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Success Quote by Thomas Sowell

"Socialism in general has a record of failure so blatant that only an intellectual could ignore or evade it"

About this Quote

Sowell’s line lands like a courtroom flourish: not just a claim about economic systems, but an indictment of a certain professional temperament. The jab is surgical because it weaponizes status. “Only an intellectual” flips the usual hierarchy - the credentialed thinker is cast as the most reality-resistant person in the room, uniquely trained to rationalize away evidence. It’s populism with a PhD’s vocabulary: the posture of empiricism paired with contempt for the class that narrates society to itself.

The wording does a lot of hidden work. “Socialism in general” smooths over definitions and variants, bundling everything from democratic social programs to one-party command economies into one account book. “Record of failure” presumes a settled historical ledger, while “so blatant” forecloses debate about metrics: failure for whom, by what yardstick, compared to what alternative? The real target isn’t merely policy; it’s what Sowell sees as intellectual incentives - moral vanity, abstraction addiction, and a preference for elegant theories over messy trade-offs.

Context matters: Sowell emerged from mid-century American debates where the Cold War made “socialism” a civilizational fault line, and later became a conservative public intellectual arguing that incentives and constraints beat intentions. In that ecosystem, the line functions as a gatekeeping tool: if you disagree, you’re not just wrong, you’re performing the very evasion being mocked. That’s why it works rhetorically. It turns an economic argument into a character test, daring the reader to side with “common sense” rather than the seminar room.

Quote Details

TopicFreedom
Source
Verified source: Forbes: The survival of the left (Thomas Sowell, 1997)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Socialism in general has a record of failure so blatant that only an intellectual could ignore or evade it.. This sentence appears verbatim in Thomas Sowell’s Forbes piece “The survival of the left,” dated September 8, 1997. In the Forbes article, it is immediately followed by an additional sentence beginning “Even countries that were once more prosperous than their neighbors…” The quote is later reprinted in the compilation volume The Thomas Sowell Reader (Basic Books, 2011) on p. 144, but the primary/original publication (that can be directly verified online) is the 1997 Forbes article.
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Sowell, Thomas. (2026, February 9). Socialism in general has a record of failure so blatant that only an intellectual could ignore or evade it. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/socialism-in-general-has-a-record-of-failure-so-10483/

Chicago Style
Sowell, Thomas. "Socialism in general has a record of failure so blatant that only an intellectual could ignore or evade it." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/socialism-in-general-has-a-record-of-failure-so-10483/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Socialism in general has a record of failure so blatant that only an intellectual could ignore or evade it." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/socialism-in-general-has-a-record-of-failure-so-10483/. Accessed 22 Feb. 2026.

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Thomas Sowell

Thomas Sowell (born June 30, 1930) is a Economist from USA.

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