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Socialism Seen Up Close

February 19th, 2009 at 9:55 pm by Cranky

Oleg Atbashian, the guy who runs The People’s Cube is not only funny, but is also one of the most insightful commentators on the “virtues” of socialism.

This really resonates with me.

Being an immigrant from the former USSR – the land of equally redistributed misery – I used to cringe when Americans complained to me about the perceived misery and lack of opportunity under capitalism. I laughed at American homegrown agitators who were carping on behalf of “communities” about the lack of “economic justice.” They sounded like ignorant, spoiled brats who hated their rich parents for giving them the car of the wrong color. The whiners either didn’t realize how good they had it or they were being deliberately misleading. Either way their message was a fraud.

I had witnessed the stagnation and the collapse of a centralized command economy that, in the absence of the markets, was fueled by the carrot and stick of coercion and stale motivational slogans. I had lived through the hyperinflation, when I had to pay a million rubles to a guy who fixed the rusty refrigerator in my kitchen. I had seen the old country plunge into the chaos of mass unemployment and crime, while it was being robbed to the bone by crooked unelected officials who profited from the corrupt scheme to merge socialism and capitalism – a half-baked brainchild of Clinton’s economists who are now advising Obama.

From someone who knows. Here’s to hoping that his first-hand experiences can reach a few minds.

Continuing:

But Obama managed to convince millions of Americans that they were so destitute and helpless that only a system of government rationing could save them from imminent starvation and homelessness. All of a sudden, previously self-reliant Americans found themselves in the position of neutered house pets, meowing and howling at the prospect of not getting their guaranteed three meals a day.

Opponents of capitalism will tell you that market demand is created, not by necessity, but by sneaky marketing campaigns that generate a false perception of necessity. The same experts have now implemented this perverted theory by running a multimillion-dollar, Madison-Avenue-style marketing campaign, whose goal was to sell to the generally well-off Americans the notion that they were living in misery, poverty, and hopelessness — thus creating a false perception of a need for change.

Oleg, half of us dimwits were already sold on the idea. We just needed the shiny package.

Personally, I cannot understand why Americans don’t wake up and thank God or Providence or whatever for being able to live free. The human condition has always been nasty short and brutish. We are truly fortunate to be living in a society that (mostly) leaves us alone to pursue prosperity and altruism on our own terms.


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