1. On the Economy:
I always heard that one party was better for business, the stock market, and jobs. It seemed obvious. Everyone repeated it.
Then I looked at the record.
Since 1933, the stock market has performed more than twice as well under Democratic presidents (NYU / Stock Market Historical Review).
Job creation has nearly doubled.
And 10 of the last 11 recessions began under Republican administrations.
I'm not sharing this to score political points. I'm saying: the story I was told was a "brule." It didn't match reality.
2. On Immigration:
I was told immigrants were driving crime and draining resources.
But study after study shows the opposite.
Texas — a state at the center of the immigration debate — found that native-born Americans commit violent crimes at nearly twice the rate of undocumented immigrants (Texas Dept. of Public Safety, 2024).
And in 2022 alone, undocumented immigrants paid $96.7 billion in taxes (ITEP, 2024).
They pay billions. They work in agriculture, construction, elder care, childcare — industries that would collapse without them. Many can't even claim refunds on the taxes they pay.
So if they're not causing crime… and they're not draining your taxes…
Why have we been taught to fear them?
Who benefits when we are afraid of the most vulnerable among us?
3. On Healthcare: The Freedom to Fail
530,000.
That is the number of American families that go bankrupt every year due to medical bills.
In Canada: zero.
In Germany: zero.
In the U.K., France, Japan, and Australia, virtually zero.
This isn't because Americans are sicker. It's because of choices—policy choices made by people who benefit from the status quo.
But here is the "Brule" (the Bullshit Rule) we've been taught: Safety nets make people lazy.
The data shows the exact opposite.
Countries with robust social safety nets—like Sweden, Norway, and Denmark—are actually hotbeds for entrepreneurship. Sweden, for example, produces more "unicorn" billion-dollar tech companies per capita than any other region in the world except Silicon Valley.
Why?
Because entrepreneurship requires risk. And it is much easier to take a risk—to quit your job, start that company, or invent that product—when you know that failure doesn't mean your children will starve or you'll lose your home if you get sick.
In America, "freedom" often means the freedom to fall through the cracks.
In Social Democracies, the government provides a trampoline.
When you don't have to worry about losing your healthcare because you left your corporate job, you are free to be brave.
4. On the American Dream: A Personal Warning
I was always told America has the highest upward mobility in the world—that this is the only place where anyone, from any background, can make it to the top.
It is a beautiful story. But I decided to look at the rankings.
The Global Social Mobility Index ranks countries on how easy it is for a person to start at zero and climb to the top.
The United States ranks 27th.
The top of the list? Denmark, Norway, Finland, Sweden.
The "American Dream" is now statistically more likely to happen in Scandinavia than in America.
So why do we resist the very policies that would fix this?
I believe it is because Americans have been manipulated into confusing "Social Democracy" with "Communism."
And I need to make a distinction here that is deeply personal to me.
I am an entrepreneur. I love entrepreneurs. And I hate Communism with a fire that comes from my own blood.
The Estonian side of my family owned a farm on the Baltic island of Hiiumaa for hundreds of years. But when the Communists took control of Estonia in the 1940s, that legacy was shattered.
They sent a massive portion of the Estonian population to the gulags. My children's great-grandparents were marched into a forest, lined up, and shot in the head.
They were buried in unmarked graves.
Their sin? They were farmers who happened to own their own land.
This is a scar on my family's history. That land was stolen, and it was only returned to us in the early 1990s when Estonia finally threw off the shackles of Communism and property ownership was legal again.
So you can imagine how I feel when I hear Americans screaming the word "Communism" at things that are clearly not Communism.
I know what Communism is. I know the smell of the graves it digs.
And I need you to know: A safety net is not Communism.
We need to understand the difference between three very different things:
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario