Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Hugo Chavez and Jack London on why socialism kills
Hugo Chavez and Jack London on why socialism kills
Jan 9, 2026 5:54 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
Why Religious Liberty Is Important for Institutions
Is religious liberty only for individuals or also for institutions? As Ryan Messmore explains, America’s founders thought that the Constitution’s “first freedom” is for both: True liberty must take account of the relational aspect of human nature. And truereligious liberty, in particular, must entail the freedom to exercise one’s faith in the various relationships and joint activities of day-to-day life. In other words, religious freedom applies to participation in institutions. Each one of those institutions—our particular school, church, workplace, etc.—takes...
The Next Civil Rights Movement
During last year’s Acton University—have you signed up for this year yet?—Nelson Kloosterman gave a lecture on the subject of school choice and private education. In the latest issue of Comment magazine, Kloosterman expands on his claim that parental choice is “the next civil rights movement“: Let me begin with some ments designed to set up the discussion that follows. First, and most importantly, I believe that the fundamental issue in this matter involves parental choice, even though the far...
Are Young Millennials Less Religious or Simply Young?
Joe Carter recently posted a summary of a new studyconducted jointly by Public Religion Research Institute and Georgetown University’s Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs that shows that college-aged Millennials (18-24 year olds) “report significant levels of movement from the religious affiliation of their childhood, mostly toward identifying as religiously unaffiliated.” He also noted the tendency of college-aged Millennials to be more politically liberal. Just yesterday, the same study was highlighted by Robert Jones of the Washington Post,...
Jacoby, D’Souza debate Religion in the Public Square
Susan Jacoby and Dinesh D’Souza met here in Grand Rapids at Fountain Street Church on Thursday, April 26, to debate the merits of religion in public discourse. The debate, co-sponsored by The Intercollegiate Studies Institute and the Hauenstein Center for Presidential Studies, was titled, “Is Christianity Good for American Politics?” Susan Jacoby is program director at The Center for Inquiry and author of The Age of American Unreason and Alger Hiss and The Battle for History. She argued for the...
Video: Chuck Colson speaks at the Abraham Kuyper & Leo XIII Conference
On October 31, 1998, Charles Colson came to Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Michigan to deliver the closing address at Acton’s “The Legacy of Abraham Kuyper & Leo XIII” conference, sponsored jointly with Calvin Seminary. “This is a momentous time for the Church as we reflect on two thousand years since the birth of Christ, and as we approach the millenium. And the question, I suspect, that all of us are asking and that the Church should be asking across...
The Heritage Guide to the Constitution
Our friends at the Heritage Foundation have created an invaluable online tool for learning about the U.S. Constitution: The Heritage Guide to the Constitution is intended to provide a brief and accurate explanation of each clause of the Constitution as envisioned by the Framers and as applied in contemporary law. Its particular aim is to provide lawmakers with a means to defend their role and to fulfill their responsibilities in our constitutional order. Yet while the Guide will provide a...
Writing Tips for Your On Call in Culture Blog Entry
“Think, Think, Think” –Pooh It’s always hard to sit down and write. There are a million distractions that tempt us away from the keyboard or notepad and entangle us in the details of life. Not that these details are bad. In fact, as munity focused on being On Call in Culture, many of those details are the whole purpose. But before you get out there and answer the calling that God has put on your life as a dentist, professor,...
Was Thomas More a proto-communist?
In Utopia, many modern intellectuals say Sir Thomas More advocates an ideal political and social order without private petition, citizens quarreling over worldly possessions, poverty and other “evils” supposedly brought on by a market-based society. At least that is the way social liberals, including left-leaning Christians, tend to interpret this great saint’s 1516 literary masterpiece, believing the English Catholic statesman’s work presents his vision of an ideal monwealth modeled on the early Church (even ifthose munist experiments failed). Recently, Istituto...
Fair Trade or Free Trade?
Is ‘fair trade’ more fair or more just than free trade? While free trade has been increasingly maligned, The Fair Trade movement has e increasingly popular over the last several years. Many see this movement as a way to help people in the developing world and as a more just alternative to free trade. On the other hand, others argue that fair trade creates an unfair advantage that tends to harm the poor. Dr. Victor Claar addresses this question in...
What Christian Education Is Not
“Each generation needs to re-own the rationale for Christian education,” says philosopher James K.A. Smith, “to ask ourselves ‘Why did we do this?’ and ‘Should we keep doing this?’” In answering such questions, Smith notes, “it might be helpful to point out what Christian education is not”: First, Christian education is not meant to be merely “safe” education. The impetus for Christian schooling is not a protectionist concern, driven by fear, to sequester children from the big, bad world. Christian...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved