Marxism doesn’t spread mainly through economics, it spreads through a story: nothing is fixed, everything must be remade, and the only way forward is to pit people into oppressor and oppressed. We push back on that story from a biblical, historical, and constitutional perspective, and we get specific about the differences between socialism, Marxism, and communism and why they all move toward coercion and loss of liberty. If you’ve ever wondered why these ideas keep getting rebranded for new generations, we connect the pattern to the way history is no longer taught or tested the way it used to be.
We also revisit America’s early warnings. Jamestown and Plymouth both experimented with shared-property models and learned the hard way what happens when responsibility gets detached from reward. Those examples aren’t dusty trivia. They’re case studies that help parents, pastors, and students evaluate today’s promises about “new” versions of old systems and see why outcomes repeat across time and place.
Then we’re joined by K Carl Smith, author of *Douglass vs Marx*, a creative, source-based “debate” built from the actual writings of Frederick Douglass and Karl Marx. Douglass is uniquely positioned to answer Marx because he lived real oppression, articulated God-given rights, defended personal responsibility, and ultimately called the Constitution a liberty document after reading it for himself. We talk about why Douglass gets clipped and distorted in modern education, how CRT and DEI borrow Marxist categories, and how this book functions like a curriculum with reflections and discussion questions.
If you care about freedom, faith, and the future of education, listen, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the conversation.
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