Chilling to the Bone

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"We will replace the frigidity of rugged individualism with the warmth of collectivism." Thus far Mamdani, whose words are chilling to the bone. Now we might counter that rugged individualism is a whole lot better than collectivism, and we'd be right. Collectivism means you lose your identity, you become a number, a statistic, a victim, and a ward of the state that cares not a whit about you.

Collectivism has the warmth of a Siberian gulag, a dark North Korean night. The fact that Mamdani can get away with such rhetoric, even after Communism has taken the lives of tens of millions of people, is frustrating.

Why does Mamdani's rhetoric still resonate, especially in our urban centers? (1) Our people have not been taught history, haven't learned the lesson of Siberia, the long march, the death camps, the killing fields of Cambodia. So they keep crashing in the same car, keep jumping off the same cliff, keep falling for the same snake oil. (2) We have left our young people with not much to hold onto. When we don't take our children to church, they need an alternative. Communism is a secular version of the Book of Acts, where all things are voluntarily held in common. Leftism offers people a religion, something to believe in. You can't beat something with nothing. (3) People are by nature social. Rugged individualism is in many ways a false alternative. When the family falls apart, people feel alone. It is hardly a wonder that single women are the Democrats' most consistent voting bloc. But what can you do when there is no father at home? Who will protect and provide? And what happens when the safety net of the extended family, grandparents, aunts and uncles and cousins, is nowhere to be found? (4) Envy remains a powerful motivator, one that eats away at the soul, one that makes me sad to eat a hamburger because someone else is eating a steak.

So enters Mamdani, all smiles, full of promises. He may not be able to deliver, but rest assured, he'll do just fine. And while he promises rent-controlled apartments and free busses, he'll be living in a big house and be driven in a fine car that comes with a driver. All at the expense of those who comes to help. Same as it ever was.

The Rev. Dr. Peter Scaer is chairman and professor of Exegetical Theology and director of the M.A. program at Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne, Ind.

 

Be Informed
How can our culture turn from the anti-family, anti-marriage, anti-children, culturally suicidal path we’re on? Listen in for the challenges and opportunities ahead with Tim Goeglein and the Rev. Dr. Gregory Seltz.

 

Be Equipped
Dr. Ryan Anderson, president of the Ethics and Public Policy Center, discusses the FDA and the dangers of chemical abortion. Click here to listen to a recent Issues, Etc. podcast on the topic.

 

Be Encouraged
“You may have a messy story. Your family may have a dysfunctional past. Your past (or present) may be filled with greed, sexual immorality, or other idols. But Jesus won’t let that stop Him from reaching out to you with the message of His unconditional love. You might be far from good, but you are not too far gone for God.” –Pastor Mike Novotny

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February 2026 Prayer Partner Thursday