World Cup Visitors Get It; the Pope and Socialists Don't
Several things have taken place over the past week that shore up the importance of understanding what has truly made the United States of America the most prosperous country in human history.
First, we have the foreigners visiting the U.S. to cheer on their teams in this year's World Cup soccer championship. As I wrote last week, it's been heartwarming to see how much these people love America, and how surprised they've been to find that Americans are warm, welcoming, generous and kind people.
Another aspect of America that has astonished our guests is the number, size and variety of our businesses: restaurants of every type, small boutiques, "big box" supermarkets and corner grocers, food trucks, outdoor equipment and hunting stores (with their ubiquitous guns and ammo), mom-and-pop shops, little kids' lemonade stands, delicatessens — you name it. Social media is filled with posts and videos in which visitors express their amazement at the quality of the food (and portion size!), "free" appetizers and soda refills, and the countless options and choices among America's products and services.
That, my friends, is a consequence of America's culture of entrepreneurship — a fact that some of the foreigners here have recognized and remarked upon with envy. One Canadian described us as "the most opportunity-dense country ever."
So I was disappointed (though not surprised) when Pope Leo XIV posted on X a few days ago that food, water and health care shouldn't be "commodities" that are subject to "market considerations." In his follow-up post, he "appealed to governments" to "increase the resources dedicated to combating hunger and its root causes."
Seriously? Governments are the chief "root causes" of hunger.
The key to adequate food production is not government but small business. Sorry, Holy Father, but food, water and health care are "commodities," because their provision, for the most........
