Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Give socialism a try? Let’s not.
Give socialism a try? Let’s not.
Jan 31, 2026 1:10 PM

“Yeah, well, you know, that’s just, like, your opinion, man” – Jeffrey “The Dude” Lebowski played by Jeff Bridges. ‘Jeff Bridges speaking at the 2017 San Diego Comic-Con International in San Diego, California’ by Gage Skidmore CC BY-SA 3.0

Elizabeth Bruenig, columnist for the Washington Post, yesterday published an opinion piece entitled, ‘It’s time to give socialism a try’. The title is a bit misleading as the piece makes no positive case for socialism but rather chronicles her own and several others convictions that something in our society has gone terribly wrong. Bruenig then claims that the something that has been going badly wrong is capitalism,

Capitalism is an ideology that is far more passing than it admits, and one that turns every relationship into a calculable exchange. Bodies, time, energy, creativity, love — all modities 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.

I can’t speak for others but I manage to get through most of my days with only fleeting moments of alienation. Last night I finished up an excellent book (Thoughtfully reviewed here) on the attributes of God that then kept me up the better part of the night in sustained contemplation, this morning I got up to go to work at the Acton Institute which, in the interest of public morality, seeks to promote a free and virtuous society, and this weekend I’ll be driving to a family reunion which has been an ongoing tradition for over twenty years. It’s hard to be an atomized individual stuffed into a house in the wilderness for the weekend with three generations of family.

Not sharing a personal experience of alienation perhaps the best approach would be to turn to what free-market theorists themselves have to say (As I previously did in ‘Misreading capitalism’), if they indeed believe that the free-market, “turns every relationship into a calculable exchange.” Ross Emmett, Professor of Political Economy and Political Theory & Constitutional Democracy at Michigan State, has a fine paper ‘Economics Is Not All of Life’ which outlines that Richard Whately and Frank Knight did not.

But Bruenig has told us that, “Capitalism is an ideology that is far more passing than it admits…”, and if that is true then we have nothing to learn from its theorists and proponents. But it is hard to judge if the statement is true because no argument is actually made for it.

Perhaps I’m overthinking this. It is, after all, published as an opinion and Bruenig is certainly entitled to hers. To say the consequences of actually existing socialism can be severe is an understatement and there is good evidence that economic freedom contributes to social progress (Including but not limited to the reduction of poverty and recognition of women’s rights). That seems to me an argument to give socialism a pass.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Saving Secular Society
I used to have more regular and extensive interaction with people whose worldviews were starkly different from my own. That’s not so much the case anymore, so it’s good to be reminded occasionally that some people live in different worlds that are sometimes hard prehend. That happened today when I came across an announcment for a conference, “The Secular Society and Its Enemies.” In the strange universe in which the conference’s organizers live, “The world is finally waking up to...
Journal of Markets & Morality, Volume 10, Issue 1
This issue of the Journal of Markets & Morality features a scholia translation of Cardinal Cajetan’s (1469-1534) influential treatise On Exchanging Money (1499). Cajetan is the author of the officially mentaries on the Summa of Thomas Aquinas, which are easily available in the magnificent Leonine edition of this magnum opus. He is even more famous as the papal legate whom Leo X (1513-1521) dispatched to Germany in a futile effort to bring Martin Luther back into the Roman fold. Economic...
David (McCarty) vs. Goliath
Well…except Goliath is mostly a good guy too– and he’s the one putting rocks in the air– and David got beat in this case by the government. From yesterday’s (Louisville) Courier-Journal, Charlie White and Sara Cunningham report on the stand-off between homeowner David McCarty and the local Wal-Mart under construction in Lebanon, KY. Complying with a court order, a Central Kentucky man yesterday ended his sit-down protest a few feet from a blasting site — part of the construction of...
‘Call of the Philanthropist’
The new issue of Philanthropy Magazine features a cover story on Frank Hanna, vice chairman of the Acton Institute board of directors, and winner of the 2007 William E. Simon Prize for Philanthropic Leadership. The story is titled “Call of the Philanthropist,” a play on Acton’s Call of the Entrepreneur documentary, which features Hanna prominently. The lengthy profile by Christopher Levenick offers insights into Hanna’s philanthropic activities and his philosophy of giving. Rev. Robert Sirico is quoted extensively, as are...
‘The Idolatry of the Porn Worldview’
The folks over at the Reformation21 blog, produced of the Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals, have a great discussion going about the spiritual, cultural, and pastoral implications of pornography (here, here, and here). The first post takes up the Naomi Wolf article, “The Porn Myth,” which also occasioned in part my reflections on the pornification of culture in general and technology in particular. Carl Trueman aptly wonders (in the second post), Could it be that pornography is the ultimate free market...
The Weekly Standard, AFR, and “The Call of the Entrepreneur”
Sonny Bunch reviewed “The Call of the Entrepreneur” and discussed the significance of the American Film Renaissance (AFR) in The Weekly Standard. His article is titled, “The Right Stuff: Conservatives decide if you can’t beat Hollywood, join it.” In his piece, Bunch discussed the goals of AFR: AFR has been hosting film festivals across the country since 2004, but the Hubbards hope to set up permanent shop in Washington and push the festival into the mainstream. Jim Hubbard says he...
Global Warming Consensus Alert: Points for Honesty
Normally, I’m not a huge fan of Congressman John Dingell. But on this issue, I have to at least give him points for honesty: Democrats took over Congress vowing to make global warming a top priority, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi planned to notch a quick victory with a bill that was long on political symbolism and cost, if short on actual emissions reductions. Standing in her way has been Mr. Dingell. Much to the speaker’s consternation, the powerful chairman...
Abandon SCHIP: Big Government Returns
The mammoth Congressional expansion of SCHIP is such a bad idea, even the normally big spending President Bush vetoed the bill. I wrote a piece titled, “Abandon SCHIP: Big Government Returns,” which is now available on the Acton Website. The political posturing concerning the program has reached a troubling level. Supporters are using using kids as props to usher in socialized medicine and government expansion. But one of the main problems with the bill is the regressive characteristic of the...
Human Events on “The Call of the Entrepreneur”
Erika Andersen reviewed the “The Call of the Entrepreneur” for Human Events in a piece titled, “Entrepreneurship Preserves Life as We Know It.” The Call premiered last week to DC audiences at the E Street Cinema, as part of the Renaissance Film Festival. In her article Andersen noted the international interest in the film: Though it initially seems like the tale of the American dream, “The Call of the Entrepreneur” is an international story and is now being translated into...
Fair Trade’s Faded Facade
The Free Exchange blog at (HT) concludes a long and thoughtful post on fair trade, specifically in response to this recent NYT article, “Fair Trade in Bloom,” by wondering: And how does this affect coffee supply? If a premium is available for fair-trade coffee, shouldn’t other growers enter the market to take advantage of it until the price of coffee is bid down to market levels, leaving total producer take–baseline coffee price plus premium–where it stood before? Such a scenario...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved