In 1959, Fidel Castro promised to redistribute Cuba's wealth and create equality for all. Within a decade, the island that once exported sugar and cigars to the world couldn't even keep its own lights on. The wealthy fled, but instead of their riches trickling down to the poor, everyone just became equally poor together.
The revolucionarios had calculated that seizing the means of production would mean seizing prosperity itself. What they discovered instead was that prosperity isn't sitting in some vault waiting to be redistributed—it's created daily by millions of voluntary exchanges, investments, and entrepreneurial risks. When you abolish those mechanisms, you don't redistribute wealth; you redistribute poverty.
Today's politicians make the same mathematical error Castro did: they see inequality and assume it represents a fixed pie that just needs better slicing. They never ask why some pies grow while others shrink, or why the countries promising equality most loudly seem to deliver scarcity most efficiently.
The cruel irony is that the only truly "equal" outcome socialism reliably produces is making everyone equally worse off than they started.
🇻🇪 Venezuela invented more than people realize:
🦠 Helicobacter pylori research (early work on stomach ulcers) 🧬 Experimental leprosy & leishmaniasis immunotherapy 🎶 El Sistema — the music education model copied worldwide 🐄 Heat-resistant Carora dairy cattle 🛢️ Heavy crude oil extraction techniques (Orinoco Belt) 🌉 Cable-stayed bridge engineering 🏗️ Earthquake-resistant construction methods 🚠 Urban cable-car public transport 🌽 Industrial arepa flour (globalized a staple food) 🌿 Indigenous cassava detoxification techniques
Note: Venezuelan invention, innovation or significant contribution.