Isn't the problem here rather more widespread and common than such a distinction can realistically reveal? To my mind, it has a far greater proportion of its origins in the desire of some people to spread and promote opinion and to ensure as far as possible that such opinion becomes "received", i.e the accepted and acceptable norm and this this applies both to current and possible future capitalist stances and anit-capitalist ones alike? There's always someone trying to persuade someone else that their ideas and viewpoints are incontrovertible facts and I do not see that any changes that may occur in future to capitalist or anti-capitalist thinking and practice will be free from that.
An additional (and broadly unrelated but equally notable) problem with the promotion and practical application of market capitalism is that far too many of its promoters and practitioners seem unwilling to recognise and/or incapable of recognising that it does not, cannot and should not be expected to govern every aspect of life to the point at which nothing is any lonber considered to have any value unless it has monetary value.
Whilst I do consider that it might just be possible eventually to break the mould of the latter, the prevalence of human foibles will almost certainly continue indefinitely to conspire against that of the former.
An additional (and broadly unrelated but equally notable) problem with the promotion and practical application of market capitalism is that far too many of its promoters and practitioners seem unwilling to recognise and/or incapable of recognising that it does not, cannot and should not be expected to govern every aspect of life to the point at which nothing is any lonber considered to have any value unless it has monetary value.
Whilst I do consider that it might just be possible eventually to break the mould of the latter, the prevalence of human foibles will almost certainly continue indefinitely to conspire against that of the former.
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