Ok, take your pity for my fragile mind out of the equation and let's debate like grown ups for once. I will take your points and address them but then you have to actually respond like for like with no misdirection or "this is too much effort" responses.
1. I hate greedy corporations as much as you. I hate wealth inequality as much as you. But the capitalist system isn’t the direct cause of these evils.
Nobody has claimed that the capitalist system is the direct cause of inequity. Find me one place where I said it was the direct cause and I will back down. Capitalism is just a system. It is the best system we have right now but it is just a system. The debate here is about the interference of governments. So we are talking system control. Please acknowledge that I am discussing system control. I very much dislike unfettered capitalism because a system without control is anarchy. Anarchy is a concept that always leads to the dominance of the powerful over the vulnerable. This is as true for money as it is for a playground. Goverments are there to control the system of capitalism. You agree?
2. You will always get ridiculous wealth & power inequality in any system that we devise. It’s the nature of any hierarchical structure.
Absolutely. So ideology should raise us above nature, right? Nature is all violence and take what I want. Society is the ideological urge to create something better than that. We cannot and should not stop people getting rich. But we should ensure that people's wealth is taxed in such a way as to lessen the suffering of those who have not. From a capitalist viewpoint this recycling of money is necessary as a closed system always dies. Correct? If money only ever travels up, it can't come back down to go up again. Thatcher called this the drip-down model of society. Ideologically that states that if a few get very rich then enough will profit from that that we all feel richer. I fundamentally disagree with this principle. To me, wealth is always sucked away from the masses and towards the few. That is why I believe regulation and taxation are important. Because society is greater than the individual.
Let's be clear. I haven't asked for an anarchist restructuring. I am asking for fair wealth redistribution through taxes that enable those at the bottom to fully access the wealth you think they can get through hard work. Explain to me how unfettered, low-tax economies will balance society to create vibrant capitalist systems and not dead closed systems?
3. Your life has flourished because of inventors & entrepreneurs creating solutions that allow you to live the way you do. Capitalism allows humans to specialise and direct their efforts toward production and a greater goal. Markets allow those incentives to align and work together to produce better outcomes.
Markets have to be structured, regulated and challenged, right? You have said many times that the NHS doesn't work because it is a closed loop where there is no incentive to progress. Ultimately wealth creates stagnation and growth creates invention. Only when the very rich are challenged by the market and by individuals with the resources to create alternatives will things change for the better. Therefore, taxing "super-wealth" highly incentivises a strong market. Take Amazon. Here is a super-monopoly which sucks wealth out of countries and out of the people in those countries through economic loopholes and market dominance. You would agree we need to strongly regulate to present that, correct?
4. The problems you are talking about are caused by the central banks & printing of money, not capitalism itself. Governments printing fiat currency has allowed them to direct capital against the free market and bend it to their own aims.
This is a misdirect. Governments print money only in times of economic stress created by global markets. These global markets are often poorly regulated. They have never ever added money because they taxed people. So, remembering this is a debate around taxation, it is poorly controlled economic markets and capitalist systems that lead to the printing of money. A fairly taxed society where people are adequately provided for by adequate taxation is far less likely to need to print more money as an emergency measure.
If you are smart you will point, at this moment, to the financial hardships of communist countries. This would be a fair point. I am not aiming to create the UK as USSR II. What I want is a strong social contract that puts the needs of the public ahead of the needs of business and promises that taxation is unavoidable by the rich and valued by the rest of society. I want people to stop lying about who is impacted by taxation. I showed you earlier that someone on minimum wage will pay about £60 per month in tax. Yet their rent may be as much £1000. This is unfettered, unsocially-acceptable capitalism and a lack of proper government intervention in action.
5. This is why I feel strongly that more capitalism and less government intervention is the answer. Not less capitalism and relying on the daddy state
Not one problem you mention is down to over-active governments. None of the issues you have are about printing money. They are the inevitable consequence of unfetttered capitalism in a free market economy that has no social contract. A world where investors care about the bottom line and the bottom line is profit leads always to the suffering of those who have not.
I am not a socialist, but you make me want to listen to the arguments for socialism. Thanks.
(Not sarcasm - genuine thanks)