I think there is a middle way to do that while advancing social justice (in its widest application) - not through strictly economic capitalism with its reliance on free markets as a means of doing that (I don't think that works as perfectly as proponents of it, like yourself, it would seem, think it does) and not through democratic socialism that depends on management by the state to do it (we'll all likely agree definitely doesn't work).
Man is evil. Power corrupts. I'd be happy to argue either of those sentences with any progressives present. I've met only a handful of statists in my lifetime who actually believe those statements to be untrue. If what you say is actually what you believe, why give more power to an elite few? And Donald Trump is not one bit better when he says he is going to establish a tariff. Trump says he is going to stop crime, "right now". and he applied "right now" to destroying ISIS too. How do you figure he is going to do that...declare war and marshal law at the same time?
Money and power are interchangeable, perhaps not in an exact formula like E=MC(2), but close enough. Trump has acquired money and wants to trade it for power. Hillary has already engaged in several transactions trading power for money. She just wants "more". The only difference between the two is that Hillary has actually traded power for money. Trump merely wants to trade money for power.
I assuredly do not think capitalism "works perfectly". What recommends capitalism as an economic system can be summarized in two sentences: " Man is evil. Power corrupts". And, just for good measure (and to send my friend Hack into a snit), Christianity is the only religious system based on the idea that man is evil. Only one. It is the combination of capitalism and Christianity that made the US exceptional.
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