Why she became a socialist

Posted May 13, 2009

Recently I visited a friend’s house and saw a photo of a little girl with those super-short bangs that were popular when I was young. I asked my friend Liz (I’ll change the names) if it was her, and she said no, it was her sister Mary. “It’s because of Mary that I’m a socialist,” she said, and went on to say that Mary had died when she was 10 years old and Liz was 16.

“From the time Mary was two weeks old everyone knew she was going to die,” Liz said. She had a heart condition. “Everyone was always so nice to her, and because of that she was really, really nice herself.” She remembered a rare instance when the girls’ mother had lost patience and yelled at Mary, and then felt guilty and apologized. So that her mother wouldn’t feel bad, Mary brushed it off: “Don’t worry, Mom, it wasn’t a big deal.”

Liz decided she wanted everyone to be treated like Mary was so that everyone would have the chance to be like Mary was. She thought the only way to get that was socialism.

Often, when you ask people how or why they became socialists, anger is a big part of it. Righteous anger, of course—a burning sense of injustice. I would have thought Liz would be one of those; she’s a passionate person. I was struck by the idea that a desire for socialism could come from seeing the fruits of love.

Comments

One response to “Why she became a socialist”

  1. dskerz Avatar
    dskerz

    Well said. I think we’ve probably all had certain experiences that made us personally receptacle to socialist ideas. I know I have. I sometimes wonder why so few people become socialists, though I think there are a number of reasons, limited access to these ideas in the US being one of them. But I do think that the moral impulses behind socialism are present in many, many people who don’t even really know what socialism is. Just watch a Michael Moore film, for instance. There are many latent socialists out there. Changing conditions, plus good work by us, can help bring this out.