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Monday, June 22, 2026

Democratic Socialists Threaten Private Property Rights, Which Are ‘Essential for Personal Liberty, Economic Dynamism, Market Efficiency, and Social Order’



Democratic Socialism and Its Inapplicability

     The continued primary wins of Democratic Socialists as well as far-right candidates reflect a flaw in our primary system. Many people don’t vote in primaries, and those who do are often motivated by a specific candidate, often one on the fringe. Our primary system favors fringe candidates, and so we often get candidates that reflect a distorted reality. Far-left or far-right candidates are often supported by small minorities. On the left, I would estimate that somewhere between 10 and 15%, and likely closer to 10%, and hopefully less, of Democrats actually favor Democratic Socialists. Of course, this varies by state and region. Since our primary system favors fringe candidates, it also disfavors centrist or moderate candidates, the most likely ones to forge the compromises necessary for good government.

     The idea of socialism, of course, derives from Marxism and is associated with failed states, oppressive states, poor human rights records, massive corruption, and brutal regimes like the Soviet Union. Thus, it is difficult for many of us to see how so many can put those facts aside to endorse socialism as some kind of doctrine that fosters fairness, equality, and functionality. They often conflate social welfare with socialism. They often cite Scandinavian social democracies, which are really quite capitalist, but also benefit from sovereign wealth funds. In Norway’s case, its sovereign wealth fund was built by its oil and gas wealth. It is a petro-state that favors a good degree of social welfare.

     Government-owned and government-run institutions are a feature of socialist and capitalist countries, including the U.S. Ideas like socialized medicine, or rather, universal health care, are often touted as socialist but are really just areas where government involvement can assure wider availability and affordability for the poor. Democratic socialists favor universal health care in some form, as do I, many other Democrats, and some Republicans. It really has nothing to do with socialism. These notions are often put forth to make socialism seem benign and acceptable.

     Others, especially those from former Soviet Republics in Eastern Europe and Western Asia, are much more critical of socialism since they know what it’s like living under Soviet tyranny. Consider the following quotes of someone who lived under socialism in the Soviet Republic of Georgia and his father’s grueling oppression under it.

But socialism, in practice, does not work without force and brutality, even if you give it nice adjectives like “democratic.” Socialism is not really a policy or an economic system. It is not Scandinavia. It is a machine whose only function is to destroy anyone sufficiently capable, principled or stubborn enough to threaten those who operate it. It does this legally, bureaucratically and, when necessary, with bullets.”

And even when socialism finally and thankfully disappears, it has a distinctive habit of leaving behind impoverished, authoritarian basket-case countries with decades of problems to sort out.”

In 1988, the same year my father was secretly listening to Radio Free Europe (Soviet law classified this as a crime), Bernie Sanders sat bare-chested in a Soviet banya, wrapped only in a towel, singing with his Soviet hosts over vodka toasts. He later called it “a very strange honeymoon.” His hosts knew exactly what to show him and what to hide from him.”

My father knew what was being hidden. He had lived inside it.”

     In a Fox News segment, Julian Epstein notes that:

Socialism is basically the idea that if you’re not happy with things, it’s the system’s fault and the government will bail you out.”

     Certainly, capitalism is the ‘scapegoat’ used over and over by socialists. With them, blaming everything on capitalism is commonplace. Epstein decried what he says is the Democratic Party’s movement toward extreme candidates. While some may disagree, there is evidence. A current Democratic Socialist Congressional candidate and Muslim-convert, endorsed by New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, Darializa Avila Chevalier, has been associated with:

“…thousands of posts and reposts expressing support for abolishing police, prisons and borders, as well as seizing private property and nationalizing major industries and calling into question Israel’s right to exist.”

     Although she backtracked and deleted her old Twitter account, saying that those views don’t reflect her views today, she is widely known to have such views, including the common socialist slogan to “seize the means of production.”

     We have had Bernie Sanders for many years, and AOC and a few others, fringe politicians with influence in certain places, but Mamdani as mayor of New York is perhaps the first occasion in America of a Democratic Socialist with significant executive power. Mamdani promised in his inaugural address to introduce New Yorkers to “the warmth of collectivism.” Mamdani recently announced a plan to transfer properties to tenants and non-profit groups, citing bad landlords. According to Jonathan Turley, in an opinion piece for The Hill:

Mamdani faced criticism for his appointment of Cea Weaver as the new director of the Office to Protect Tenants. She previously called for efforts to “impoverish the white middle-class” and called homeownership “racist” while demanding the seizure of private property.”

Videos of Weaver echoed thread-worn socialist mantras that are the signature of the Mamdani Administration. “I think the reality is, that for centuries we’ve really treated property as an individualized good and not a collective good,” she said. “And transitioning to treating it as a collective good and towards a model of shared equity will require that we think about it differently and it will mean that families — especially white families, but some POC families who are homeowners as well — are going to have a different relationship to property than the one that we currently have.”

Weaver famously tweeted out her beliefs about private property, which are apparently widely shared in the Mamdani administration: “Private property, including and kind of ESPECIALLY homeownership is a weapon of White supremacy masquerading as ‘wealth building’ public policy.”

     Mamdani’s effort to develop city-run grocery stores is also being revealed as a likely boondoggle:

His grocery stores show the same economic sleight of hand. The city is planning to spend $30 million to create the first store — four times what such stores normally cost. On top of that cost, it was discovered that the city had already appropriated $25 million for the improvement of the site. That is $55 million for a site that will not go on the market for the highest bidders, but rather be operated by the city at a loss.”

     It has also been pointed out that the current grocery stores in these areas may have trouble competing with the heavily subsidized city-owned stores. It will certainly distort the market.

     A recent article in the New York Post highlights the DSA’s development of its “community defense” initiative, called the Red Rabbits Security Commission, which seeks to have an expanded role in street protests and direct-action organizing. Now, I think it’s fine if someone wants to protest against the overarching actions of ICE, for instance, but if we have organized political factions with much broader goals against our current political system setting the terms of protests, that is a recipe for disaster. The group was previously called the National Vigilance Committee but changed due to the negative connotations of vigilantism. Previous members have praised political revolutionary violence. Current interests include:

“…martial-arts sparring, evacuation planning, wound-packing, radio communications, the use of umbrellas and signs to shield participants from and block “fascists,” and even chemical-exposure training, in which participants practiced being pepper-sprayed.”

     Some local DSA groups work with:

“…the Party for Socialism and Liberation — a would-be revolutionary political party with close ties to the Communist Party of China. Portland DSA cited its work with the National Lawyers Guild — a left-wing legal group with historic ties to the Soviet Union — to provide know-your-rights trainings.”

     Yuck!

     The article goes on to suggest that such activities could endanger the DSA’s designation as a 501(c)(4) social welfare organization.

Some Red Rabbits activities, like know-your-rights education and de-escalation training, probably meet that threshold. But it’s hard to argue that a street-level security force geared toward disruption, confrontation, and resistance to law enforcement exists primarily to “further the common good.”

Tactics such as blocking traffic with bicycles, training activists to escape physical holds, forming umbrella phalanxes to confront “fascists” and conducting “takedowns on intersections” bear little resemblance to traditional social-welfare activities.”

Instead, they suggest preparation for a broader “national uprising” — one of the organization’s stated directives.”

 

The Importance of Private Property

     Private property is simply ownership by a non-governmental entity, whether a person, a group of people, or a corporation. Of course, governments also have a stake in private property through taxation, or property taxes. According to Wikipedia, there are four types of property taxes:

The four broad types of property taxes are land, improvements to land (immovable human-made objects, such as buildings), personal property (movable human-made objects), and intangible property.”

     Wikipedia also explains how socialists generally regard private property:

Socialist economists are critical of private property in the means of production, as socialism aims to replace it with social ownership or public property. Socialists generally argue that private property relations limit the development of productive forces once production becomes increasingly collective, and some socialist theories maintain that economic functions traditionally performed by capitalists could be carried out through collective or social ownership. Socialists generally favor social ownership either to eliminate class distinctions between owners and workers or as a component of the development of a post-capitalist economic system.”

     We know that economic freedom, which is girded by private property rights, leads to prosperity. Countries with adequate economic freedom have higher economic productivity and exhibit more efficient use of resources. Private property rights also support social cohesion, especially since there is no fear of the government seizing property.

     Below, it is explained how private property rights provide the basis for economic development.




     When Hugo Chavez was elected in Venezuela in 1998, his Bolivarian socialist government seized wealthy estates, redistributed wealth, and seized and nationalized companies, including the oil companies that had previously made it the wealthiest country in South America. It went from there to the country with the second least economic freedom by 2018, second only to the North Korean brutal dictatorship. It essentially became a failed state with hyperinflation, mass corruption, and starving people, which led to mass migration out of the country.

     Another New York Post article explores Bernie Sanders’ call to nationalize half of the AI industry. Bernie had previously called for a national ban on AI data centers. A few Progressive states, like New York, have enacted state bans. The Post’s response to Bernie’s proposal notes:

It has zero chance of passing even a Democratic Congress; it’s blatantly unconstitutional; it’s economic suicide — and it’s fundamentally tyrannical.”

     While Trump has taken a small but significant government stake in a few companies, raising eyebrows, it falls short of the seizure of private property. The Post decries collectivism and continues:

That collectivism brings oppression and ruin everywhere it’s tried — but then Sanders has been a fan of every nation that’s impoverished itself this way, from the Soviet Union to Castro’s Cuba to Chavez’s Venezuela.”

     Bernie was originally impressed by the collectivist kibbutz system he participated in in Israel and its purported communist origins. He honeymooned in Moscow, and after Chavez was elected in Venezuela, when it still had oil wealth before the Chavismo government ruined it, he hailed it as the great success of South America. Under socialism, it became the exact opposite. The Post expressed dismay that there is not more backlash against Bernie’s ideas, which they call “monstrous.” I agree that we need to denounce such ideas strongly. I agree that it is a very bad look for the Democratic Party to support such nonsense.

     In a twist for this post, there is a situation in New York City where seizing a specific private property is warranted.

A bipartisan majority of NYC Council members is demanding Mayor Zohran Mamdani seize privately owned property in order to save a piece of Manhattan history tied to the Underground Railroad

       They called on Mamdani to use the city’s eminent domain powers to preserve the property and “to block a proposal to build a 100-foot-high commercial building next door to the Merchant’s House Museum in NoHo, where a secret passageway used to smuggle slaves to freedom was discovered in February.”

 

 

 

References:

 

Opinion: Mamdani introduces New York to socialism, 'block by block'. Opinion by Jonathan Turley, opinion contributor. The Hill. May 30, 2026. Opinion: Mamdani introduces New York to socialism, 'block by block'

Private property. Wikipedia. Private property - Wikipedia

Importance of Private Property Rights. Bruce Colbert, AICP. Property Owners Association of Riverside County. July 16, 2018. Importance of Private Property Rights

At $55M, Mamdani’s city-owned grocery store is a growing boondoggle. Opinion by Post Editorial Board. New York Post. May 30, 2026. At $55M, Mamdani’s city-owned grocery store is a growing boondoggle

Socialist 'Red Rabbits' are training for national uprising against cops. Opinion by Stu Smith. New York Post. June 9, 2026. Socialist 'Red Rabbits' are training for national uprising against cops

Mamdani-backed congressional candidate deleted posts calling to seize private property, abolish police, borders, prisons. Andrew Kaczynski and Em Steck. CNN. June 1, 2026. Mamdani-backed congressional candidate deleted posts calling to seize private property, abolish police, borders, prisons | CNN Politics

Julian Epstein: Democratic Party is losing moral authority by aligning with extremists. Fox News. June 12, 2026. Julian Epstein: Democratic Party is losing moral authority by aligning with extremists | Watch

NYC Council: Mamdani must seize private property to save Manhattan Underground Railroad site. Rich Calder. New York Post. June 13, 2026. NYC Council: Mamdani must seize private property to save Manhattan Underground Railroad site

Opinion: My family lived through socialism. Most Democrats are frighteningly wrong about it. Opinion by Emzari Gelashvili. The Hill. June 17, 2026. Opinion: My family lived through socialism. Most Democrats are frighteningly wrong about it.

Bernie Sanders’ call to seize the AI industry has damning lessons about politics today. Opinion by Post Editorial Board. New York Post. June 21, 2026. Bernie Sanders’ call to seize the AI industry has damning lessons about politics today

 

 

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