Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Hugo Chavez and Jack London on why socialism kills
Hugo Chavez and Jack London on why socialism kills
Jan 6, 2026 11:35 PM

In an emotional story in the January 2020 issue of Reason, Jose Cordiero relays how “socialism killed my father” – through economic scarcity. His article highlights the life-and-death stakes of wealth creation.

Cordiero writes that he was working in Silicon Valley when he got a call that his father had experienced kidney failure in Caracas.

Yet even traveling to Bolivarian Venezuela became virtually impossible. The economic collapse ushered in by Hugo Chavez’s socialist policies dried up demand: Indeed, the number of refugees who have fled the socialist paradise topped four million this summer. Furthermore, economic uncertainty reduced the number of airlines willing to supply flights to Venezuela. Cordiero had to wait two days to get a flight to his father’s side, after hearing his father may be on his deathbed.

“Fortunately, my father was still alive when I arrived in Caracas, but he required continuous dialysis,” Cordiero writes. Then he unravels the ways socialism kills through destroying economic resources:

Even in the best of the few remaining private clinics, there was a chronic lack of basic supplies and equipment. Dialyzers had to be constantly reused, and there were not enough medicines for patients. In several parts of the country, electricity and water were also rationed, including in hospitals.Given the precarious economic situation, and thanks to paratively advantageous financial situation, we decided the best course of action would be to leave Venezuela and fly to my father’s native Madrid, where he could get the treatment he needed.

But because of the decimated air travel situation, we had to wait three weeks for the next available flight to Spain. The few panies still operating in Venezuela had reduced their flights dramatically because of Venezuelan government controls. Sadly, the Caracas dialysis couldn’t hold out that long. Just two days before he was scheduled to leave his adopted country, my father died because of its disastrous policies. I still remember it vividly. I cannot forget.

Losing a parent is heart-wrenching in any circumstances, but it leaves a more bitter aftertaste knowing the difference between life and death may have been the availability of resources.

Cordiero’s story went live the same day the Fraser Institute released its annual “Waiting Your Turn” report on healthcare times in Canada. It found that waiting times have only increased in that nation’s single-payer healthcare system:

Specialist physicians surveyed report a median waiting time of 20.9 weeks between referral from a general practitioner and receipt of treatment—longer than the wait of 19.8 weeks reported in 2018. This year’s wait time is just shy of the longest wait time recorded in this survey’s history (21.2 weeks in 2017) and is 124% longer than in 1993, when it was just 9.3 weeks.

Wait times for necessary services stretch as long as 49.3 weeks on Prince Edward Island.

These delays stem from a glut of demand cresting over an outnumbered supply of doctors and specialists. The laws of economics, like the laws of biology, take their course regardless of our desire to repeal or amend them.

“Wait times can, and do, have serious consequences such as increased pain, suffering, and mental anguish,” the authors note. “In certain instances, they can also result in poorer medical es – transforming potentially reversible illnesses or injuries into chronic, irreversible conditions, or even permanent disabilities.”

In some cases, undeniably, the result has been that untreated Canadians rest in peace with Cordiero’s father.

When people think of the ways socialism kills, they often think of its long history of what R.J. Rummel called “democide”: murder of civilians by their government. This is fitting. Communism killed 100 million people in 100 years, and counting. However, as Cordiero’s mournful tale describes, socialism also kills a bit at a time. Socialist policies destroy wealth accumulation and creation, undermine property rights, and slowly induce everyone with the resources to leave their less fortunate brethren behind. Add to this the reduction in airline services and energy scarcity, and the result is deadly. An already pinched healthcare system then loses the resources – human, medical, energy – to perform at its already low level.

The snowballing effects of wealth destruction heap up an avalanche of unintended human deaths.

The closest analogy is Jack London’s immortal story “To Build a Fire.” The bination of careless habits, self-indulgence, and bine to claim his life. A refusal to learn the laws of economics leads nations to the same result, even against the government’s wishes.

Wealth creation plus a charitable concern for our neighbor allows everyone to benefit from plenty.

Christians who erroneously believe socialism and a single-payer healthcare system create a just society that values all lives should turn their eyes to Venezuela, to Cordiero’s story in Reason, and to Jack London’s immortal short story.

Brasil. CC BY 3.0 BR.)

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
Plan to Privatize the DIA Still Alive
Earlier this year I argued for a plan that would privatize the DIA, allowing for the City of Detroit to cash in on a measure of the collection’s worth to satisfy creditors and simultaneously protect the DIA’s artwork from being parceled out in bankruptcy proceedings. At the time, I had doubts about the practicability of the idea. I figured that even if such a path were to be pursued that the DIA would likely end up torn apart like a...
Do We Need To ‘Check Our Faith At The Door?’
Increasingly, Americans who adhere to a religion are told they cannot “force their beliefs” on others. Simply stating publicly that one doesn’t believe gays have the right to marry can cost you your career. Literally hundreds of lawsuits are now in motion against the government because employers do not want to be forced to violate their religious beliefs by paying for employees’ contraception and/or abortions. Richard W. Garnett ponders this topic in today’s Los Angeles Times. Garnett takes the reader...
Samuel Gregg: Free Market Economics And The Pope
Pope Francis’ Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium continues to stimulate conversation, especially in the arena of economics. According to Francis X. Rocca at the Catholic News Service, many are heralding the pope’s call for doing away with “an ‘economy of exclusion and inequality’ based on the ‘idolatry of money.'” Sam Gregg, Acton’s Director of Research, weighed in on the pope’s economic viewpoint. There’s plenty of evidence out there, from the World Bank for example, suggesting that the number of people in...
PovertyCure International Short Film Festival: Invitation To Vote And Attend
is an international network of organizations and individuals seeking to ground mon battle against global poverty in a proper understanding of the human person and society, and to encourage solutions that foster opportunity and unleash the entrepreneurial spirit that already fills the developing world. In order to continue to educate and inform people about entrepreneurial solutions to poverty, PovertyCure is hosting the PovertyCure Film Festival and Feature Documentary Preview on December 12, 2013 in New York City. According to PovertyCure,...
Acton Institute Participating in 2014 ‘Cure Our World’ Conference in Bangkok
The Acton Institute is co-sponsoring the ‘Cure Our World’ Conference, sponsored by the Catholic Business Executives Group (CBEG) for Christian business leaders. The conference will take place in Bangkok, March 20-22 of 2014. There will be many interesting speakers, including Acton president and co-founder, Rev. Robert A. Sirico. Read on for how to get the “early bird” discount. Here are seven reasons why you consider participating in this conference: To learn, meditate and inculcate the social teachings and wisdom of...
How to Think About Money Like the Working Poor (Part 2)
Yesterday I began a series of posts which attempts to explain why the working poor tend to make terrible financial decisions and how they think about money differently than other economic classes. In my initial post I wrote, Imagine that instead of having to deal with consumption smoothing decisions, at most, several times a year, you had to deal with them several times a month, or even several times a week. Now also imagine there is no workable solution that...
The Mysterious Case Of The Disappearing Doctors
No, it’s not a Sherlock Holmes book. It’s reality: American is losing doctors. When most of us have a medical concern, our first “line of defense” is the family physician: that person who checks our blood pressure, keeps on eye on our weight, looks in our ears and our throat for infections, and does our annual physicals. And it’s these doctors that are ing scarce. In American Spectator, Acton Research Fellow Jonathan Witt takes a look at this issue. My...
The Luxury of Solar-Powered Simplicity
There is a kind of trendy “green” simplicity that is a luxury only paratively wealthy can afford, says Dylan Pahman in this week’s Acton Commentary. But there is a movement catching steam that might perfectly encapsulate a type of solar-powered simplicity: The tiny house movement is a recent trend in the United States for building and living in eco-friendly domiciles about half the average size of an apartment. Graham Hill, a tiny house architect, described his philosophy in the New...
Audio: Samuel Gregg Discusses ‘Evangelii Gaudium’ on Kresta in the Afternoon
Continuing our roundup of ment on Evangelii Gaudium, here’s Acton’s Director of Research and Author of Tea Party Catholic Samuel Gregg joining host Al Kresta on Ave Maria Radio’s Kresta in the Afternoonto discuss Pope Francis’ Apostolic Exhortation, with particular emphasis on its economic elements. This interview took place on Monday, December 2nd. ...
How to Think About Money Like the Working Poor
After reading ment thread in which her online friends plaining about poor people’s self-defeating behavior, Linda Walther Tirado wrote an articled titled “Why I Make Terrible Decisions, or, Poverty Thoughts,” which chronicled her struggles with near abject poverty. I think that we look at the academic problems of poverty and have no idea of the why. We know the what and the how, and we can see systemic problems, but it’s rare to have a poor person actually explain it...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved