Therefore the market prioritizes capital. We need to be prioritizing our well-beings. The leaders are not. wellbeing is not profit in any way.
I think we'll just have to disagree on that one. First off - Well-being is definitely profit for an individual and for groups of people (families, communities, etc. Maybe at some point it stops scaling). Secondly - the capitalist market doesn't prioritize capital - it prioritizes
extracting value from capital - there's an important difference. The reason we see breakdowns today is mainly in two categories: A) a preponderance of maximizing short-term value over long, and B) the breakdown in balance against concentration of ownership.
Computers, smartphones, the internet... All done without profit in mind, by the government.
Haha what? Computers were government funded, but don't be fooled that it wasn't for profit: heavy computers were done
to win a war. If that's not profit, I don't know how to continue...
Counterpoint, why do we need money at all?
It would be cool if we didn't need it - but I don't know of any other system that can so effectively manage deferred trades. Put another way: barter-only really sucks, and there are many reasons we don't do that any more.
We're labor. Another form of capital.
I don't know how to discuss this. Is there a new economic model out there I've missed? This feels almost as extreme as saying "services are another form of goods".
As for policy - talk of "hold companies (or governments) accountable" sounds good, until you ask "how"? How do you make a policy that will "punish the abusive companies" without punishing the individual worse? Look at something like pollution - yeah those companies may emit 70% of the CO2 or whatever. But if you scale that per consumer of their good/service, say "if you pollute this much per customer, you're above the limit" then you'll probably find that anyone with a smaller economy of scale is going to be worse.
I mean, when I grill on charcoal in my yard, I produce way more emissions and particulates per hamburger than your favorite evil burger chain. Should I be banned from doing that? Maybe - I don't know. Should I just have to pay a fee for it, as it's a luxury to be able to grill in my own yard? How do you set the fee?
Ivory-tower philosophizing is great, but when it comes to shoe-leather you'll find there's lot of pitfalls and corner cases.
Regarding armed guards to keep employees in line: I honestly don't even know how to comment on a society where that is possible. I don't even know why people keep working for WalMart to be honest... I can't comprehend a mindset where I would not be willing to sacrifice short term to get out of that cycle. I'd live at home, band together with friends, something, anything, to have a different situation. But you know what? Some people don't have that motivation. "You can lead a horse to water" is a saying for a reason... yeah it doesn't mean you should abuse people, but there's also real cost (social and economic) associated with over-paying for a good or service.
As for "socialisim train" - sort of. Basically my views are that we need systems that have incentives to make you want to help others in addition to yourself, rather than help yourself at the expense of others. But I've been around the sun enough times to know that this isn't something you can enforce - it's something you have to demonstrate and instill in the younger generations. Our culture has gone from the "pull-yourself-up generation", to the "give your kids better than you had generation" to the "keep the awesome stuff I got" generation to the disenfranchised "those guys have everything, what's left for me" generation.
I don't know what generation is next - I'm hoping it's another combo of "pull-yourself-up" plus "give to others" one, not a "you know what, screw this" kind of desperation.