Before the Soviet Union, Cuba, and
Venezuela, socialism was tried here on American soil by the Pilgrims and it miserably
failed.
The Pilgrims were
funded in their journey by a group of English businessmen who required them to
live communally for seven years until their debt was repaid with interest. This
meant that there was no private ownership and there were no individual rewards for their labor.
Instead, everyone worked fields owned by the plantation. The harvest went into a common fund from which each family received an equal portion for their sustenance. The remainder was used to pay their debt. The same was true of goods and money obtained by fishing and trapping furs. The wealth went into a common fund and everyone received an equal portion for their labor.
In this socialist system, everyone was equal but also miserable.
The Pain of Socialism
William Bradford, who served as Governor of Plymouth for over thirty years, told of the challenges of this socialist system. Young men, he said, resented getting paid the same as older men when they did so much more of the work. As a result, they tended to slouch and give only a half-hearted effort since they knew they would receive the same, no matter how hard they worked.
The
older men felt they deserved more honor and recompense because of their age and experience. They resented getting paid the same as the youngsters in their midst. Bradford said
that the women often refused to go to the fields to work, complaining of
headaches, and to have compelled them to go would have been considered tyranny
and oppression.
This
socialist system discouraged work and innovation. It also produced strife and
dissension, which further robbed the inhabitants of energy and output. The
system almost destroyed the colony.
When
it became obvious that lack and, perhaps, starvation would be their lot,
Bradford and the leaders of the colony decided to make a change. After much
prayer and discussion, they decided to dispense with that part of the agreement
that required them to live communally and to replace it with a free enterprise
system.
The Gain of Free Enterprise
According
to Bradford, they then divided the land around them, allotting to each family a
certain portion that would be theirs to work and use for their own needs. Bradford
said there was an immediate change. The young men began to work much harder
because they knew they would enjoy the fruit of their own labors. There were no
more complaints from the older men for the same reason. And now the women were
seen going into the fields to work, taking the children with them, because they
knew that they and their families would benefit personally.
Instead
of lacking food, each family now grew more food and corn than they needed, and
they began to trade with one another for furnishings, clothes, and other goods.
They
also had enough excess to trade with the Indians for furs and other items. In
short, the colony began to prosper when it got rid of its socialist form of
government and implemented a free, entrepreneurial system. Of their experience
with socialism, Bradford wrote,
This
[socialist] community was found to breed much confusion and discontent and
retard much employment that would have been to their benefit and comfort . . .
and showed the vanity of that conceit of Plato's, and applauded by some of
later times, that the taking away of property and bringing in community into a
commonwealth would make them happy and flourishing; as if they were wiser than
God.
We Must Learn from History
Bradford believed that
socialism does not work because it runs counter to human nature as created by
God. In Scripture, God rewards individuals for their labor and good works.
Capitalism works because it is compatible with the reality of human nature and
the world in which we live.
Since the Pilgrims, there have been many stark examples of the failures of socialism. In fact, there is not a single example of socialism/Marxism having produced a happy and prosperous people. We should, therefore, remember the words of Winston Churchill, “Those who do not learn from history, are doomed to repeat it.”
This article was derived
from The Pilgrims and 1726: The Year that Defined America by Dr. Eddie Hyatt and are available from Amazon and
his website at www.eddiehyatt.com.
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