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Americans love freedom we love money we love capitalism. Capitalism is most definitely an

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Americans love freedom; we love money; we love capitalism. Capitalism is most definitely an element of dominant culture amongst the citizens of the United States. In American culture it is easy to see that many of our institutions, including public schools, indoctrinate the children whom they serve with a common American idealism: capitalism is good, communism is bad. Being a citizen of the United States and not being a capitalist is verging upon the fringe of an unwritten taboo. If there is one thing that is true: capitalism does work, and the dominant thought of the United States is that it works the best. But is this true? Does capitalism really work the best? In this essay, I will begin by explicitly defining and analyzing …show more content…

What I have described as capitalism is not just an economic system; it is a social system that has engrained itself into the core of American rationalism, to the point at which it is onerous to dissociate our values from our economic system. Which leads me to my ensuing point: where did capitalism come from and by what means was it engrained into our culture? Instances of capitalism can be traced all the way back to mercantilism in the fourteenth century in Western Europe. The ownership of land was becoming a more basic concept; however the ownership was concentrated in the upper class. The proletarian began to take their place as the laborers due to the fact that they either had no means of production or, even if they did, their rate and efficiency of production was shadowed by that of the big land owners and their workforce of other laborers. This is enough information to get the point across that this method of economic organization was what developed the economical situation, coupled with the desire for religious freedom, which caused many peasants to immigrate to North America in the first place. So, moving on, why did the people once again adopt capitalism? Personally, I agree with Weber’s theory. Weber believes that Protestant religious belief systems, including Calvinist, Pietistic, Baptist, and Methodist sects, played a role in the

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