Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Freedom with Fairness: My Take on Capitalism, Socialism, and Citizenship


When I think about big political and economic systems like capitalism, socialism, and communism, I often come back to a simple story of two farmers.

Farmer A grows 10 bags of wheat and has a family of 4.

Farmer B grows 5 bags of wheat and has a family of 8.


Now the question is: how should their wheat be divided?



Capitalism


Each farmer keeps what he produces.

Farmer A keeps 10 bags.

Farmer B keeps 5 bags.

If Farmer B’s family needs more, he must buy or trade with Farmer A.


Principle: Reward for effort, minimal redistribution.



Communism


All wheat is pooled together, then shared equally among everyone.

Total = 10 + 5 = 15 bags.

Total people = 4 + 8 = 12 people.

Each person gets 1.25 bags.

→ Farmer A’s family (4 × 1.25) = 5 bags.

→ Farmer B’s family (8 × 1.25) = 10 bags.


Principle: From each according to ability, to each according to need.



Socialism


Each farmer keeps most of what he earns, but a portion is collected and redistributed for fairness.

Farmer A contributes 3 bags to a community pool and keeps 7 bags.

Farmer B contributes 1 bag and keeps 4 bags.

The pooled 4 bags are redistributed to help larger or struggling families.

After redistribution, Farmer A ends with 7 bags, Farmer B ends with 8 bags.


Principle: Balance between fairness and reward.


This story taught me something important: no single system is perfect.



Why I Lean Toward a Middle Path


Pure capitalism rewards hard work but can leave the vulnerable behind.

Pure communism guarantees equality but kills motivation.

Pure socialism tries to balance the two, but often struggles with efficiency.


So what works best? For me, it’s a capitalist base with socialist safeguards.


That means:

Yes, Farmer A deserves to enjoy the fruits of his labor.

But no, Farmer B’s children shouldn’t starve because his harvest was smaller.

The solution is a system where effort is rewarded but dignity is protected.



🇨🇦 In Canada: I Support Conservatives


In Canada, I lean toward the Conservatives. Not because I want to abandon social programs, but because I believe in keeping the capitalist backbone strong while following the socialist tenets of equal distribution of care. Conservatives champion lower taxes, smaller government, and enterprise — but they still protect essentials: universal healthcare, pensions, child benefits.


Here, accountability is also better built into the system. Governments can fall if they lose public trust, and leaders can be questioned and replaced. That keeps both capitalism and fairness in check.



A Philosophy for Life


To me, politics is not about left or right. It’s about living by a principle:


“Freedom with fairness. Effort with empathy. Power with accountability.”


This extends beyond governments — it’s personal.

When somebody pays me, I feel accountable to deliver value.

By the same logic, when citizens pay taxes, the government — which is elected by the people and funded by taxpayers’ money — must be accountable to them.

Without accountability, freedom and fairness collapse into corruption and exploitation.


In the end, I believe my worldview is simply this:

Reward effort.

Protect dignity.

Demand accountability.

Avoid extremes.


That, to me, is the true path of a citizen who cares — for family, for community, and for the country.

Most Indians Modern Feudal Mindset

                                                

A nation’s progress is not measured by the number of its skyscrapers, but by the stature of its mind. India has changed its skylines, not its premises. Beneath the glass and steel of its cities lies the same ancient submission — to power, to tribe, to myth. The nation that once produced thinkers capable of abstraction has learned to worship obedience as a virtue and dependence as destiny.

Most of the Indians mindset remains feudal — not because kings still rule, but because men still kneel. Authority is not earned through reason or merit but inherited through position, caste, or wealth. The peasant’s loyalty to his landlord has merely changed form; it now appears as the voter’s devotion to his leader, the employee’s worship of his boss, the citizen’s reverence for the bureaucrat. Individual dignity has been replaced by the need for validation from the powerful.


It is also mythological — not in the poetic sense of imagination, but in the moral sense of evasion. Myths that once served as metaphors for human struggle have become instruments of submission. Instead of learning from the epics, people seek permission from them. Truth is not discovered; it is decreed by tradition. A culture that once asked questions of the cosmos now fears questioning its own customs.


And it is patriarchal, because the idea of freedom still ends at the threshold of the family. The man is ruler by birthright; the woman, subject by decree. Honor replaces morality; control replaces respect. The tribe — whether of blood, caste, or religion — demands loyalty not to values but to its survival. Individual conscience is smothered by the collective’s code.


This, then, is India’s tragedy: it has built a republic on a feudal soul. Its constitution promises liberty; its citizens still crave masters. Its economy speaks of growth; its morality whispers obedience.


Yet somewhere within this vast inertia, a different spirit stirs — men and women who refuse to kneel before birth, title, or god; who seek truth not in scripture but in logic; who measure worth not by faith, but by thought and action.


When such minds rise, India will finally enter modernity — not by importing machines or slogans, but by reclaiming the one idea that made civilization possible: the sanctity of the individual mind. Until then, progress will remain decoration — a palace built on medieval foundations.

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I firstly declare here that all the content written in the blog is exclusively written by me and I hold the copyrights of each and everything. Be it a poem or a movie review. Also, the videos or photographs I upload or attach are exclusively owned by me. This declaration is important in a world that seems so worried of piracy. The prime purpose of these blogs is to put my writings and photographs on the net. and well to start with.... I live in my mind, and existence is the attempt to bring my thoughts into physical reality, I celebrate myself, sing myself and I am always happy in my own company.....I am not the best in the world but I strive for excellence and thats what keeps me alive... Talking much about oneself can also be a means to conceal oneself--Friedrich Nietzsche