Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Video: Margarita Mooney, how socialism warps the human heart
Video: Margarita Mooney, how socialism warps the human heart
Jun 12, 2026 7:21 PM

Of all the speeches at the Acton Institute’s 2018 annual dinner, perhaps the one bined the greatest emotional impact and intellectual heft into the fewest minutes came from Margarita Mooney. The associate professor at Princeton Seminary, Acton University alumna, and decades-long visitor munist Cuba gave the invocation after a five-minute-long discussion about how socialism crushes the human spirit, violates personal dignity, and reduces people to selling themselves in prostitution for survival when all other businesses are prohibited.

Mooney recounts the searing images she saw in her mother’s native Cuba, beginning when she was a junior at Yale.

“My very first night in Havana, a male prostitute called my hotel room. He knew what room I was in, and he knew I was alone,” she said. “I threw all the plastic furniture in front of my room’s door, and I knelt down by my bed, praying to God for protection.”

Mooney found heartbreak and hope during her seven trips to the hemisphere’s munist nation.

“I saw what happens to the human heart when people are prohibited from starting a business, punished for going to church, and denied access to information other than that es from munist government,” she said. “All around me men and women were using their bodies as instruments of market exchange.”

Her observations could be applied throughout economically collectivist nations.

New economics meets the world’s oldest profession

The same problem attends modern-day Venezuela, where a decade of Bolivarian socialism has reduced the nation’s exports to one: a desperate population willing to do anything to survive.

In some brothels in neighboring Colombia, 58 of 60 prostitutes hail from Venezuela. “We’ve got lots of teachers, some doctors, many professional women and one petroleum engineer,”a brothel owner, Gabriel Sánchez, told the Miami Herald. “All of them showed up with their degrees in hand.” All now work as prostitutes for $25 an hour.

“If you had told me four years ago that I would be here, doing this, I wouldn’t have believed you,” said one of the women, Dayana.

Similar scenes unfold in economically ravaged, and collectivist, Greece. “I had a flower shop for 18 years — and now I’m here out of necessity,” a middle-aged woman named Dimitra, a middle-aged woman told the New York Times. The newspaper of record reported that “the number of prostitutes in the city had increased by 7 percent since 2012, yet prices have dropped drastically,” by 56 percent, to just €17 ($19.37).

Alas, the law of supply and demand applies to every market, licit or illicit.

Mooney’s tale of prostitutes so desperate they would encroach on young women should shake everyone who cares about women’s rights (and shame everyone who wears a Che Guevara sweatshirt). Yet in an era of #MeToo activism, the plight of these women – their victimization – has had no other voice.

Thankfully, Mooney’s brief remarks give reason for hope, and an antidote to soul-crushing conditions.

Mother Theresa, #MeToo, and human dignity

In the midst of the bleakness of totalitarian oppression, the thirst for freedom cannot be extirpated from the human heart. “My trips to Cuba made real to me what the Bible tells us: God gave us freedom,” she said, “and these present struggles, no matter how hard they are, can never take that away.”

Mooney underlined the fact that the world’s most truly progressive leaders in social justice – she named Mother Theresa among them – had a holistic view of human dignity. It applies to all God’s children, regardless of race, sex, ethnicity, caste, or any other immutable characteristic. The Western tradition holds that this dignity affords the right to work at lawful businesses and own private property in order to support herself and her family in a manner befitting that dignity.

She also hailed the Acton Institute, “an munity of faith-filled, truth-seeking people who fight for freedom, revive cities, and spread the message about how entrepreneurship can help reduce poverty.” Acton applies those anthropological insights to economics, placing the human person – rather than leaders’ collectivist philosophy – at the heart of exchange.

Mooney brings these truths to bear in her professional life as a faithful Catholic and political conservative in the Ivy League. She incorporates her holistic view of human dignity into her books:Faith Makes Us Live: Surviving and Thriving in the Haitian Diaspora and a second tentatively titled Living a Broken Life, Beautifully. She created her own foundation, the Scala Foundation, to give a sense munity to students seeking classical education, engaged in a rigorous pursuit of truth, and desperate for fellowship in an environment in which they believe they are alone.

You can watch Mooney’s full presentation here:

Further Acton Institute 2018 annual dinner coverage:

Rev. Robert Sirico on the eternal significance of work

The spiritual core of political hate

Rev. Tim Keller on the myth of petence

Rev. Tim Keller on how the modern identity presents problems for life and business

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
Which Vocations Should Be Off Limits to Christians?
The Reformation doctrine of vocation teaches that even seemingly secular jobs and earthly relationships are spheres where God assigns Christians to live out their faith, notes Gene Veith. But are there some lines of work that Christians should avoid? God himself works through human vocations in providential care as he governs the world. He provides daily bread through farmers and bakers. He protects us through lawful magistrates. He heals us by means of physicians, nurses, and pharmacists. He creates new...
Private Charity: A Practitioner’s View
There are only a few days left to register for the AU Online session, Private Charity: A Practitioner’s View! This online session will take place on March 27 and feature highly-rated Acton lecturer and current U.S. Regional Facilitator for Partners Worldwide, Rudy Carrasco. In a lecture that blends the theoretical with real-life encounters and stories, Rudy shows how using local knowledge and resources unavailable and unsuited to public agencies is vital for effective charity. Why wait to hear Rudy speak...
The Hunger Games: When power corrupts
Eric Teetsel, who runs the Values & Capitalism project over at AEI, invited me (among others) to pen some alternative endings to the Hunger Games trilogy. Eric is concerned that at the ending of the series, “Collins’s characters deteriorate into self-interested, cynical, vengeful creatures. The parallels of their behavior post-victory with the actions of their former dictators are made clear. Katniss even votes in support of another Hunger Games, this time featuring the children of the elites who have been...
Commentary: Human Nature: The Question behind the Culture Wars
Why do people so readily assume the worst about the religious motives of their fellow citizens? Why do we let partisanship take precedence over implementing policy solutions? In his new book, The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion, social psychologist Jonathan Haidt explores the origins of our divisions and attempts to show the way forward to mutual understanding. In his review of Haidt’s book, Anthony Bradley writes in this week’s Acton Commentary (published Mar. 21)...
John Witherspoon and the Early American Understanding of Religious Liberty
With the concept of religious liberty being treated as an antiquated and obsolete notion, it’s refreshing to be reminded of the great, but oft-forgotten, Founding Father John Witherspoon. As John Willson writes, Witherspoon—who was asigner of the Declaration, member of Congress, and President of Princeton—had a profound understanding of how the government should relate to religion: Witherspoon had not the slightest doubt that there was truth, and that it can be apprehended in the gospel of Jesus Christ as expressed...
Miller: Here I Come to Save the World Bank
In The American Spectator, Acton Institute’s Michael Matheson Miller throws his hat into the ring as he launches a tongue-in-cheek candidacy for World Bank president, but also raises serious questions about the institution’s poverty fighting programs. Miller is a research fellow at Acton, where he directs PovertyCure, an initiative that promotes enterprise solutions to poverty. Jeffrey Sachs — are you listening? Here are some planks from Miller’s campaign platform: I don’t believe that foreign aid is the solution — or...
John Locke and the Contraceptive Mandate
Michael Gerson on what the Obama administration’s view of religious liberty shares with John Locke: One tradition of religious liberty contends that freedom of conscience is protected and advanced by the autonomy of religious groups. In this view, government should honor an institutional pluralism — the ability of people to associate, live and act in accordance with their religious beliefs, limited only by the clear requirements of public order. So Roger Williams ed Catholics and Quakers to the Rhode Island...
Europe: A Turtle on its Back?
Would dissolving the mon currency, as proposed by the French free-market economist and entrepreneur Charles Gave in his bookLibéral mais non coupable(“Liberal But Not Guilty”) free the Old Continent to stand upright on its financial feet again?Or would dissolving the currency drastically end the European project altogether, as some pro-Euro technocrats in Brussels fear? Charles Gave, the chairman of the investment firmGaveKal, (and whose lecture I listened to at a 2011 Acton Conference Family Enterprise, Market Economies, and Poverty in...
Willingness and Ability to Serve in the Armed Forces
I saw the fine film Act of Valor last month, and I was struck by the level of sacrifice displayed in the lives of the service members featured. I have wondered in the meantime whether the scale of the sacrifice that’s been required of American service persons over the last two decades is sustainable. One of the film’s characters leaves behind a pregnant wife, and beyond all of the usual and somewhat abstract “faith and freedom” reasons for serving in...
Obama Administration Actions Affecting Religious Freedom
“The past year has marked a shift in religious liberty debates,” notes Sarah Pulliam Bailey at Christianity Today, “one that previously centered on hiring rights but became focused on health care requirements.” Bailey put together a helpful timeline that shows a number of actions the government took in the past year, setting precedents and priorities on various issues affecting religious freedom. ...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved