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Millennials should read Solzhenitsyn
Millennials should read Solzhenitsyn
Oct 30, 2025 11:17 AM

The appeal of Bernie Sanders’ socialism is a puzzle to many; his appeal rises when economics is understood mechanistically, subject to impersonal forces and nefarious individuals. As a result, an economy can be directed only by the macro decisions of large and powerful entities like governments.

It is easy to appeal to free education, the eradication of poverty, and all the other promises made by those who don’t have any real experience in wealth creation. Most often their supporters don’t either, including millennials. We need to be patient with the ignorance of the young, but we should never acquiesce to it. Economics is not a mechanistic enterprise. Economics is closely tied to human anthropology—the precepts that define what a human is, how one produces artifacts first for survival and then for the building of culture, how one values nature and the principles applied to refashion matter into something new.

You can say that the presuppositions of economic theory draw from the anthropological dimension of human existence and not the other way around. This turns mon wisdom on its head, but historically the assertion finds support. Economics rightly understood then touches on deeper, transcendental truths. And, as the great Russian writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn taught, any discussion about materialism and transcendence must answer the fundamental question about whether the final touchstone of truth lies in or out of the human person. This determines how prehend the world around us and how we act in it. Here the materialist and traditionalist clash, and the first battleground is always language.

This point is often poorly understood by the traditionalist. For example, the word capitalism. The trap lies in the word itself. Capitalism sounds as bound to ideology as socialism is, albeit in different dress. It is perceived as peting materialist economic theory. As a result, the shallow moral justifications of the socialist win the day, and the real and necessary connection between free markets and human flourishing is prehended.

The sad reality is that capitalist abuses abound. Such abuses should not be defended, but using the terms implicitly defends them.

It is difficult to rebut the shallow moral appeals of the socialist. These moral arguments appeal to the young because they are inexperienced. Who can be against the eradication of poverty? This ignorance is aided and abetted by the tenured class who presume their paychecks appear as a divine right and conclude that the greedy withhold the largess from others.

An article in the Washington Post titled “A majority of millennials now reject capitalism, poll shows” provides some insights. The article’s author, Max Ehrenfreund, says that millennials see capitalism as crony capitalism. Unfortunately, Ehrenfreund collapses the term “free market” into “capitalist,” thereby subsuming human flourishing into the same materialist worldview as the people he writes about.

Human flourishing is an anthropological issue, but if materialism holds the day, the density of economic ignorance will intensify. Christopher Ingraham took a cursory look at the reading lists of Ivy League universities in “What Ivy league students are reading that you aren’t.” Conspicuously absent are the books that examine economics from the anthropological viewpoint. Universities should add to their reading list books such as Friedrich A. Hayek’sThe Road to Serfdom,which rightly perceives socialism as an enslavement of the soul.

Ignorance is alleviated by knowledge. Plato speaks ofphronesis, a type of knowledge related to how to act and think in ways related to virtue, a moral understanding that penetrates deeper than immediate practicality. These concepts reach deep but appeal to a near universal yearning prehend things beyond their immediate appearance. This yearning is the reason the banal moral appeals and shallow criticisms of the socialist are so powerful to the inexperienced young and their poorly educated elders. Critics of socialist ideologues can fault the shallow moralism that putatively justifies the soul-crushing bondage of slavery to the state. However, until they recognize and employ the moral dimension of economics in ways port to real experience, they simply will not be heard prehended.

Solzhenitsyn writes, “Socialism of any type leads to the destruction of the human spirit.” That premise, that truth, that touchstone, breaks the shackles that define economics as solely a materialist enterprise. It warns of the nascent totalitarianism lurking in the heart of socialism. It opens history, the real experience of real men as judges of the moral claims that hold the imagination of the socialist in paralytic thrall and seduces the inexperienced and uneducated.

Moral claims, then, are important—a point the socialist implicitly understands, but the free marketer/capitalist often overlooks. Stories must be told that deal with the real experiences of real people. The publication of Solzhenitsyn’s Gulags decimated the Marxist intellectual establishment of Western Europe. Socialism destroys the soul and nation. Stories revealing that destruction can penetrate seduction and lies. As Solzhenitsyn puts it, “One word of truth outweighs the world.”

Closer-to-home moral arguments could be marshaled in events such as the collapse of Venezuela, where a once thriving culture has been brought to its knees by socialist doctrine.

One impediment stands in the way of the needed clarity. If the defender of free markets does prehend the need for a transcendent touchstone, if they believe that human flourishing will simply emerge as a functioning of free agents left unfettered, then they are constricted in the same way as the materialist and will fail. Economic freedom is predicated on more than “self-interest.” es only when we see that our neighbor’s flourishing is also our own.

Rev. Johannes L. Jacobse is a priest atSt. Peter the Apostle Orthodox Churchin Bonita Springs, Florida, and president of theAmerican Orthodox Institute.

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