Dr_Liszt wrote:Capitalism certainly can't exist without exploitation, as that's built into it.
The book says that is socialist blatter.
Well, it's half right.
Dr_Liszt wrote:It basically says "Capitalism provides what the worker produces."
Yeah, to the capitalist. The capitalist owns everything the worker produces and in return the capitalist gives the worker a wage. The capitalist also owns the means of production. Nothing the worker produces is his or her own. On a broader scale the worker can buy whatever the capitalist (in reality all the employees) made by becoming a consumer, but nothing about that system is fair or equitable or "free". A system which actually provides what the worker produces would be a system in which the worker controls the means of production and owns the result of his or her labor... you know, socialism.
Dr_Liszt wrote:Meaning that is the most just system, but it is far from perfect, so instead of limiting capitalism we should perfect it.
You perfect it by turning it socialist. There is nothing about capitalism that is just.
Dr_Liszt wrote:It also said that socialists like to point out the poverty that exists in abundance, not knowing that when the richer get richer, the poorer will get less poor because of economic growth.
lolololololol
Dr_Liszt wrote:So I do think that capitalism, if you take away the Fed, Wall Street and all the components that have rigged the system, and if you remove unfairness of competition, could in theory be a good system where anyone can grow and be "a source of wealth". But it's basically the imperialist policies and monopolies that have put limitations on it.
I'm not sure if what I'm saying is correct. I guess my question is.. is what I'm saying correct?
Not really. Capitalism is exploitative at its core. I suppose you could argue that it
might be a good system if you define it ridiculously broadly, like "free trade" or "the free market" (as its defenders usually do, as they seem to realize the current system of wage labor capitalism cannot possibly be defended on any humane grounds), but knowing human incentives such a system will never be fair for very long. It would be radically unsustainable. (And even a perfect platonic system of "free trade" would still be bound by relationships of domination and exploitation.) No, capitalism is an abomination and it needs to be scrapped entirely.