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Prosperity Comes From Freedom, Not Redistribution

Prosperity Comes From Freedom, Not Redistribution

This is the uncomfortable truth: in a free society, inequality is not merely imposed; it is continually generated by human behavior itself.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IPMC18ScZwE

It is a peaceful and serene Sunday morning in Northern Virginia. As I sat reflecting, I happened upon a video by Ben Shapiro in which he argued that we must stop “punishing success.” He remarked that figures like Zohran Mamdani or Hasan Piker are less concerned with genuinely uplifting the poor than with seeing the wealthy brought low.

This immediately brought to mind Margaret Thatcher’s enduring observation: critics of inequality often “would rather that the poor were poorer, provided that the rich were less rich.” That insight cuts directly to the heart of the redistribution debate.

It is widely understood that even if a government were to seize and divide all wealth equally, disparities would re-emerge almost immediately. Some would spend what they received, others would give it away, and still others would invest it and multiply it. The result is not accidental — it is the predictable outcome of differences in judgment, discipline, ambition, and willingness to take risks.

This is the uncomfortable truth: in a free society, inequality is not merely imposed; it is continually generated by human behavior itself. Attempts to forcibly erase it do not create justice — they distort incentives and penalize the very qualities that produce growth in the first place. Redistribution, particularly when coercive, does not reward virtue; it punishes initiative, foresight, and hard work while privileging consumption over creation.

Compulsory redistribution does more than reshuffle resources — it corrodes the very foundations of prosperity. When success is treated as a problem to be corrected rather than a standard to be emulated, the incentive to innovate, to build, and to strive inevitably weakens. Over time, the pattern is clear: productivity declines, investment retreats, and the engine of economic advancement stalls.

By contrast, societies that prioritize economic and political freedom consistently generate greater prosperity. When individuals are free to pursue opportunity, to emulate success rather than resent it, and to retain the rewards of their efforts, the result is not merely personal advancement but broad-based societal progress. The United States remains the clearest modern example of this principle in action.

As the nation approaches its 250th anniversary, it is worth reflecting on what that freedom has made possible. Much of the modern world now enjoys conveniences that would have been unimaginable in earlier generations, many of them shaped or accelerated by American ingenuity. From the steel plow and advances in surgical anesthesia to the airplane — and later breakthroughs such as the computer, the internet, the smartphone, and artificial intelligence — these innovations did not emerge from systems focused on leveling outcomes or constraining success.

Other inventions, including the automobile and household technologies like the sewing and washing machines, became widely accessible through a distinctly American emphasis on practicality and scale. Together, they arose from a culture that rewards ingenuity, risk-taking, and ambition.

It is difficult — if not impossible — to imagine such breakthroughs arising from a system driven by resentment or enforced equality rather than aspiration and creative drive.

In the end, prosperity is not built by pulling down the successful, but by enabling others to rise. “A rising tide lifts all boats” — but only when the tide itself is free to rise.

 

Nora D. Clinton is a Research Scholar & Project Manager at the Legal Insurrection Foundation. She was born and raised in Sofia, Bulgaria. She holds a PhD in Classics and has published extensively on ancient documents on stone. In 2020, she authored the popular memoir Quarantine Reflections Across Two Worlds. Nora is a co-founder of two partner charities dedicated to academic cooperation and American values. She lives in Northern Virginia with her husband and son. 

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Comments

We are dealing with those who would rather rule over ruins than have to compete even a tiny little bit.


 
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Whitewall | June 1, 2026 at 12:55 pm

The title of this article is exactly correct. If this article headline and subhead could be placed on the doors of the DNC, elected Dem officials and university classrooms….the entire Democrat party and their dependents would go the route of Jim Jones and the koolaid drinkers without having to to travel to South America.


 
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Paula | June 1, 2026 at 12:59 pm

Peter and Paul both receive the same income. Paul spends it all and Peter saves half. At the end of the year, half of what Peter saved is given to Paul.

After a while, Paul quits working. Now half of everything Peter earns is given to Paul.

Pretty soon Peter says, “Screw this” and he quits working.

What is your conclusion?

1. Paul is a Democrat
2. You have to rob Peter to pay Paul
3. Eventually you run out of other people’s money.


 
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mailman | June 1, 2026 at 1:08 pm

Something is definitely going on at the moment as my share portfolio is currently up 8% in 2 months. If it keeps this pace up that’s 48% year on year for this financial year! 😁😁 Fingers crossed the left doesn’t f88k that up!!


 
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rickcheese | June 1, 2026 at 1:38 pm

Yet we still pay taxes that fund the welfare state


 
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henrybowman | June 1, 2026 at 2:13 pm

There are a lot of truisms about life and wealth that the left studiously refuses to comprehend.

Wealth is not a fixed pie to be divided. Innovation creates new wealth that never previously existed.

Inequality fuels economies. Even in the physical world, an engine has to have more energy (hotter, faster, higher) than its surroundings in order to deliver power to anyone else.

The top 1% does control 30% of the wealth. However — at least in the USA — the people who BELONG to that top 1% churn energetically. Of the families in the top 1% today, only 7% will remain in the top 1% two generations later. (The “top 1%” currently starts at about $12M total wealth.)

If you enjoy insights like these, pick up a copy of “The Millionaire Next Door.” A lot of its numbers are rusty due to inflation over the past 30 years, but its insights on economics and the personal habits of the “non-celebrity” wealthy (like always buying used vehicles, and practically on a “price per pound” basis) are tremendously instructive.


 
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TrickyRicky | June 1, 2026 at 3:32 pm

Some words of wisdom from “The Road To Serfdom” by Hayek:

“What is called economic power, while it can be an instrument of coercion, is, in the hands of private individuals, never exclusive or complete power, never power over the whole life of a person. But centralized as an instrument of political power creates a degree of dependence scarcely distinguishable from slavery”.


 
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CommoChief | June 1, 2026 at 3:58 pm

‘Prosperity comes from freedom…’…and fair dealing, a neutral judiciary for contract enforcement, prohibitions on the more egregious anticompetitive practices, limits on regulations and upon the scope of regulatory authority, bureaucracy that understands its limited role and a Congress that stops shirking its duty and handing power to unelected bureaucracy to design, implement and enforce goofy, burdensome regulations.


 
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beautifulruralPA | June 1, 2026 at 5:39 pm

Well said, Nora, and makes the obvious difference between communism and capitalism.


 
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destroycommunism | June 1, 2026 at 7:33 pm

good article but lefty says …yeah,, we know,,but we have the masses eating out of our hands and your pockets

the revolution is here and blmplo is winning battles across the country as we continue to bow to their pressures..of our way…OR ELSE!!!

they just fired a wht cop who took down a blk female who attacked him..all charges against her dropped…

this is not the future

this is now

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