That's the funny thing about the way things are, it's never enough. There was once a time when we at least had bread and circuses. Now, it's "Is that...BREAD?! GIVE ME THAT, YOU FUCKING FREELOADER, IT'S
MINE!"
I'm starting to suspect that Marx really was onto something with "historical inevitability", because late feudalism had some of the same living absurdities resulting from structural corrosion, and people knew it. See everything ever written by Voltaire or for a more specific example
this scene from Henry V in which Henry's claim on the dukedoms of France is "explained" by way of a two minute long rambling speech about succession law nonsense that could go in any possible direction, which Henry asks to be given so he can feel better about getting thousands and thousands of people killed for his personal desires. "So it is as clear as is the summer sun!"
The weight of feudalism's years started showing, in the inbred mad monarchs and the logic bomb successions piling up, fractional corruption turning France's wide fertile fields into famine like magic and pretty much everybody but the people at the top of society suffering and giving warning after warning to no avail.
That's the historical period I think the one we're entering most resembles. We see shit like
literally offering your flesh and blood to your boss and then getting fired for "poor performance" among an endless parade of more casual abuses in an environment where the people who do all the work are at the casual amusement of the people who manage and the people who own. As that enlightened self-interest plutocrat guy put it a few pages ago, there's a social contract to even the most ardent capitalist system, and it is very broken now. When you cheat those around you with technicalities and lobbyists you can usually get away with it, but each and every one of those marks, every last stolen wage and precautionary firing puts a hole in the overall system that can't easily be healed. That's what happened to feudalism and I'm pretty sure that's what's happening to capitalism now.
We'll work our way out of this species-wide rut eventually, but the way it happens is going to depend a lot on how willing the wealthy are to understand that what they've done in life is just win at a particular system, and that "winning" enough to have that system abolished is a loss for them if they don't manage the move to a new one.