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OPINION

Maduro: The End of a Warm Collectivist

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Maduro: The End of a Warm Collectivist
AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos

There is a lie socialism always tells before it tells the truth.

The lie is that it is warm. That it is compassionate. That it cares more deeply, feels more tenderly, and governs more humanely than any system rooted in individual liberty. It promises cradle-to-grave security, shared sacrifice, and moral superiority—all in exchange for a little freedom here, a little property there, and eventually, your independence altogether.

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The truth comes later. It always does.

Today, that truth no longer governs from a palace in Caracas. It sits behind bars in the United States, wearing shackles instead of a sash.

Nicolás Maduro, the strongman who inherited Hugo Chávez’s socialist “revolution,” no longer presides over anything. He is rotting in U.S. custody, facing justice for narco-terrorism, corruption, and the wholesale destruction of a once-prosperous nation. The man who promised equality delivered starvation. The leader who vowed dignity enforced fear. The architect of collectivist “care” left millions desperate, displaced, and dead.

This is not an anomaly. It is the inevitable end of the ideology itself.

And here’s where Americans must resist the temptation to look away smugly and say, “That could never happen here.” Because the same moral language, the same ideological DNA, and the same authoritarian impulses are already taking root—wearing better suits and softer smiles.

Figures like Zohran Mamdani may be new to the game, but their ambitions are not. End private property. Confiscate personal wealth “for the collective good.” Centralize power. Demonize dissent. Criminalize success. Silence opposition.

Different stage. Same play.

Maduro did not begin as a cartoon villain. He did not campaign on starvation or prison cells. He promised equity. He promised justice. He promised to make the wealthy pay their “fair share.” He promised to put the state in charge so the people could finally be free.

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Instead, he nationalized industries, seized farms, crushed businesses, rigged elections, silenced journalists, jailed opponents, and weaponized the police and military against civilians. Venezuela—sitting atop the largest proven oil reserves on earth—collapsed into one of the worst peacetime economic disasters in modern history.

Millions fled. Currency evaporated. Hospitals emptied. Children starved.

That is collectivism completed.

The American left is fond of saying, “That wasn’t real socialism.” But this excuse collapses under even casual scrutiny. Socialism cannot survive without coercion. It demands compliance because people do not voluntarily surrender their labor, savings, property, or speech indefinitely. When resistance emerges—as it always does—the state responds with force.

That is not a bug. It is the feature.

Mamdani and his ideological allies are still at the “warm” stage. They speak of “housing as a human right,” “wealth redistribution,” and “ending exploitation.” It all sounds merciful. It all sounds moral. But the real question is never asked:

Who decides?

Who decides how much wealth is “too much”?

Who decides which property must be seized?

Who decides which opinions are “dangerous”?

Who decides when compliance is mandatory?

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The answer is never “the people.” It is always the state—and the people who control it.

Maduro did not consult Venezuelans when he expropriated their livelihoods. He did not politely debate protesters filling the streets. He deployed batons. He deployed bullets. He deployed terror. And now, fittingly, he is no longer the one issuing commands—he is the one awaiting judgment.

Warm collectivism always ends cold.

America’s founders understood something modern socialists refuse to acknowledge: power concentrates, corrupts, and ultimately consumes. Private property is not greed—it is protection. Individual liberty is not selfishness—it is the only reliable barrier between citizens and tyrants. Free markets are not perfect, but they disperse power broadly instead of consolidating it in the hands of government enforcers.

Socialism assumes the virtue of those in charge. History assumes otherwise.

That is why socialism’s ledger is written in mass graves, prison camps, and refugee columns. Venezuela is only the most recent entry. The difference now is that its chief author has finally been removed from the page.

Maduro is not a distortion of socialism. He is its logical conclusion.

And Mamdani is not an innocent reformer playing with harmless ideas. He is standing at the same ideological starting line—before the seizures, before the silencing, before the force.

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If Americans fail to recognize this pattern, if we continue mistaking control for compassion and coercion for care, we may one day discover that the warmth we were promised was nothing more than the heat from a burning house.

History has already rendered its verdict.

Socialism fails. Brutally. Repeatedly. Predictably.

Maduro’s fall is not proof that collectivism works.

It is proof that it always ends the same way—just sooner for some than for others.

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