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Segment 7—Why the “warmth of collectivism” is a lie: Why it’s so appealing anyway?
Why is collectivism so appealing? Because it sounds like warmth—until you notice what it quietly requires: guilt, pressure, and eventually control. If collectivism were only a theory on a chalkboard, it wouldn’t be so seductive. The reason it keeps returning, generation after generation, is because it doesn’t sell itself as a spreadsheet. It sells itself as a story. A story with villains and victims. A story with a cure. A story with a community waiting on the other side of t
dktippit3
3 days ago5 min read


Segment 6—Why the “warmth of collectivism” is a lie: Why Denmark isn’t “true socialism”
Denmark isn’t a “socialist paradise”—it’s a market economy with a big safety net. Segment 6 separates the myth from the model. When people defend collectivism today, they rarely lead with Stalin or Mao. They lead with Denmark. It’s the clean example. The polite example. The photogenic example. “Look,” they say, “Denmark has universal healthcare, free education, a strong safety net, high happiness rankings—and they’re basically socialist. So relax. Socialism can be warm.” But
dktippit3
5 days ago4 min read


Segment 1—Why the “warmth of collectivism” is a lie: Jesus was not a socialist.
Was Jesus a socialist—or did He offer something deeper than any political system? Segment 1 exposes the lie behind “the warmth of collectivism” and why real Christian warmth never requires compulsion. There’s a line that sounds like a warm blanket on a cold night: “We will replace the frigidity of rugged individualism with the warmth of collectivism.” When I first heard it, my first emotion wasn’t anger. It was concern. Because this wasn’t said by a random commentator or a co
dktippit3
Feb 27 min read
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