Socialism Sucks Audiobook By Robert Lawson, Benjamin Powell cover art

Socialism Sucks

Two Economists Drink Their Way Through the Unfree World

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Socialism Sucks

By: Robert Lawson, Benjamin Powell
Narrated by: John Pruden
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About this listen

The bastard step-child of Milton Friedman and Anthony Bourdain, Socialism Sucks is a bar crawl through former, current, and wannabe socialist countries around the world. Free-market economists Robert Lawson and Benjamin Powell travel to countries like Venezuela, Cuba, Russia, and Sweden to investigate the dangers and idiocies of socialism - while drinking a lot of beer.

©2019 Dreamscape Media, LLC (P)2019 Dreamscape Media, LLC
Communism & Socialism Conservatism & Liberalism Economics Food & Wine Ideologies & Doctrines Political Science Politics & Government Thought-Provoking Funny Imperialism
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Educational Content • Entertaining Approach • Informative Analysis • Real-world Examples • Accessible Economics
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even if you disagree with the authors politically, this is an informative and entertaining book that constructs it's argument with facts and real world experience...and beer.

entertaining and informative

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My only complaint was the conclusion that open borders would benefit everyone. I highly doubt it. The United States would end up overcrowded & the theory doesn’t take into account the social ramifications of what their economic model considers to be a good thing.

Excellent fun read

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The author makes extremely reasonable facts about the actual application of socialism. The best part however is at the end of the book when they go to a socialist conference and question millennials about socialism and why they support it. The results where extremely interesting.
I definitely recommend this book. It was a great listen and was concise without a lot of hard to understand vocabulary. Though it was biased against socialism, it didn’t use ‘bad’ facts to prove its points.

Powerful Argument Against Socialism

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Felt like I was in a bar talking about the fate of the world with some old friends.

Excellent read, very entertaining

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Very entertaining way of equating the success (or lack thereof) of socialist countries through the quality and variety of something that most young people can relate to, beer. It also goes into some misconceptions people have about Socialism and corrects them.

I'll drink to that

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as a soviet born libertarian, I found the subject matter engaging and relevant to today's affairs and arguments. simply put, socialism sucks!

millennials would benefit to read this

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Review in a nutshell: I was entertained throughout and learned more than I anticipated in a 4 hour 25 minute book.

Eye opening moments:

Life in Sweden might be good, but Swedes living in the U.S. are significantly more prosperous than Swedes living in Sweden (similarly but less surprisingly, Cubans living in the U.S. are far better off than Cubans in Cuba).

Bernie Sanders once praised Venezuela's brand of socialism (“These days, the American dream is more apt to be realized in South America, in places such as Ecuador, Venezuela, and Argentina, where incomes are actually more equal today than they are in the land of Horatio Alger. Who’s the banana republic now?”-Bernie Sanders). I wish this were more widely known.

Some Cubans are aware that more interaction with America will lend itself to growing freedom in Cuba.

Georgia's surge toward freedom was completely new information to me.

Some concerns:

High school teachers and community college professors might not assign or recommend this book due to the repeated references to alcohol. Hey Robert and Benjamin, maybe this calls for a second book geared toward that audience?

Partway through this book I thought, "O goodness, they think millennials are actually socialists! That's why we're spending so much time talking about true socialism in this book up to this point." And I thought the entire book was going to be a waste. Once we got to the socialist convention in the U.S., they diagnosed what's going on among young Americans very accurately, which was a big relief. Somehow I missed that near the front of the book . . . so if you're like me when you read this maybe I can help -- they tie up everything very well in the second half of the book. Don't worry! In fact, the last few chapters would be worth reading on their own.

Overall, well done! Big thanks to the authors.

-Jordan, age 30.

I learned more than I anticipated in a 4 + hr book

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This is a book that I want to send to my millennial children who don’t seem to understand the perils of socialism.



Both entertaining and informative

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Great book for beer lovers and people thinking that socialism will all work out fine.

Every millennial should read this!

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Great description of true socialism. Good history of the calamities socialism created and millions who were killed. But very little discussion of current ideas of Democratic Socialism and whether it will work.

Good book

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