For those of you that aren't american/don't know about a american civil war/slavery thing:
Going way back to the mid 1800's the movement for slavery was kicking off, the northern states were against slavery, and were for it. The reason why it was divided that way is complicated, but mainly it's because the southern states were heavy on lucrative agriculture which made plantation owners very rich. There was a whole slew of things that went down before it actually came down to violence over the issue such as the underground railroad and the political fight to push for federal ruling on the matter, all of which makes for interesting reading... but I'm not going to go into too big of a lecture here.
Anyway, something interesting I found about the slavery issue, is that southern farmers would actually support slavery in the hopes that they would be able to own a slave someday themselves, despite the fact that realistically very few of them ever would, slavery was making them poorer, it drove the price of their produce down, and wealthy plantations would buy out large amounts of land, making it very hard for a farmer to expand his fields. All of which made it incredibly difficult for a farmer to work up the kind of cash needed to get a slave (the farmers dream being to no longer have to work for his livelihood).
The farmers were aware of this fact, but they still wanted the ability to own slaves...
It's interesting, I guess if people are presented with the chance to live a good life, and the slimmer chance to live a very good life, they'll take their chances with the slim chance option. I think in essence that's the capitalistic dream, the ability for a person to live better than others (obviously they
MUST be more deserving of it if they have that lifestyle).
Of course, there's other things you can read out of that.