Comment Re:The problem isn't technology, it's people (Score 2) 202
Capitalism itself is very simple. You're allowed to own things. You're allowed to buy, sell, and trade things.
That's precisely why everyone limits it, including Libertarians. Things Capitalists will happily trade when not restrained include, among others -- and these are things that happened until they were forcibly prevented: slaves, of both the chattel and indentured varieties; laws, purchasing the best priced ones from the best law-sellers; navies from army-renting countries to topple annoying governments; bounty hunters to cut off the hands and legs of children slaves to force their parents to do what they're told; corsairs to attack and destroy competing cargo ships; hitmen to kill competitors; mobs to spank and kill protesters; and so on, and so forth.
What differs between political ideologies is how much restraining they want to put on Capitalism. Libertarians think that forbidding Capitalists to trade on slaves and laws suffices. Others think additional restrains are required. But everyone, without exception, wants to prevent pure, raw Capitalism from running rampant.
No one likes pure, raw, unbridled Capitalism, not even its most staunch defenders.