Your language is as atrocious as your knowledge of history.
Begin with John Winthrop, Puritan of Massachusetts Bay Colony...
1. "In Winthrop’s
Modell of Christian Charity, he makes it plainly clear that society in the New World should be based on love and kindness, a sort of Christian Communism, if you will."
John Winthrop A defense for Christian Communism Honors ENG 2210 Early American Literature
2. "Like his mediaeval predecessors, Winthrop accepted the idea of a blissful state of primitive communism...."
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3. "John Winthrop's general goal when traveling to the New World was a simple one. He wanted this new society to prosper religiously, economically, and politically. All of those aboard the Arbella would have to be willing to cooperate and show sufficient knowledge of Winthrop's words in order to thrive as a new society. After all, the plan was to have the city be a model to the rest of the world.
His reasoning is very similar to that of Communism."
ARON ROMANOFF John Winthrop s A Model of Christian Charity
4. Wm. Bradford, Pilgrim of Plymouth, saved his colony by instituting capitalism...
"Bradford tells the story of the tough Massachusetts winter of 1623 and how the colony barely survived, unable to raise enough food to sustain themselves. One reason he gave: the rules of the colony, as laid down by the investors, specified that the colonists should till their land in common, as was the case in the England from which they migrated.
But the colony, perhaps desperate, seems to have changed the rules in order to jack up productivity,
allowing individual families to tend plots on their own, an early instance of the benefits of pursuing self-interest as opposed to communalism."
Communism Capitalism and the Third Thanksgiving The Rundown PBS NewsHour
a. "
And so assigned to every family a parcell of land, according to the proportion of their number for that end, only for present use (but made no devission for inheritance), and ranged all boys and youth under some familie.
This had very good success; for it made all hands very industrious, so as much more torne was planted then other waise would have bene by any means the Govr or any other could use, and saved him a great deall of trouble, and gave farr better contente. The women now wente willingly into the feild, and tooke their litle-ons with them to set torne, which before would aledg weaknes, and inabilitie; whom to have compelled would have bene thought great tiranie and oppression."
Ibid.