What a load of delusional crap.
If America never had a socialist agenda we'd have no
[*]roads
[*]schools
[*]libraries
[*]food safety
[*]water safety
[*]mail
[*]public parks
[*]police
[*]national security
[*]GPS
[*]weather reports
- insurance (an inherently socialist concept)
And conservatives don't tell me those aren't things you use or have almost every day.
The item in
blue isn't socialist.
Those in
purple don't need the government to be accomplished; they have been, and can be, done by the private sector.
The ones in
green could easily be done by the private sector; they just don't happen to be because government doesn't let go of anything once it has it. There have been private ventures in mail delivery, and their only problem was that they were up against a monopoly. UPS and others have avoided the monopoly's massive foot and are doing quite well.
The ones in brown probably have to be legitimate government functions; Freidman might have ventured an argument for doing them privately, but unless you want competing water companies trenching and putting in new lines all the time, I don't see much of a way to introduce competition... unless government digs and provides monster access tunnels and charges for their use, so citizens don't have to put up with constant rearrangement of land.
In
red -- could be done privately. Our society was more mature in terms of social responsibility two hundred years ago, though; we're farther from being ready for this than they were -- and in fact, the government has firmly stamped down the different sproutings of beginnings at private police.
In what looks to me like
lavender but the site calls magenta is an interesting case. It's the sort of thing that arguably took government to do, but that's not at all certain; the situation was entirely muddled by an array of monopolies... which under the Constitution are not legitimate, and the government ought to stop doing. But, once built, I can see no real reason the system needs to be in government hands. The real problem with it in terms of the free market is that there's no way to get payment from users, because it isn't necessary to have any codes for access.
That leaves insurance, and there's nothing "inherently socialist" about -- unless you want to call a game of pick-up baseball "inherently socialist", or a neighborhood poker game. All three are matters of people deciding to function together in a cooperative way, the difference being that in one there's no payment required to the organizer, in another the organizer may dip in for funds to provide 'side benefits' to all (and keep the change), and in the third the organizer generally (not always) states up front he's out to (not always) benefit. There's no state involvement, no government monopoly, no compulsion or coercion.
And don't deceive yourself: socialism is based on coercion. Force and monopoly are central to the scheme. It's a plain demonstration of what G. Washington pointed out to early Americans: government is force, nothing but force.