Regardless of the obvious failures of Karl Marx’s utopian agenda, many believe that alleviation to poverty and social ills are found in the promise of big government, redistribution of wealth and regulations. Rev. Robert Sirico, co-founder and president of the Acton Institute, would say otherwise.
“One need only trace the causes for the collapse of the USSR more than 25 years ago to observe the extreme ings of centralized planning,” writes Sirico in his article titled “Despite evidence, myth of Marxist utopia persists.” While history exemplifies the moral bankruptcy of Marx’s ideas, the present also bears witness to the grave ings” of socialism. “The catalog of ignominies inflicted upon the populations incorporated under the banner of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (and ideologically aligned regimes such as North Korea, China, Cuba, and Venezuela) is well-known and oft-repeated,” says Sirico.
The decline of extreme poverty over the last 25 years proves that free market systems pose the best solution.
It’s up to all of us to determine the best methods of reducing the number of poor as much as humanly possible, regardless of the cause of their poverty: external or self-inflicted. The operative word ishumanly. That doesn’t mean we should downplay efforts to alleviate the suffering of the poor, but, instead, recognize that massive government wealth and e redistribution plans disingenuously described as programs designed to assist the poor actually risk increasing poverty.
Read Sirico’s whole article found inThe Philadelphia Inquirer.