How Communism Grows
Communism doesn’t spread.
It grows.
Like mold in a damp corner, it doesn’t arrive with fanfare—it appears when the conditions are right.
Those conditions aren’t political first. They’re spiritual and educational.
Communism is the natural consequence of a people untaught in the wisdom of yesteryear. The lessons carved into history by those who lived through famine, tyranny, and the slow death of personal responsibility.
When that wisdom fades, when the stories of what made freedom costly and precious stop being told—people start believing again that equality can be legislated and that security is a right, not a responsibility.
And so, it grows. Quietly. Predictably.
The cure isn’t outrage. It’s education.
Not the institutional kind, but the kind that teaches character, consequence, and the nature of man.
Because where wisdom thrives, communism dies before it ever takes root.
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