If you look around your everyday life, you may or may not be aware of most things we have in society that are not found in every country in the world. Electronic devices, brand-clothing, cars, etc. these are all materialistic items that can be easily attained since we live in a capitalistic society. Capitalism is a form of economy where the market is controlled by private businesses and industries. Although the U.S. is not entirely a capitalistic economy (because of many government services and products), it is still one of the most successful capitalistic economy in comparison to other first-world countries. On the other hand, you also have countries in the world today that follow an economic system that …show more content…
The paternalistic state protects the weakest and simultaneously gives opportunities to all citizens without exclusions, the fact of controlling the accumulation of wealth is not contrary to wealth itself, but to its excess to individual egoism that blinds the greedy by not allowing participation Of "their" wealth not even to their own relatives. Savage capitalism, the law of the market, the law of the most powerful, is antisocial for it is wild, in a cultured society cannot prevail the savagery of the law of the jungle. But in a cultured society, a dictatorship of a state that exceeds liberties cannot be accepted in an educated society, trying to make everyone equal by force and turning all citizens into employees at the service of the State as was intended in the former Soviet Union. The historical experience is that in these totalitarian states a caste of bureaucrats is born that ends up being equal to the elites of the old monarchic States, in the first decades it is not bad because it has the capacity to remove a ruined nation and to take it to higher levels Of development, but achieved the first objective when the nation wants to enjoy that awakened development in a highly planned world suffocating with very few individual freedoms. Communism is a utopia; savage capitalism is a reality, not a utopia. If a nation is not able to prevent its economy from turning into savage capitalism, it will go directly to the precipice to the catastrophe, which will inexorably lead to a revolution and if that revolution is fought by an alliance of market-controlled countries, the result will be a War in which the poor and the middle class will lay their blood. If the market wins, that nation will be looted, divided and