Andrés Alburquerque, Senior Fellow, MSI² for FinGurú
The Fabian Society is named after the Roman general Quintus Fabius and his tactics of delayed attacks against Hannibal.
Those on the right are naive by nature… the left constantly feeds us the narrative they want us to swallow, and we inevitably do.
The most widespread myth, fallacy —or, to put it gently, inaccuracy— is the idea that the current Democratic Party has deviated: that it is temporarily adrift and lost at sea. It is seen as a mere degeneration of the great party it once was. An aberration that can be corrected; a temporary stumble. False! This has been the plan from day one: a mix of fascism, socialism, and ultimately, communism as a goal, achievable through multiple possible paths, like spaghetti in a hurricane forecast: many different routes with a certain outcome: disaster.
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Origins of Fabianism.
The Fabian Society is named after the Roman general Quintus Fabius and his tactics of delayed attacks against Hannibal. His logic can be illustrated with the following quote:
“At the right moment you must wait, as Fabius did with great patience when fighting against Hannibal, although many censured his delays; but when the moment comes, you must strike hard, as Fabius did, or your waiting will be in vain and fruitless.”
That moment is now, America in 2025.
The society was founded on January 4, 1884, and attracted writers of the stature of Bernard Shaw; it is not surprising that Kennedy, the epitome of the Fabian, quoted him repeatedly during his political career: “Some men see things as they are and ask: ‘Why?’ I dream things that never were and say: ‘Why not?’” This phrase, with its intrinsic grandeur, highlights and explains the essence of Fabianism. Bold… betting big…
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The icon of the society says it all: a wolf in sheep’s clothing —a strategy disguised as moderation.
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Fabianism in action.
The first Fabian president was Woodrow Wilson, who laid the groundwork for what was to come with his technocratic government and administrative structure. Infamously, the creation of the Federal Reserve. Although it was not his original idea, he was key in building the financial scaffolding with which the Fed was erected as we know it today.
He signed the Federal Reserve Act in 1913 while wealthy bankers on both sides of the Atlantic prepared a Russian communist, Vladimir Lenin, to take control of the largest country in the world and declare war on capitalism.
It seems a dichotomy, but it is not. It was all part of the master plan.
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Fabianism at its peak.
The second and most influential Fabian president was FDR, with his New Deal; apparently, a great project or set of projects that sounded very good, but in reality delayed our recovery from the Great Depression and consolidated the infiltration of our most sacred institutions with his wife’s friends.
It must be very clear that Fabianism is the ultimate deception and is based on accumulating the right complaints; the right causes and the right claims, only to endlessly stir the masses towards a solution that never arrives, while they conveniently remain in power.
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Institutions over elections.
Elections can be unpredictable and ungovernable. No matter how much money is funneled into a campaign, the outcome is never guaranteed; instead, if you systematically infiltrate an institution with the right cadres, it will always respond to you.
And here we have a mix of old Gramscianism that undermines the West from within and current leftist activism. The most scandalous example of this practice was Obama’s appointment of John Brennan as CIA chief: a self-admitted communist voter.
It is no surprise that he publicly declared that Hunter Biden's laptop was an active Russian operation; a blatant lie that has been repeatedly debunked since then.
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Fabianism today.
Many seem surprised by the “transformation” that has taken place within the Democratic Party; some say they are just a bunch of crazies, while others refer to a group of four congresswomen. This has not happened by accident. Let us translate a quote from the secret object of desire for so many on the left: Fidel Castro:
“We have always been communists and we will die communists; at first, we could not boast of our ideology because the people were not ready…”; always the deception.
Behind the most beautiful landscapes lie the darkest swamps. But why should we care?
Today, Fabian instincts are sharper than ever, and the question is not whether they have removed the disguise, but why now. And the dark and frightening truth begins to take shape. Because they know it is their moment. It is time to wage the mother of all wars. The war against every part of our society, but again, the Fabian way, not an all-out war, but one divided into skirmishes.
They must be careful not to alienate all of society, because that would mean their downfall; so how will they do it? As only a true Fabian would. Attacking one segment at a time and uniting all others against that one, until it is eliminated, and then moving to the next; and the next; and the next, until there is no resistance.
Until the few survivors are just a mass of diminished beings, unaware that they have drifted into the abyss of nothingness.
Andrés Alburquerque is a political analyst, university professor, and media personality born in Cuba, recognized for his open defense of democratic values and his fierce criticism of authoritarianism in Latin America. Born in Havana in 1956 into a communist family, he witnessed early the disillusionment that followed the Cuban Revolution, a turning point that shaped his lifelong commitment to political truth and civic freedom.
Forced into exile, Alburquerque lived in Europe and Latin America, including Italy, the Dominican Republic, and Mexico, before establishing his permanent residence in the United States in 2007. Since then, he has been an active voice in the Republican Party, known for his independent views and his willingness to confront ideological complacency within its political ranks.
Alburquerque is the author of Ten More or Less Cuban Stories, a literary work that reflects his deep cultural roots and his critical perspective on Cuban society. He also hosts Citizen Focus, a YouTube program dedicated to analyzing the political and social dilemmas facing American democracy in light of the growing influence of the left.
His experience and knowledge have made him a frequent guest on radio and television programs in Miami, where he offers commentary on Cuba, human rights, and regional politics.
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