Some years ago, when I was working for an unnamed federal employee union, I had the occasion to visit a large California Social Security Administration office. There, I saw an older gentleman sitting alone eating his lunch in the breakroom. Having some time to kill before my next meeting, I sat down with him, and we began to talk.
Somehow, we got on the subject of politics, and he inquired about mine. "I am definitely not a Republican and I am not really a Democrat anymore either," I explained to him, "but something else, I suppose."
"Ah," he smiled knowingly, "a socialist."
"Perhaps," I replied, "but not in the traditional sense."
"The beautiful dream," he replied.
He then explained to me about how he was from Vietnam. During the war, the Viet Cong had come to their little village early on and taught them about Communism and the bounty it would certainly deliver unto them. For their family, living hand to mouth, and struggling each day to merely survive, it was a powerful message.
Later on, he said, the Viet Cong returned to their village and took his older brother away to fight in the war against the Americans. It would not be long before they would hear about his death from disease. After that, the Viet Cong returned many times to take what precious little food the villagers had. And after that, they came and murdered his family when they had nothing left to give. He himself had been left for dead, and he raised his right arm then to show that it was missing from the elbow down. Then he pulled back his button-down shirt a little so I could see the tops of still protruding scars.
"And then the Americans came," he said. "And they burned what was left of our village so the enemy couldn't use it anymore, and they took the survivors away, including me."
He genuinely smiled at me again as he rose to return to work and placed his one remaining hand upon my shoulder. "Still, though," he said. "It remains a beautiful dream, doesn't it?"
I sat there thoughtfully until my next meeting, deeply moved by his words.
He is, after all, correct. Communist regimes have not provided a utopia or an answer to the woes of the masses. The revolutions have only served to depose oligarchs of the capitalist classes and replace them with oligarchs of the political classes.
The Viet Nam war cost our own nation some 58,220 young service members and shattered the lives of countless others. We revere them now, and the sacrifices they made, whether we agree with the often-misguided principles of the war or not.
History has proven that Communism is not the answer. But neither is untethered Capitalism.
For as much we as a nation opine over the loss of American lives in any war (and we should), Viet Nam cost an average of 7,278 American lives each year for a period of eight years. It remains a grave national tragedy.
On other hand, under unrestrained Capitalism, things are decidedly worse than any conflict of the last 75 years.
The American Journal of Public Heath estimates that between 35,327 and 44,789 Americans die each and every year due to a lack of health insurance coverage. The Harvard Medical School puts that number at 45,000 each year.
For those of us fortunate enough to survive just this one aspect of unbridled Capitalism, the Kaiser Family Foundation estimates that 100 million Americans have medical debt to the combined tune of $220 billion.
And where on earth does all that money go? I will give you a hint. It does not go to doctors or nurses. In fact, if you look at that $220 billion number, it shrinks in comparison to the $95 billion in PROFITS that the US Health Insurance industry raked in during just the first half of 2024, or the $112 billion in PROFITS the 10 largest pharmaceutical companies walked away with in in 2022 alone.
Meanwhile, Open Secrets shows that just one organization, The Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, spent $31,720,000 lobbying Congress, while member companies made campaign contributions to both sides.
So, for as much as outright Communism has been shown by history not to work, so too has supposed "free market" Capitalism. Something has to change and soon.
And I know that right now, you are thinking, yeah but, we are watching the rise of despotism and the alt-right here in the United States so we are further away from socialized healthcare in this country than we have ever been before. Maybe now is not the best time to push further to the left.
I would argue that now is precisely the time to push and push hard. Yesterday, on April 5th, 2005, we witnessed tens of thousands of Americans take to the streets in protest of Trump and Musk and DOGE. There is a real movement in the making. Populism is on the rise. And it will blow in whichever direction seems most likely to bust the constraints of the status quo.
I recently had the occasion to watch three back-to-back documentaries about the January 6th rioters. I was expecting radical right-wing ideologues or outright Nazis and some were. What I saw instead, was that a solid 40% from among these three independent documentaries were self-proclaimed Obama voters before. They voted for Trump for the reason they voted for Obama. They wanted change. Real change. Radical change.
They wanted a plan for radical change in the status quo and if it meant misguidedly blaming immigrants or trans people, they were willing to accept it. The alternative after all, was a Democratic party without a real plan for change, and a candidate who openly admitted she would do nothing to change the course of the last administration's policies, while moving ever further right of center and parading around with the Cheney family, while the toiling masses struggled to merely survive.
It is the reason thousands pushed their way into the capitol demanding blood from Democrats and Republicans. It is also the same reason why Bernie drew over 30,000 people to a rally in Colorado this week, and tens of thousands protested around the nation yesterday.
I know, if you've made it this far you likely think I am crazy and fail to appreciate the differences in the sides, and you might be right about the crazy part, but I am surrounded by GOPers here in Iowa and I talk to them every day so I am aware of the difference. The people long for a break in the establishment that they know is broken and dysfunctional, and if the left were able to muster anything that resembled an actual plan, the people would flock to it.
It is not enough to despise Trump or rally in the streets or burn Tesla's, even if they do emit a pleasing colorful glow when lit a fire at night. The left, not the Democrats who are bought and paid for by the same billionaire class as the Republicans, but the left, needs a plan that does not entail the open embrace of Mao and Stalin.
For the future is not completely bleak and without hope even now. The next individuals inline for real political ascent should have radical plans of action that are neither completely capitalist nor communist, but an amalgamation of political philosophies that work to provide real solutions to the nation's woes.
We can have free markets and create a world where small businesses can thrive again, free of the suppression of monopoly rule by the Wal-Marts of the world. We can have retirement security by bolstering Social Security with tax dollars gained from fair taxation of the super-rich and large corporations. We can have affordable housing if we move to eliminate private equity firms from buying up all of the family properties and say to them to either sell their assets back to the open market or prepare to have them seized and sold at auction.
And yes, we can have healthcare for all, like every other developed nation in the world if we federalize the healthcare system and pharmaceutical giants and the hospitals, while driving health insurance companies back into the stone ages, where they can exist to serve a few wealthy clients who choose to still employ them. And we can have small business family practices again, where doctors can make decisions about the care of their patients without corporate oversight and private insurer restrictions.
I say these things because I see so many younger people embracing the far-left ideals of failed states just as many are embracing the ideals of failed alt-right states, neither of which, I pray, ever come to complete fruition on American soils. But there does, however, remain hope for change and a departure from a failed two-party state where both sides have been equally corrupted.
There is some form of a beautiful dream that is still alive and within reach, but we need work to create a vision of what exactly that dream is, because currently, there is only the nightmare and nearly all of America longs to be awakened from it.
Thanks for reading,
Buzz
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