By Jim Geraghty
Monday, September 29, 2025
Over the weekend, the Wall Street Journal offered
a deeply reported analysis of the young socialists who are fueling the
Democratic Party’s lurch to the left in the past years, tracing it back to
economic anxieties of the Great Recession. There’s an eye-opening description
of a meeting of communists in Philadelphia:
On a recent evening, 15 comrades
from the Northwest Philadelphia cell of the Revolutionary Communists of America
gathered for their weekly meeting in a classroom at Thomas Jefferson
University.
The mostly 20- and 30-somethings
had eschewed the Mao caps and Che Guevara T-shirts of previous generations.
Soon, though, terms like “ruling class,” “parasitic,” “bourgeoisie” and
“dialectic” were bandied about the room as they settled into an earnest discussion
of the assigned reading, an article entitled “Morality and the Class Struggle.”
References to the 2008 crisis were also plentiful. Several members invoked it
when explaining what prompted them to ditch “the milquetoast” left, as one
called it.
Zach Bickel, 34, blamed the
crisis for taking his father’s job and causing his community in central
Pennsylvania to be “whittled away.”
“The system never really
recovered from 2008,” said Nico Melton, 25, who claimed to have become
disillusioned while studying at the Wharton School at University of
Pennsylvania, the capitalist bastion that is Trump’s alma mater. Melton was one
of just a few members when the cell was formed about a year ago.
At times, the meeting felt like a
support group—in this case, for people suffering from the modern economy. Communism,
they acknowledged, hadn’t worked anywhere in the world it had been attempted—at
least not yet.
Now, I just want you to take a moment to savor the
off-the-charts arrogance to look at the entire evil history of communism, with
its gulags, secret police, invasions, wholesale suppression of dissent and free
speech, political prisoners, forced labor camps, the Holodomor, the Great
Purge, the Cultural Revolution in China, the Cambodian genocide, and modern-day
North Korea . . . and then to conclude, “Yes, but we can make it work
better. It will be different when we do it!”
Every previous group of communists has been equally
convinced that this time, everything will turn out differently, concentrating
massive amounts of power in the state won’t lead to the corruption of those
running it, the stifling of dissent will be for the greater good, the state
punishment of those who disagree will be fair and not abusive, and a worker’s
paradise is just a five-year plan away. It would be funny if it didn’t
represent such willful blindness, and if people like this weren’t gaining more
strength in the modern Democratic Party.
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