Who ever said Slavery and Capitalism contradict eachother?
I do. There's not much "free enterprise" in whips and shackles.
Sure there is. Just not for the people wearing the shackles, because they already lost.
Capitalism and slavery can co-exist, capitalism is merely a situation in which the ruling class of a society is made up of those who possess capital, and slavery is a case in which people are bought and traded. There is no contradiction.
Monetary competition can lead to companies being stimulated to innovate and provide better services, but it can also lead to companies trying to more efficiently manipulate their target audience more effectively than the other (hence why psychology is involved in advertising).
I would think pure Capitalism could work if people were completely rational beings. Unfortunetely they are not.
Apparently (in America), people generally respond better to the term "Free enterprise" than they do "capitalism"
Also, 1/4 of conservatives have a positive image of socialism
I never really understood why American politics have aligned the way they have. We have the situation where the democrats are pro-government in the economic sphere, but anti-government in the personal sphere (abortion, gay marriage, drugs), and republicans are anti-government in the economic sphere but pro-government in the personal sphere.
You think it would be aligned Pro-Pro vs. Neg-Neg, not Pro-Neg vs. Neg-Pro. Although that would complicate my voting because the dems pretty accurately represent me.
There are essentially three big problems:
1. Resource depletion.
2. Lack of scarcity.
3. Non-capital economy.
1) Resource depletion is characteristic of all forms of society, indeed even all forms of life deplete resources. Not a specifically capitalist problem, but a legitimate critique of humans and other organisms. Capitalism has survived and dealt with many resource shortages, shortages of whale oil (invention of Kerosene), shortages of ivory (lead to the invention of plastic), shortages of conventional oil (shale reserves), shortages of conventional natural gas (fracking), shortages of tin (refining aluminium from bauxite for use in things like aluminium foil instead of tin foil), shortages of diamonds (artificial diamonds).
2) Never will be such a thing as true lack of scarcity, everything will always cost something to produce, and thus have a cost that must be paid for, nothing is ever free. Capitalism gradually brings us closer to abundance for all goods, because it encourages cost cutting because that would increase margin if you kept prices steady, or if you lower prices perhaps increase profits by increasing volume. Progressively lower prices for the same quality of good, caused by competition, bring us closer to the ideal of having everything for free. People always think of new things they want, and they can think of things faster than they can satisfy their desires, thus there is always scarcity.
3) Capitalism can and likely will survive all of the things you mentioned as the capitalist class will still dominate society. The only alternatives are domination of society by the government or the land owners, and the innovations you mentioned would not bring any of those people closer to power.
If they want to be free they need money. That is the spirit of capitalism.
Yes, this. This is why I dont believe a pure free market is actual "freedom", even if it technically is legally. If you can't afford something like education or healthcare, then you don't have the freedom to access these services. The poor are considerably restricted in what they can actually do, even if there is no law actually restricting them.
The fact that some people can not afford an education means that the supply is simply scare, or that by providing the services you incur costs that the poor can not adequately compensate for. If the former where true, than the only alternative to rationing via the price mechanism would be an alternative scheme of rationing, which would just shift the lack of freedom onto different people, and in the case of the latter the only way to give the poor an education would be to force people to teach them at reduced cost, or force another party to subsidize the poor, both of which also result in a lose of freedom.
You don't have an inherent right to have other people educate you or care for you when you are sick. You only have rights when it comes to your person and the things borne of your labor, ie your life, your liberty, and your property.
I find it rather funny that capitalism only seems to benefit the whole of society when it doesn't work completely, while communism only benefits the whole of society when it does work completely.
True free market would pretty much result in slavery, with only a handful who actually succeed. Government laws prevent businesses from poisoning everyone then selling the cure.
Communism doesn't work because it assumes people can work together. In reality, the assholes who'd be on top in free market societies just cheat everyone else.
Which is why a mix of the two, with a heavier focus on free market, is best. Well, this is a paraphrased argument, but still.
This guy gets it. You need some of the competition provided by free and well regulated markets, and you also need some of the co-operation that you can only get through central planning. That is one of the reasons why firms (as in companies) exist, the benefits from co-operating outweigh the benefits of competition.