The Stack: Anti-Communism Week Why Freedom Wins
As the White House marks Anti-Communism Week, Todd Huff unpacks the lessons we keep forgetting. Communism promised equality—but delivered mass murder, starvation, and tyranny, claiming over 100 million lives in the 20th century.
Todd traces the ideology from Marx and Engels to Stalin, Mao, and Pol Pot, exposing how every utopian scheme ends in state-imposed misery. He contrasts equality of outcome with the true moral good—equality of opportunity within freedom—and warns that socialism’s “kinder” façade leads to the same place.
Citing Milton Friedman and Ronald Reagan, Todd explains why America’s founders built a system that limits power because government is force.
From faith to free markets, this episode defends the principles that keep individuals free—and nations alive. Conservative, not bitter…and absolutely pro-truth and pro-freedom.
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📝 Transcript: Anti Communism Week Why Freedom Wins
The Todd Huff Show – November 12, 2025
Host: Todd Huff
Todd Huff: Be advised, the content of this program has been documented to prevent and even cure liberalism, and listening may cause you to lean to the right.
Todd Huff: And now, coming to you from the Full Suite Wealth studios, here's your conservative but not bitter host, Todd Huff. Well, that is right, my friends, and you are welcome here, joining the Todd Huff Show. It is my pleasure, distinct honor, to be here with you today.
Todd Huff: Email address todd@toddhuffshow.com — you can send your thoughts, questions, opinions, feedback. Always be sure to include the appropriate amounts of adoration and praise, which, as I've said before, is probably ten to fifteen percent more than you might first think is necessary. I'm kidding — but just a little, my friend. It's good to be here.
Todd Huff: The White House — this is where we're headed today. The White House late last week announced, issued a proclamation announcing Anti Communism Week. And I thought we'd spend some time talking about this because there are people in this country, there's a political movement that is growing, that is very sympathetic at the least, and very pro-communism at its worst.
Todd Huff: And we want to address this. In fact, we had Zoron Momdani win the mayoral race in the city of New York, and we have people who just don’t have an understanding at all. And I want to talk about this today. I want to talk about this because I think this is quite important.
Todd Huff: I think it’s quite interesting to discuss. And I always try to use the current events of the day kind of as a springboard to get into what I consider the more important fundamental foundations of worldview and ideology, because that is what shapes the way that people think about politics, about what our government needs to be doing.
Todd Huff:
That oftentimes puts them either in alignment with, but more times than not, puts them really in opposition — direct opposition — to what our founders put together here in this great nation when they framed this country, when they wrote our founding documents. So that’s where we’re going to head today, my friends.
Todd Huff: And as always, you can share your thoughts and opinions, questions — I’ll take those. You can do those through the website as well at toddhuffshow.com. But friends, let’s be honest: when your financial world starts getting a little more complicated, you need more than just one-size-fits-all advice.
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Todd Huff: I mentioned here that the White House issued a proclamation saying that on November 7 — that was late last week, that would have been Friday — it’s Anti Communism Week, and that they’re going to commemorate the approximately 100 million people who lost their lives under communist regimes in the 20th century.
Todd Huff:
And let’s pause there for a moment. Let’s think about that for just a moment. Communism in the 20th century is responsible for killing almost 100 million people. This is mind-boggling. This is government executing — killing — its own people.
Todd Huff: This, by the way, is not the same thing as someone who has committed a heinous crime, someone who’s committed a violent crime, taking the life of another individual, for example, and that person being executed. And even if that was what these numbers represented, we would surely agree that that’s a lot of people.
Todd Huff: Even if it’s justified in the form of capital punishment for murder and violent crimes — 100 million people. That is not quite, but getting close to a third of the population of this great nation. 100 million people.
Todd Huff: Now remember — how did we get there? This is the thing that I want to hit on, because this is what I see. A lot of people — Rush would call them low-information voters — but a lot of people pay attention to what politicians say, and they don’t really connect the dots or pay much attention to what they do.
Todd Huff: And it is unbelievable to me that an adult would think that way. When I was a kid, I remember — I blew my first knee. I was, what was I, 15 or 16 years old? I think I was 16, my junior year of football. I must have been 16, and I tore an ACL and some cartilage, and I had surgery.
Todd Huff:
I had actually had two surgeries back in those days. The surgery has come so far now. I think a lot of it can be done through arthroscopic tools, but back when I had the surgery, I had arthroscopic surgery. The doctor wanted to look in and see the knee via the scope so that he could see the damage.
Todd Huff: Also, he knew I had cartilage he needed to clean up. So he cleaned up the cartilage; he could see that the ACL was torn, and then we scheduled another surgery — I think just a couple of weeks later. That’s where I have the longer scar. They opened me up; they rebuilt the ACL. That was a rough surgery back in those days.
Todd Huff: But it’s come a long, long way. But I remember here, when I had gotten surgery, people sent me gifts and people would give me books and different things, and I remember getting a book of quotes. In fact, I’d like to find that book of quotes. I used to read that a lot when — you know, when you’re stuck in recovery.
Todd Huff: Your options are limited. Not that there’s anything wrong with reading, but as a 16-year-old, I wasn’t an avid reader like maybe I am today. But when you’re on your back and you can’t do much — in fact, the machine after surgery, they put me on a machine called the CPM.
Todd Huff: I don’t know what it stood for — constant something motion — but basically you were flat on your back and your knee was being bent probably 23 hours a day.
Todd Huff: Exercises or getting up to go to the restroom or whatever. But I remember a lot of times sitting there and I would read this book of quotes, among other things. And I remember there was a quote in this, and I think I shared it on here even recently. But the quote said, What you do speaks so loudly, I can’t hear what you’re saying.
Todd Huff: And that’s always stuck with me. Words speak — actions speak louder than words. But not to some people. Some people get so fixated on what another person is saying, and it sounds so good to them that they get caught up in the verbiage, in the spoken word, and they don’t connect the dots and say, what this person is doing is actually the opposite of what they tell me they’re going to do.
Todd Huff: And this accounts for a lot of the success of communism. In fact, I’ve shared a story that I remember hearing as a young man about Joseph Stalin. He would, of course, put — he was the communist dictator in the Soviet Union, the USSR, of which Russia was a part.
Todd Huff: And he would send people, as communist dictators do, to the gulags, into labor camps. And these individuals would be praising — it’s crazy — but they would be praising Stalin, the very person who is ultimately responsible for putting them there. But it’s like they never connected those dots.
Todd Huff: Stalin would say something about the ideology of communism and how it’s “from each according to his ability, to each according to his need,” and people think that sounds so wonderful and all of that. And they miss the fact that because they did something that was not approved by the state, they were in the gulags — even praising, in some cases, the name of the dictator as they were in these gulags and prisons — praising him for things that…
Todd Huff: Well, things that he ultimately put them in for — things that he never really stood behind. These altruistic beliefs that were just words that were spoken or written or whatever that people came to associate with him, but they didn’t come to associate their being in prison because of this same individual.
Todd Huff: So communism requires this kind of disconnect. But at its core — at its core — it’s a political and an economic ideology that seeks to have a classless society. Classless society. How do they plan to get there?
Todd Huff:
Listen, in my mind — you’ve heard me say on this program, if you’ve listened for any length of time — I’m not a person, I don’t look at people and think of classes of people. I mean, I’m not an idiot. I can look at someone and see, that’s a man, that’s a woman. No matter how much people on the left tell me I can’t do that.
Todd Huff: I can look at someone and see their race or ethnicity. Sometimes you can’t, right? You can look at me and see that I’m a shockingly handsome white-headed dude here on the Todd Huff Show. But you can see a lot of these things, and you can recognize that people are different in a myriad of ways without saying, oh, you’re pigeonholed into this class.
Todd Huff: I really don’t like the conversation about middle class, lower middle class, upper middle class. I understand, and there’s a reason that we’re talking about these sorts of things in politics and all that — I get it. But I also think that people, especially in this country, you can shift between economic classes quite easily.
Todd Huff: I don’t want to say easily, but that can happen multiple times in a person’s lifetime. In fact, most people who are millionaires or higher — most of the vast majority of them — are first-generation people who embrace this concept. Of there being a classless society really wants you to believe that there’s kind of a caste system and there’s no way to move between systems and that merit never plays a role.
Todd Huff: That’s simply not the case. That’s not the case at all. But that’s what people hear, and I think a lot of times people embrace it because they want to make sense of the struggles they’ve had. Listen, struggle is a part of life.
Todd Huff:
Struggle, failure — is on the road to success. Too many people — I’m an entrepreneur, and I know my mentality about this has changed a lot since I first became an entrepreneur. I think that there’s a phase that most people go through where they’re afraid of failing, and so you’re extra cautious.
Todd Huff: You maybe become hyper perfectionist in your tendencies, and you don’t want to make a mistake because you see a mistake as catastrophic, when in reality, you make many decisions a day. You take a projected course, and you’ll find along that course there are going to be a series of failures.
Todd Huff: Failures are simply — failures are feedback from what you’re doing. Failures should be viewed as just readjusting the GPS, right? It’s looking at the coordinates and saying, I need to adjust course. Sometimes they’re big failures, and I’ve got to make a massive deviation from the path I’m on.
Todd Huff: Other times it’s just small course corrections. But too many people think that because they’ve not reached the status that they had hoped to reach economically or whatever, that the only way to fix that is for government to come in — government to come in and somehow make this right.
Todd Huff: But that is craziness. Because what happens is that you give people in government too much authority, too much power. This is not the way that it is supposed to be, and giving government too much power creates tyranny. Government at its core, at its base level, government is force.
Todd Huff: And in order to properly have a proper understanding of the role of government — which I think our founders nailed perfectly — you first have to understand: what is the role? What’s the purpose of government? What’s the nature of humanity?
Todd Huff: How are we created to live? What is the best way to get there? And, of course, the best way to get there is by having a free society so that people can live their lives according to their own consciences. Of course, there have to be some sort of guardrails that say, these sorts of things are prohibited because you’re directly harming another person, their life, their property.
Todd Huff: And this is really the framework of how government — of course built and based upon Western thought, Judaic-Christian principles — you begin to have some sort of a structure. And you say, we want you to be free. We don’t want there to be absolute anarchy.
Todd Huff: We don’t want there to be an enforcement mechanism so that people cannot act lawlessly and violently against another group of people without some sort of a recourse — prison, punishment, a government that says you can’t do that.
Todd Huff:
Of course, government can’t protect you from everything, but that doesn’t mean that they shouldn’t try to create a society where people can thrive and live life as they want to live. That’s really the balance here.
Todd Huff: And so we realize that if you look at a continuum — on one end, you say there’s pure anarchy. On the other end, you say you have a complete government top-down control, where they make all the decisions. You’re just a cog in the wheel and you do what they tell you.
Todd Huff: And some people really want that. People want that because they think that’s a classless society. That makes us all equal. I think this obsession with having equal outcomes — there’s such an external focus.
Todd Huff: Comparison can be such a devastating thing. Why are we constantly — why are some people so constantly looking at other people and seeing where they are and then having jealousy or envy for where that person is and saying that the reason I’m not there is because they had some benefit that I need to have, and so let’s get rid of all these classes in society.
Todd Huff: Let’s make it equal so that we could all have equal outcomes in our life. That’s just not the way that it’s designed to work. And dare I say it also will guarantee that you’re not going to have as much success in whatever endeavor you choose.
Todd Huff: If you’re protected from those failures that we talked about — in fact, the more you travel a path, and listen, I speak as one who’s had plenty of failures and things — I would say that once you get past the initial hurt of the failure or of the problem, the more appreciative I think that people are of them.
Todd Huff: People who truly learn from them, that they can be wonderful teachers, wonderful tools. These things can calibrate us so that we get onto the right path, and you eliminate that when you try to say government is responsible for creating all these equal outcomes, a classless society.
Todd Huff: And to some, this sounds so, so good. But what you end up doing is you give too much power to the government — government that’s run by human beings just like the rest of us.
Todd Huff: And we know that the nature of humanity — we’re sinful people, my friends. We’re not altruistic or just noble creatures. Doesn’t mean that we can’t do good. It doesn’t mean that we often don’t choose to do good. But we’re not good at our core.
Todd Huff: And when there’s no accountability and when there’s too much power, bad things happen. And that’s exactly what has happened throughout the course of history when it pertains to communism. It is a wicked, evil ideology.
Todd Huff: And it sounds so pleasant, it sounds so wonderful to people who want to see things equalized, who want to see things made right — at least from their perspective, from their perspective and in their eyes.
Todd Huff: It sounds so good because these folks have learned to manipulate people into believing that they can actually achieve and accomplish for an entire society what we as individuals should be trying to accomplish for ourselves and for our families.
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Todd Huff: Okay, so let’s go here. Let’s dig a little bit deeper here into communism, and, of course, Anti Communism Week — the death of 100 million people approximately in the 20th century.
Todd Huff: So let’s talk a little bit more about communism. I’m going to set this up, I’m going to get as much of this in today as I can as I’m reaching the end of the first segment of the program. But we said that communism is a political and economic system that seeks a classless society.
Todd Huff:
They seek to eliminate private property. They want to place all means of production basically in the control of the government. That’s where it ends up in practice. In theory, they say it’s just collectively owned — we all somehow own everything equally.
Todd Huff: And there are some wild beliefs — I mean, it’s to the point, I’ve had conversations, read books, had encounters with people, professors. It is wild, wild stuff what some of these people believe. You shouldn’t have any private property.
Todd Huff: Some people are even to the point where they say even spouses are communal — I don’t want to say property, but I guess that’s how they think about it. Just wild, wild stuff here, my friends.
Todd Huff: And there’s obviously different, I guess, offshoots of communism and where the line should be drawn. But you get into some really crazy stuff. They want the government to control everything.
Todd Huff:
And the theory promises, ultimately, equality. But the reality delivers something much, much different. The reality delivers oppression. So you can say that everybody wants equality, who’s out there spouting these communistic statements and reading these books.
Todd Huff: And saying that they stand — of course, they usually stand for socialism, which is — listen, socialism might be the off-ramp; communism, as it’s been said, is the destination. These things are related. They’re closely related. Make no mistake about it.
Todd Huff: They’ll tell you, “I’m not a communist. No, no. I’m a democratic socialist.” I think throwing that word “democratic” in there makes it sound so much better. But the direction of travel and the destination for even social, democratic socialism is heading in this very direction — government control of something halfway to communism.
Todd Huff: So timeout’s in order, my friends. We’ll talk more about this after the break. You’re listening to conservative, not bitter talk. I’m your host, Todd Huff. Back in just a minute.
Todd Huff:
Welcome back, my friends, talking here about communism. Why are we doing that? Well, number one, it’s becoming something that is more prevalent. There are more people today — when I was a kid, if you said you were a communist, I grew up in the…
Todd Huff:
I mean, those were fighting words. You’d probably be in a fistfight if you said you were a communist. I remember a Seinfeld where Elaine was dating a guy named Ned, I believe. I think his name was Ned — Ned the Communist.
Todd Huff: That was not received well by the audience. I mean, obviously it was Seinfeld, that was making fun of this or whatever, but that wasn’t something that made someone automatically likable and relatable to the audience or even to the characters on Seinfeld.
Todd Huff: Of course, I think Kramer found some way — Kramer always found a way to connect with all the characters. But anyway, it’s not something that was considered a good thing when I was a kid, and it’s not a good thing.
Todd Huff: It’s absolutely not a good thing. It’s caused untold havoc and destruction on this planet. It is a dark, dark ideology, my friends, and I want to talk more about it.
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Todd Huff: Okay, so let’s get here, to the roots, I guess, of communism. There was a book written back in 1848 called The Communist Manifesto.
Todd Huff: I’ve actually read this a couple of times. Written by Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels — you’ll know those names. This is where you get these, I would say, the core belief, which is from each according to his ability, to each according to his need.
Todd Huff: That sounds so good to people. And listen, in one sense, I can say that there’s something there that’s attractive — people who have things, who have been blessed, who have had success.
Todd Huff: I’ve shared on this program that it’s a good thing, biblically speaking, to help those who are in difficult circumstances, who are on the outskirts, I guess, of the heart of society — people who Jesus talked about: the widows and the orphans and people who were the poor and needy, the sick.
Todd Huff: He commanded us to take care of them. But there wasn’t an organized structure that stole from us and then said, “We’re going to redistribute it.” It’s really the compassion of individuals and our free choices that are really the means by which we should get there.
Todd Huff: But not for communism. Communism says we’re going to put the benevolent dictator in charge, and he’s going to make all this right somehow and in some way.
Todd Huff: So they, in the book, Marx and Engels, called on workers to rise up against capitalism, arguing that private ownership produces inequality. And of course, private ownership does cause there to be different results.
Todd Huff: I mean, listen, I think about this in terms that the average person would understand. There are thirty-two National Football League teams, and they create rules — the NFL has rules — on trying to make each franchise equally competitive as best they can.
Todd Huff: But it doesn’t work that way. You have a salary cap so one team can’t go and spend a bazillion dollars on the players and the other team are paying them with IOUs or some such thing, right? That’s not the way that it works.
Todd Huff: They’ve got a complicated system in place to make sure that teams have the same sorts of resources and tools to get players, attract talent. But nothing is the same. The market in Cleveland is not the same market as Boston, right?
Todd Huff: And the coaching staff and the different approaches, and the players and the culture and all these other things that create different outcomes. There’s absolutely nothing that can be done to create a different Super Bowl champion every year.
Todd Huff: For there’s thirty-two teams — over the course of the next thirty-two years, every team wins one Super Bowl — the odds of that happening are practically zero. It’s virtually impossible. And you’ll notice that some franchises struggle for a lot longer, and others have continually risen to the top.
Todd Huff: Why? I don’t always know why. Sometimes you can tell why. Sometimes there’s some good fortune in there. Sometimes there’s coaching. Think about the Pittsburgh Steelers — I don’t want to make this too much about sports, but the Pittsburgh Steelers have basically had three coaches over, I don’t know…
Todd Huff: It went from Chuck Noll to Bill Cowher to Mike Tomlin, and Chuck Noll was coaching, I know, back in the — I think they’ve had three coaches dating back to 19… you’d have to look it up, I didn’t look it up before the program — but it goes back to say this: fifty years or something like this, they’ve had three coaches.
Todd Huff: Meanwhile, you’ll find other teams who have multiple coaches over a five-year period of time. And you find yourself saying, how does that happen? How is it that the Baltimore Ravens’ defense every year is a good defense?
Todd Huff: How the Chicago Bears — with some exceptions — even when they’re bad, they always seem to have a good defense. How did the… take your pick, right? There are so many things. There’s no way, there is no way on earth that there can be equality of outcomes in the NFL, which is only thirty-two teams.
Todd Huff: Each team has, what, fifty-three players, plus the practice squad? We can’t even control that. I’m not saying we should try. I’m saying we can’t even control that, let alone a nation of 340 million people. It’s crazy.
Todd Huff: And not just in the sport of football — in all aspects of life. Why do people believe this? In a way, you can say it shows that we have a hunger and a thirst for the perfection that we can only have in heaven.
Todd Huff: You could say that this is in some way a bit of evidence, a tiny speck of evidence that says that we were created for something more. It’s like we realize maybe that things were created to work are not the way that they’re working now, which, of course, goes in line with the biblical narrative of the fall of man from the Garden of Eden.
Todd Huff: But this is a desire of the human heart — some sort of just almost like a fairy tale storybook ending. And people believe that the government can somehow achieve this. But when this ideology is implemented in the real world, bad, bad things happen.
Todd Huff: Here’s some examples here of just how bad historically things have happened in the 20th century alone. In the Soviet Union, Vladimir Lenin and Joseph Stalin’s regimes murdered roughly twenty million of their own people through forced collectivization, execution, the gulags — which I mentioned — and engineered famines.
Todd Huff: In China — that’s Mao Zedong — his Great Leap Forward and Cultural Revolution killed an estimated forty-five to sixty million people through starvation, violence, and political purges.
Todd Huff: I guess the mindset is the people who get in the way of the government having absolute control have to be punished or wiped off the face of the planet. That’s certainly what it looks like in practice to a person like me.
Todd Huff: In Cambodia, Pol Pot executed or starved about two million people between 1975 and 1979. In North Korea, we know about the Kim dynasty — they have killed or starved millions more through forced labor and purges. Now we’ve got Kim Jong-un; we had Kim Jong-il previously.
Todd Huff: Communist governments in Cuba, Vietnam, Laos, the Eastern Bloc added several million more victims through imprisonment, executions, and oppression. That leads us to roughly one hundred million people who were killed by communist regimes — by their own government, not by foreign armies.
Todd Huff: These are not justifiable cases of capital punishment. This is the government saying we are executing you because you will not submit to our absolute and total authority over you.
Todd Huff:
So sources for these include The Black Book of Communism (Harvard University Press, 1999), the U.S. Congressional Record, and the Victims of Communism Memorial Fund.
Todd Huff: So — quick timeout, my friends. Communism kills. That’s the core of the message here today. Communism kills, my friends, and we have people that are playing — that are playing footsie with it here in the United States in 2025.
Todd Huff: Quick timeout. Back in just a minute.
Todd Huff:
Welcome back, my friends. Third and final segments of today’s program, talking here about communism since it’s Anti Communism Week, as announced by the White House on this past Friday.
Todd Huff: Wanted to talk about this because we’ve had a love affair in this country by some with socialism, which is its cousin. I mean, these are kissing cousins, my friends — communism and socialism. And we’ll get to those in a minute.
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Todd Huff: That leads us back to this talk about communism, socialism. Even with the stats and the information I shared with you just before the break there, people have fallen in love with the maybe a little bit kinder, a little bit gentler relative — the kissing cousin of communism — and that would be socialism.
Todd Huff: That’s made a comeback here in our popular culture today, certainly in academia. And some people just have a misunderstanding of where this leads, or they don’t care, or they think that this time — oh, this time we’ll get it right, my friends.
Todd Huff: This time there won’t be the gulags, the starvation, the extreme, over-the-top government force. There won’t be the calls to make government God. You know, communism asserts itself as God.
Todd Huff: Communism says there cannot be — you can’t worship God. Now, in the Soviet Union, they “allowed,” quote unquote, there to be churches, but that was more for historical significance.
Todd Huff: If people were really changed by the gospel of Jesus Christ and thought Jesus and believed Jesus was their King and not the communist dictator, there were consequences to be paid. Just look at — read some of these books: Foxe’s Book of Martyrs.
Todd Huff: There’s a book called Jesus Freaks that was written, I don’t know, twenty-some years ago. And there are stories — there are stories of people who were killed by the communists. I remember some of them; in fact, I remember one story I’ll share with you really quickly.
Todd Huff: There were a group of communist Soviets who went to this community of, I think it was Christians. They were Christians, and they took them out, they stripped them, I believe, naked, or at least barefoot and barely clothed. They took them out on a frozen lake in the middle of winter to basically freeze them to death.
Todd Huff: They encircled them. They put them out on the frozen lake, and these people, as they were being murdered, frozen to death by these communist evildoers, they started singing worship songs, and they would die one by one.
Todd Huff: And there’s a moving story of one where one of the soldiers, as he was watching this, witnessing this, he stripped down and walked out onto the frozen lake to die alongside these folks. This is the sort of stuff that happens time after time after time.
Todd Huff: Socialism says, look, government should control the major industries to ensure equality, to protect the workers and all of that. We’ll still allow private property. This whole concept, again — how do you have half tyranny? That’s my question.
Todd Huff: What do you mean you’ll still allow some private property? Private property — these things are the gift of Almighty God. This isn’t for the government to decide whether people can have private property.
Todd Huff:These things come to us — certainly there are rules, you can’t go claim someone else’s property, but you have the right to own property, to call a place your home.
Todd Huff: Communism, of course, goes further than that, saying there’s no private property at all. Everything is owned and controlled by the state. People applaud this, they think it sounds good. This is where you get “from each according to his ability, to each according to his need.”
Todd Huff: That’s what communism says. Some would argue that socialism says “from each according to his ability, to each according to his work.” So you’ve got to work for it still. But again, you’re heading in the wrong direction here, my friends.
Todd Huff: And that’s what we have with socialism. Socialism claims to work through democracy. That’s where you get this term democratic socialism. But if you continue down this path, it leads to communism.
Todd Huff: Communism always becomes authoritarian — always becomes authoritarian. I don’t have a lot of time here. I’ve got a lot more thoughts. Milton Friedman once said, A society that puts equality before freedom will get neither.
Todd Huff: A society that puts freedom before equality will get a high degree of both. And of course, I love quoting Reagan on that. I love quoting Milton Friedman, too, but Reagan said this:
Todd Huff: “Socialism only worked in two places — Heaven, where they don’t need it, and in Hell, where they already have it.” And of course, in Hell they have it because there’s an equality of absolute suffering.
Todd Huff: And that, my friends, matters today because there are people out there — young people and people who are older — but young people who buy into these one-liners, these stated objectives of these ideologies.
Todd Huff: But they end badly. They end badly. We have to not only, I should say, educate on the truths of constitutional conservatism and free markets, but we also have to point out the atrocities that are caused by communism, which we did today.
Todd Huff: I’m out of time, though, my friends. SDG.