The great economist Pierre Lemieux published the Substack post, "If this is Capitalism, Give Me Socialism," recently. He wrote that surveys revealed, "...more than 50% of voters aged 18 to 39 would like a democratic socialist candidate' to win the 2028 presidential election; and that three-fourths agree that 'Major Industries like health care, energy, and big tech should be nationalized.'”
Dr. Lemieux notes that people are attracted to socialism because they think the current system in the U.S. is capitalism. But is it?
When I was earning a degree in economics in the late 1980s, no respected economist referred to the U.S. as capitalist. At best, it was a mixed economy. So, how did it become capitalist? Socialists declared it so with the election of Reagan as President in 1980 because Reagan ended price controls on energy and transportation. The mainstream media, historians, the social sciences and humanities promote socialism. Socialists claimed that Reagan had unleashed wild west, no-holds-barred, totally unregulated, laissez-faire capitalism. But he hadn't.



