin by hailing the power of the individual, but invariably ended up in a socio-feudalism system making malleable man over to fit the five-year plan.

Socialism postured as progressive when it was reactionary. Its leaders, most often hailing from the upper class and upper middle class, reverted newly liberated societies in Russia and China back to feudalism under the guise of liberating them.

The Bolsheviks took Czarist feudalism and rebranded it as collective farming, forbidding the “liberated” farmers from owning property or livestock, and even from leaving their farms to seek a better life in the big cities.

The empowerment of the individual had given way to the enslavement of man in the service of an ideal society. Individuals were once again worthless, except as they fit into a larger plan.

The socialist argument against individualism was human fallibility. The muckrakers gathered every example of misery and described them as social ills that society had to collectively remedy. Outwardly private philanthropic organizations claimed to help the poor, but their embrace of eugenics, including mandatory sterilization, seizing children from parents, prohibition, and greater state intervention, including mandatory centralized state education, set a pattern that was innately socialist even when its proponents avoided the use of the word.

Every crisis, including World War I and the Great Depression, was seen as a reason for replacing smaller institutions with larger ones and further disempowering the individual.

Hitler’s National Socialist party blamed Germany’s loss in WWI partly on free enterprise. Roosevelt and the Democrats blamed the Great Depression on free enterprise. Both built state systems for seizing control of it.

The Russian Bolsheviks not only blamed individual farmers for their famine, but used it to wipe them out.

The post-war economic rebound in America and Europe did not end socialism, but rebooted it, with governments confiscating even more wealth for “the benefit of society.”

The macro conflicts of WWII and the Cold War, the threat of nuclear annihilation, were used to define the individual as too small to make a difference on his or her own except as part of a larger mass movement.

In the 1960s, class warfare gave way to identity politics. Individuals had to join groups to fight for a fairer society. What governmental institutions had failed to accomplish in fully transforming man, the new movements set out to accomplish in the psychedelic decade. The individual was told that liberation would come from losing his bourgeois background, worldview, inhibitions, morality and values to a new emerging humanistic blob shooting along the rainbow to the right side of history.

The 1980s marked a reassertion of individual priorities over mass movements. The movements that had broken the country were distrusted. Socio-feudalism struck back with an environmental crisis taking place on such a scale that individuals were nothing when measured against it.

Global authorities had to immediately seize total power to save the human race.

Environmentalism has brought socio-feudalists closest to realizing Fourier’s vision of abolishing private property and packing everyone off to collective compounds with a defined role in life: Man has had his day, but individuals can’t help selfishly wrecking the planet. Only subservience to larger systems can stop global warming, end human misery and transform the world.

A new wave of gender identity activism further eliminated the line between the individual and the state. The personal was political at the most granular level. The pronouns you used, the products you bought, whether you left the light on or not, were political choices. Human existence became a series of political tests measuring allegiance to a state ideology.

When the personal is political, there is nothing personal left to the individual.

Socio-feudalism had contrived to reduce man to a state of total subservience.

Medieval England banned playing games, especially “fute-ball” because it was seen as a distraction from the priorities of the state.

Postmodern California passed two laws outlawing Indian mascots, along with plastic bags, gendered toys and a thousand other things.

Postmodern man occupies a world of illusory technologies and shrinking possibilities where children are discouraged from riding bikes, packed off to early schooling at toddlerhood and indoctrinated to believe that their playthings are the reason for the destruction of the world.

Socio-feudalism has the destruction of individual autonomy as its central goal, and the pandemic lockdowns showed how easy that goal is to achieve in the face of a crisis. Government could and did assert control over what an individual could wear and whether he could leave the house. The public eventually responded to it not with a mass movement, as those mostly failed or were repressed, but by unilaterally discarding the prohibitions of the state.

Americans had ultimately fulfilled Emerson’s faith in “the faculty of life, which spawns and scorns system and system-makers, which eludes all conditions.” And that is why socio-feudalism will fail unless it can reduce mankind to a state of abject helplessness, ignorance and fear.

That is what Communist and Islamist regimes strove for, with varying degrees of success. And it is still the great aim of socio-feudalism today.

The ultimate struggle will be less about movements and more about individuals.

The more the system fails, the more repressive it will become. And only millions of individuals can defeat it.

Daniel Greenfield is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center.

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The six Conundrums of socialism in the USA

A friend presented me with this Conundrum:

“A gun is like a parachute. If you need one and don’t have one, you’ll probably never need one again.”

The definition of the word Conundrum is something that is puzzling or confusing.
Here are six Conundrums of socialism in the United States of America:

  1. America is capitalist and greedy – yet half of the population is subsidized.
  2. Half of the population is subsidized – yet they think they are victims.
  3. They think they are victims – yet their representatives run the government.
  4. Their representatives run the government – yet the poor keep getting poorer.
  5. The poor keep getting poorer – yet they have things that people in other countries only dream about.
  6. They have things that people in other countries only dream about – yet they want America to be more like those other countries.

Think about it! And that pretty much sums up the USA in the 21st Century. Makes you wonder who is doing the math.

These three short sentences tell you a lot about the direction of our current government and cultural environment:

  1. We are advised to NOT judge ALL Muslims by the actions of a few lunatics, but we are encouraged to judge ALL gun owners by the actions of a few lunatics.

Funny how that works. And here’s another one worth considering…

  1. Seems we constantly hear about how Social Security is going to run out of money. But we never hear about welfare or food stamps running out of money? What’s interesting is the first group “worked for” their money, but the second didn’t.

Think about it…..and Last but not least :

  1. Why are we cutting benefits for our veterans, no pay raises for our military and cutting our army, but we are not stopping the payments or benefits to illegal aliens.

All credit to Saul Anuzis

Calls for unity sure sound nice—if only they were sincere

Calls for unity sure sound nice—if only they were sincere. Total submission to the left is their desire: “Submit to us and we’ll be unified; don’t and you’ll be punished.”

Communism – The Deadliest Virus

The World’s Deadliest Virus – Global Communism – it’s coming!

By Tina Brooker:

The violence and division that we are witnessing sweeping across the West should be a wake up call for each and every one of us.  We must learn from history NOT destroy it.  

Communism is a deadly virus, one which must be vaccinated and eradicated before it spreads and kills our freedoms and all that we hold dear.

Nearly 200 years after the writing of the Communist manifesto, the left are now using identity politics and violence in order to resurrect this extremist ideology which is all about power and control.

What is Communism?

In 1848 Europe was burning, political upheaval led to mass violent riots in over 50 countries buildings burn, shops looted and national militias are called in to quell “the mob” sound familiar?

This was the year when Karl Marx published his Communist manifesto it outlined how to destroy Capitalism and usher in Communism through the means of Socialism.  To accomplish this goal the manifesto pits two groups against each other based on their identity – Bourgeoisie versus Proletariat – essentially business owners versus the workers of that business.  

Identity hatred is the key component that makes Communism work.  The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles – Karl Marx.

Today we would call this IDENTITY POLITICS.

The principles are the same define people by their groups and pit them against each other with a perceived injustice, a toxic mix.  What follows is violence.  Marx embraced violence.  He called for the overthrow of all existing social conditions and for the common ruin of the classes.

The United Nations

At this point I would like to refer you to an excerpt from an earlier article I have written on the United Nations entitled “UN Calls for Global Governance” in which António Guterres the UN Secretary-General and former president of the Socialist International Party from 1999 to 2005, is, off the back of the “Coronavirus “pandemic, pushing for “global governance”.  Stating:-

“There is a widespread and increasing distrust of national governments, “inequality, discrimination, corruption and lack of opportunities all over the world – grievances that still need to be addressed, including with a renewed social contract. 

The UN also recently tweeted its support for Antifa on its official page – alarm bells ringing yet?

Now lets return to the Marx era – What we were left with after this violent ideology of class warfare is a Communist state. Complete State ownership of your life.  No private property, high taxes, Government control of communications and media. Government jobs for all workers.  Government income for all workers.  Mandatory Government education.  Government that supersedes the Church in power.  

These are the programs the left are pushing today using Identity Politics and violence to do it. This is all about Power and control.

In 1917 Marx’s ideas got their big shot. Vladimir Lenin was a Russian Marxist living in exile in Switzerland during World War I.  Lenin believed wholeheartedly in Communism and saw the Russian political upheaval during the war as his shot to create a Communist State.  Shockingly, when Lenin asked the German military for passage to Russia in the midst of a war between the two countries Germany enthusiastically said yes.  

The Germans treated Lenin and his Communism as a deadly weapon to be used against their Russian enemy – a virus to infect the opponent and cripple them.  The Germans agreed to transport Lenin across the front lines into Russia, but only via a sealed train so Lenin and his virus could not break out into Germany.  Unleashing the deadly weapon of Communism on the Russian people was a horrifically effective tactic.  As soon as Lenin arrived in Russia, he began to employ Identity Politics and Social Justice as a potent tool in his civil war.

Lenin told his armed revolutionaries in 1918 “Comrade, hang and I mean hang so that the people can see, not less than 100 known rich men, do this so that for hundreds of miles around the people can see, tremble, know and cry.”

Lenin won using Identity Politics to pit groups against each other, incite violence, create anarchy, and then the virus took hold.  Private property and businesses were immediately dissolved, freedom of speech eliminated, individual freedoms crushed, economic collapse, famine, starvation, secret police raids.  Millions of Russians were sent to concentration camps.  

It is critical to note this mass death is not caused by Foreign Forces, but from within.  Communism kills in the name of equality.  They kill their own people, Communists do not care, they are indifferent to the suffering.

Man made famines and mass starvation in concentration camps are the norm, the cost of social justice.

The death toll numbers under Communism are staggering Eastern Europe 1m, Vietnam 1m, Afghanistan 1.5m, Africa 1.7m, North Korea 2m, Cambodia 2m, Soviet Russia 20m people, but nowhere is the genocidal sociopathic blood lust of Communism more evident than the dark history of Communist China.  

The Rise of Chinese Communism 

China became a Communist State in 1949 after a bloody prolonged civil war led by Mao Zedong.  After becoming a Communist dictator Mao joked about the killing of business owners in his own country.  30m people.  “We have so many people we can afford to lose a few”.  

Mao’s attempt to industrialise China known as the Great Leap Forward murdered more than 45m people in a few short years, many simply from starvation.  A total of 65m Chinese nationals were murdered under Mao’s Communism.  Mao kept power in spite of the genocide.  Communists NEVER give up power, ever.  They don’t have to.

The State is god, you are nothing.  Mao’s political party remains in power in China to this day and they exercise an iron clad grip on its people.  

Antifa/Black Lives Matter

Many of the organised leftists torching American cities are Marxists, they openly admit it.  Indeed, Patrisse Cullors co-founder of Black Lives Matter is on video openly stating “We are trained Marxists.  We are super versed on ideological theories”.  They use identity and class division to destroy private property in the name of “justice”, demonise capitalists, publicly persecute those who disagree with you.  Incite violence and seize power and control.

Analysis

It would appear as with Lenin who used the upheaval of war as his shot at create a  Communist state – we now see Antifa and Black Lives Matter using the upheaval of Covid-19 to launch their opening attack upon the West.  We have started to see history repeating itself. 

But who is the Chief Commander leading this dangerous coup? 

The United Nation’s Agenda 2030 is an inventory and control plan of ALL land, water, minerals, plants, animals, construction all means of production, food, energy, information and all human beings in the world – ultimately a one world governance structure from a central unit.”  

I believe we may have been given a few inadvertent clues as to who is really running this operation – hidden in plain sight.

Time to shine the spotlight on the United Nations – and join up the dots.

Remember you cannot kill an idea but ideas can kill you.

The Left has moved from Socialism to Careerism

AG Barr:
Democrats are now the “Rousseauian Revolutionary Party that believes in tearing down the system”
“They’re not interested in compromise. They’re not interested in [a] dialectic exchange of views. They’re interested in total victory…It’s a substitute for religion.”
The left is Knowingly complicit in the destruction of America as we know it.
They don’t want to stand by the ideals of justice instead they cower to the mob and don’t condemn the violence in hopes that they too will not fall victim to the mob
They have surrender their ultimate authority to anarchists with one goal, destruction.
The Left has moved from Socialism to Careerism where they move with one motive no matter the repercussions to society and that is solely to get re-elected by any means.
This is why our founding fathers created The Constitution, for groups just like this who choose to water the seeds of division and try to cultivate hate for America thus creating future generations who also despise our country.

What’s Wrong with Socialism?

Published by PragerU on Apr 4, 2017

We’ve read and watched the news of Venezuelan society collapsing under the weight of socialism.
But how bad is it really?
See this firsthand account from documentary filmmaker Ami Horowitz.

How Socialism Ruined My Country

Published by PragerU on Mar 30, 2017

Is Bernie Sanders right?
Are people living under socialism better off?
Brazil is a good case study. Felipe Moura Brasil, a journalist and Veja magazine columnist, explains how his country has fared under socialism.

Many American millennials seem to be drawn to socialism.
They came out in big numbers for Bernie Sanders in the 2016 presidential primaries. They rail against capitalism on their college campuses. They wear Che Guevara t-shirts to signal their socialist virtue.

I know a lot about socialism. I live in Rio de Janeiro and I work throughout Brazil as a journalist for a popular magazine.

In the early 2000s, Brazil’s economy was growing rapidly.

The government had enacted economic and monetary reforms and divested holdings in some state-run companies, giving the private sector more room to breathe.

Inflation—a chronic problem in Brazil—was dramatically reduced.

Foreign investors poured into the country, eager to catch a portion of our expanding economy.

The future seemed promising.

But today, our economy is in shambles, unemployment and debt are massive and powerful politicians are being investigated for involvement in the largest scandals of fraud and corruption in the country’s history.

What happened?

In 2002, a socialist politician named Lula da Silva ran for the presidency. He was a socialist, but painted himself as a modern, cool kind of socialist. He would be the politician who would heal national divisions and unite everyone. He even had a nickname, “Lulinha paz e amor”, which means “Little Lula peace and love” in Portuguese.

But the old message about the need for income redistribution to decrease inequality was still there. The media, academic elite and celebrities assured Brazilians that by transferring the money from the rich to the poor, the poor could finally be richer.

But the only ones who really got rich were Lula and his corporate and political friends.

It only got worse under his successor, Dilma Rousseff.

The socialists increased government spending, deficits, and debt. They called it a stimulus.

They increased the minimum wage and the benefits of social programs. They called it social justice.

They increased the salaries and retirement benefits of the civil service. They called it investing in the future.

They handed out thousands of jobs in the government and state-owned companies as favors to their political allies. And they called it good governance.

It worked for a while. Socialism always works at the beginning.

But government spending just kept going up and then Lula’s socialist paradise fell apart, and the economy fell with it.

The outcome: from 2008 to 2015, government spending grew nearly four times as fast as tax revenue.

The economy shrank 3.8 percent in 2015, the worst result in 25 years.

That same year, a World Bank survey found Brazil’s economy to be one of the world’s worst. Out of 189 countries, we were the 16th hardest place to open a business, the 60th most difficult nation in which to register property, and the 12th most complex place to pay taxes.

Economically and morally, the almost 15 years of socialist policies have greatly harmed Brazil. We also remain among the world’s leaders in murder and robbery, and we rank near the bottom of industrialized nations in terms of education and health care.