As much as I love free market capitalism, I also think it is terrible. Humans are evolved for a structure full of restrictions, yet sufficient enough freedom and resource development subverts the restricting structure. It's like how Nietzsche believed that Christianity was its own downfall, since Christianity allows for sufficient freedom, which allows for freedom from Christianity, which has created societies that were built on Christian ideals thwarting those ideals.

An example of a reason I think free market capitalism is also terrible is that it provides for charlatans to gain tremendous power. People like Jimmy Kimmel, Alex Jones, Al Sharpton, Keith Olbermann -- total charlatans. They're playing characters. They're lying because it gets them audience and status and resources.

Free market capitalism has trade offs. It has remarkably reduced the amount of suffering that comes through hunger, disease, and war. It has remarkably increased the amount of luxury and entertainment in the world. But it has also provided for mobs of delusional people manipulated by charlatans.

Is free market capitalism a net benefit to the world? The answer is probably an unequivocal yes. But it's not perfect. At the very least, it has embedded in its elementary principles a way to correct for the unintended negatives that arise from greater freedom and greater resources.