A system that doesn't discriminate against people provides the best opportunities for everyone, including the losers, to improve their lives. Would you rather be a loser because you just didn't try hard enough, or because the system was stacked against you?
I can control my own effort. I can't control the system stacked against me. So until we live in a country that provides a level playing field for all, we've got much work to do.
If our American system is flawed, then it is our problem. However, the attitudes and and culture promoted in this country, a blend of "pull up the ladder I got mine" and Keeping up with the Jonses"
IOW, there isn't a group or community effort make America 'all men created equal'
I think most of us would join together and would advocate having the brightest, hardest working people succeed, and having the most efficient companies offering the most value succeed.
I disagree. We live in a very private and individualistic society. "I won't bother you, you don't bother me". Sure we see times of charity and help.
Look at illegal workers in the US. We all don't like it, but yet, we support corporations that use illegals. Why do illegals keep coming? We aren't getting to the root of the problems because we is me.
In other words, we don't function as a community. We aren't interested in public solutions to problems. We want to coerce the opposition to our will.
Your last statement is completely unfounded. The United States economy, while not entirely based on a completely free market, has one of the highest standards of living in the world. Even our neediest have food, shelter, and amenities that are the envy of the world.
This is a common talking point of the right wing think tanks. As long we are better off than the rest of the world, then we don't need to improve? If American is a 7 and third world africa is a 2, how far do we slide before we call BS? 5? 3?
We've already slid back in the last decade. Our purchase power has decreased while exec elites have
used workers as ATM machines. The disparity in pay in the 1980s between workers and execs was 41x. Today it is 433x. No one seems to care except when the govt works out a homeowners bailout, then people go apeshi t. Remember keeping up with the Joneses?
Why is it when our fellow citizens act poorly we get angry, but when our corporate citizens act criminal, we are indifferent?
Just because our economy provides a better standard for most, doesn't mean it isn't as effective as it can be... I say it is not, with so many Americans in poverty.
Why should our "free market" system provide so much excess all while we have so many in need both domestically and globally? Real capitalism, righteous capitalism provides growth and reward for risk takers all while providing goods and services that real people need.