Is Hayek Socialist? A Note on The Road to Serfdom

In Saifedean Ammous’ podcast with Thomas Massey, Hayek is accused of being a little too socialist and his book The Road to Serfdom overrated. He is praised, however, for being diplomatic enough with the mainstream to remain relevant until winning the Swedish Central Bank Prize (the so-called Nobel Prize), and then speaking the anarchist language. The Road to Serfdom is the only book by Friedrich Hayek that I have read, and based on just that, I have to disagree with the socialist-lite characterization. The ideas he promotes are libertarian. He does not go up against the Keynesians, but then, the book was meant to target socialists, which it did. ...

May 19, 2026 · 254 words

Why the Worst Get on Top

I recently revisited the chapter titled “Why the Worst Get on Top” from FA Hayek’s The Road to Serfdom. The essay discusses the sociopolitical dynamics within a totalitarian system that inevitably encourage and enable bad actors to gain power while sidelining decent people. The worst features of totalitarian governments are not accidental or avoidable; they are features totalitarianism produces given enough time to operate. Just as a socialist planner must choose between either assuming dictatorial powers or abandoning his plans, a totalitarian dictator must renounce morality or fail. Socialism produces a totalitarian society, which places at its helm a dictator not bound by common morals, and from this system we get social and economic repression, destruction of life and property, elimination of political alternatives, conscription, etc. ...

May 3, 2026 · 515 words