From accusations of embracing socialism leveled at the Obama administration by the Tea Party movement to the rise of self-proclaimed democratic socialist Bernie Sanders as the second highest vote-getter in the 2016 and 2020 Democratic Party primaries, socialism has been an emerging movement and topic of conversation in the American body politic.


While polling data suggests that socialism is generally still viewed far less favorably than capitalism or free markets overall, the younger Millennial and Gen Z generations are more embracing of socialism than generations before. Similarly, those younger generations are more likely than their forbearers to be among the Nones: those who proclaim no religious affiliation and no religious or spiritual beliefs.


Is socialism filling in for the human religious impulse, allowing people to feel a part of something larger than themselves without embracing the concepts of God and church?


On this episode, Kevin Williamson, roving correspondent for National Review and author of the 2010 book, “The Politically Incorrect Guide to Socialism,” discusses the emergence of socialism in American politics and the spiritual role it seems to play now, and has historically played, for its proponents.


Kevin Williamson at National Review


The Politically Incorrect Guide to Socialism - Kevin Williamson


The Celestial Afterlife of Karl Marx - Kevin Williamson


Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s crass Marxist materialism - Dan Hugger


The key to understanding Bernie Sanders - Rev. Ben Johnson


Bruce Ashford: Marxism is a false religion (video) - Rev. Ben Johnson


There is no 'Catholic case for communism' - Rev. Ben Johnson


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