I have been watching the recent primary elections in places like New York and Colorado, and one thing is becoming unmistakably clear: something is breaking inside the American system. Candidates running on openly socialist or heavily progressive platforms are not just competing-they are winning. That is not an accident. That is a signal.
Let’s be direct. Capitalism in the United States, in its current form, is no longer functioning as it was promised. It has drifted far from its original ideals of fair competition and opportunity. Instead, what many Americans see today is a system where wealth concentrates at the top, influence follows money, and ordinary people are left navigating rising costs with shrinking security.
Call it what you want, legalized influence, systemic imbalance, or soft corruption, but the effect is the same. When corporations and wealthy donors have disproportionate sway over policy, public trust erodes. People begin to believe, not without reason, that the rules are written for those already winning.
This is exactly why socialist and democratic socialist ideas are gaining ground. Not because Americans suddenly want to abandon capitalism entirely, but because they are rejecting what capitalism has become. They are demanding a correction, one that prioritizes healthcare, education, housing, and basic dignity over unchecked profit.
What we are seeing in New York and Colorado is not an isolated political moment. It is part of a broader shift driven by frustration, especially among younger voters and working-class communities. These are people who did everything they were told, worked hard, pursued education, followed the rules and still find themselves struggling to get ahead.
Historically, this kind of shift happens when systems stop delivering for the majority. Societies do not remain static. They respond. They push back. And right now, the pushback is unmistakable.
From my perspective, this is not about labeling one side as right or wrong. It is about recognizing a turning point. When people begin to lose faith in the fairness of their economic system, they will seek alternatives, no matter how controversial those alternatives may seem to others.
For those of us who observe these changes through the lens of culture, history, and community, whether in the United States or abroad, this moment feels significant. It reflects a deeper question that goes beyond politics: what kind of society do people believe they are living in, and what kind do they want to build?
The rise of socialist-leaning candidates is not the cause of the problem. It is the consequence. If capitalism in America continues on its current path without meaningful reform, this trend will not slow down, it will accelerate.
And that is something we can no longer afford to ignore.
- Tangible Affordability: Universal healthcare (Medicare for All), affordable housing, and higher taxes on the ultra-wealthy.
- Anti-Establishment Sentiment: Voters who feel the system is "rigged" are choosing candidates offering structural changes over moderate, "tweaking around the edges" policy proposals.
- Aggressive Canvassing: Volunteers routinely knock on tens of thousands of doors to interface directly with voters.
- Mobilizing the Youth: In major races, progressive candidates have successfully captured overwhelmingly high percentages of voters under 40.
- Winning heavily progressive urban pockets ensures that whoever wins the Democratic primary wins the general election.
- Prominent national momentum has built around high-profile leaders like New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani and Washington, D.C. primary winner Janeese Lewis George, creating a blueprint for other local chapters.
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