• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • News
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
JOHN STOSSEL: This Thanksgiving Let’s Be Thankful For Capitalism And Abundance

JOHN STOSSEL: This Thanksgiving Let’s Be Thankful For Capitalism And Abundance

November 28, 2024
Feds Bust Ring Smuggling Next-Gen Chips To China On Same Day Trump Opens Export Floodgates

Feds Bust Ring Smuggling Next-Gen Chips To China On Same Day Trump Opens Export Floodgates

December 9, 2025
Supreme Court Allows Cut in Funding for Teacher Training

Supreme Court Weighs GOP Bid to Scrap Longstanding Campaign Spending Limits

December 9, 2025
FBI Agents Given Boot For Kneeling Before BLM Sue Trump Admin

FBI Agents Given Boot For Kneeling Before BLM Sue Trump Admin

December 9, 2025
Georgia Senate Power Player Steps Down to Go All-In on Lt. Governor Bid

Georgia Senate Power Player Steps Down to Go All-In on Lt. Governor Bid

December 9, 2025
Second Professor Removed As Bible-Focused Gender Essay Upends Campus

Second Professor Removed As Bible-Focused Gender Essay Upends Campus

December 9, 2025
‘Delete S*** Often’: Antifa-Linked Legal Group Has Tips For Anti-ICE Activists Afraid Of Feds

‘Delete S*** Often’: Antifa-Linked Legal Group Has Tips For Anti-ICE Activists Afraid Of Feds

December 9, 2025
Blakeman Launches Bid for New York Governor, Setting Up GOP Showdown

Blakeman Launches Bid for New York Governor, Setting Up GOP Showdown

December 9, 2025
Trump Lashes Out At Ilhan Omar, Accuses Her Of Marrying Brother

Trump Lashes Out At Ilhan Omar, Accuses Her Of Marrying Brother

December 9, 2025
Crowdfunding Surge Reveals Growing Strain on Basic Household Budgets

Crowdfunding Surge Reveals Growing Strain on Basic Household Budgets

December 9, 2025
Australia Launches Youth Social Media Ban

Australia Launches Youth Social Media Ban

December 9, 2025
2 Senators Move to Block Trump Image on Coin

2 Senators Move to Block Trump Image on Coin

December 9, 2025
$2.7B Lifeline Offered for South Carolina’s Long-Dormant Nuclear Project

$2.7B Lifeline Offered for South Carolina’s Long-Dormant Nuclear Project

December 9, 2025
  • Donald Trump
  • Tariffs
  • Congress
  • Faith
  • Immigration
Tuesday, December 9, 2025
  • Login
IJR
  • Politics
  • US News
  • Commentary
  • World News
  • Faith
  • Latest Polls
No Result
View All Result
IJR
No Result
View All Result
Home Commentary

JOHN STOSSEL: This Thanksgiving Let’s Be Thankful For Capitalism And Abundance

by Daily Caller News Foundation
November 28, 2024 at 10:30 am
in Commentary, Op-Ed, Wire
243 10
0
JOHN STOSSEL: This Thanksgiving Let’s Be Thankful For Capitalism And Abundance
492
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Daily Caller News Foundation

As we gather this Thanksgiving, it’s easy to take abundance for granted.

Leftovers are practically guaranteed.

It wasn’t always this way.

For most of history, there were no Thanksgiving feasts. Hunger, if not starvation, was the norm.

Today, supermarkets are stocked with exotic foods from all over the world. Most of it is more affordable than ever. Even after President Joe Biden’s 8% inflation, Americans spend less than 12% of our income on food, half of what they spent 100 years ago.

Why?

Because free markets happened. Capitalism happened.

When there is rule of law and private property, and people feel secure that no thief or government will take their property, farmers find new ways to grow more on less land. Greedy entrepreneurs lower costs and deliver goods faster. Consumers have better options.

Yet today many Americans trash capitalism, demanding government “fixes” to make sure everyone gets equal amounts of this and that.

But it is in countries with the most government intervention where there are empty store shelves and hungrier people.

In socialist Venezuela, affordable food is hard to find.

In Cuba, government was going to make everything plentiful. But people suffered so much that, to prevent starvation, the Castros broke from communist principles and rented out state-owned land to private capitalists.

Millions still go hungry around the world. The cause is rarely drought or “income inequality” or colonialism, but government control. Corruption, tariffs, political self-dealing and short-sighted regulations block food from reaching those who need it most.

This week, we celebrate the Pilgrims, who learned this lesson the hard way.

When they first landed in America, they tried communal living. The harvest was shared equally. That seemed fair.

But it failed miserably. A few Pilgrims worked hard, but others didn’t, claiming “weakness and inability,” as William Bradford, the governor of the colony, put it.

They nearly starved.

Desperate, Bradford tried another approach. “Every family,” he wrote, “was assigned a parcel of land.”

Private property! Capitalism! Suddenly, more pilgrims worked hard.

Of course they did. Now they got to keep what they made.

Bradford wrote, “It made all hands very industrious.”

He spelled out the lesson “The failure of this experiment of communal service, which was tried for several years, and by good and honest men proves the emptiness of the theory … taking away of private property, and the possession of it in community … would make a state happy and flourishing.”

Fast forward 400 years, and many Americans have forgotten what Bradford learned.

I see why socialism is popular. The idea of one big, harmonious collective feels good.

But it brings disaster.

Family dinners already have plenty of disagreements —children fight; adults bicker. Imagine what that would be like among millions of strangers.

Collectivist systems encourage dependency, stifle initiative and waste resources.

The same communal conceit that nearly starved the Pilgrims destroyed lives in the Soviet Union and led to mass starvation in China.

When everyone is forced into the same plan, most people will take as much as they can and produce as little as they can get away with.

Economists call it the “tragedy of the commons” referring to a common plot of land, controlled by, say, sheep owners. Each has an incentive to breed more sheep, which then eat the common’s grass until all of it is gone, and everyone goes hungry.

Only when the commons is divided into private property does each owner agree to limit his herd’s grazing so there will be enough for his sheep to eat tomorrow.

These same principles apply to many aspects of our lives: We thrive when individuals have a deed to their property and are confident that they can keep what they create. Then they create more.

That is what the Pilgrims learned: Incentives matter. Capitalist ownership is what creates American abundance.

Every Thanksgiving, I’m thankful for free markets and private property.

They are the ingredients of prosperity.

Every Tuesday at JohnStossel.com, Stossel posts a new video about the battle between government and freedom. He is the author of “Give Me a Break: How I Exposed Hucksters, Cheats, and Scam Artists and Became the Scourge of the Liberal Media.”

The views and opinions expressed in this commentary are those of the author and do not reflect the official position of the Daily Caller News Foundation.

COPYRIGHT 2024 BY JFS PRODUCTIONS INC.

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact [email protected].

Tags: big-tent-ideasDCNFU.S. News
Share197Tweet123
Daily Caller News Foundation

Daily Caller News Foundation

Advertisements

Top Stories June 10th
Top Stories June 7th
Top Stories June 6th
Top Stories June 3rd
Top Stories May 30th
Top Stories May 29th
Top Stories May 24th
Top Stories May 23rd
Top Stories May 21st
Top Stories May 17th

Join Over 6M Subscribers

We’re organizing an online community to elevate trusted voices on all sides so that you can be fully informed.





IJR

    Copyright © 2024 IJR

Trusted Voices On All Sides

  • About Us
  • GDPR Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Editorial Standards & Corrections Policy
  • Subscribe to IJR

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Politics
  • US News
  • Commentary
  • World News
  • Faith
  • Latest Polls

    Copyright © 2024 IJR

Top Stories June 10th Top Stories June 7th Top Stories June 6th Top Stories June 3rd Top Stories May 30th Top Stories May 29th Top Stories May 24th Top Stories May 23rd Top Stories May 21st Top Stories May 17th