>>33
(not
>>29 here) I agree with you. But I would say that a lot of the corruption that goes on in 'capitalism' is all this corporatism; the corporations run the show and they're in bed with the government (lobbying, backroom deals, etc.) If I were to advocate libertarianism, it wouldn't be the libertarianism that Alan Greenspan advocated. Because you can't even argue for a free market without first talking about abolishing the Federal Reserve and legalizing competing currencies, for example, being that the Fed is statist control of the entire monetary system.
I do agree with you that communism doesn't work. It was given a try and it just didn't work when put into practice.