Sorry, but what I find to be a far more dangerous myth is the belief that socialism is a benign philosophy that benefits mankind.If anything capitalism has made it worse for many groups. The idea that we’re all equal and have an equal chance to succeed is a dangerous myth.
This year marks the 100 year anniversary of the most evil system of government in the history of our world. The Soviets and other socialist movements committed large scale genocide and other crimes against humanity unmatched in their depravity.
One of the key evils of socialism is several factors:
1) It uses a "zero sum" game for happiness and prosperity. It teaches that if person A is happy and successful, it is only because they have somehow robbed or cheated person B of that success.
2) Thus, socialism usually sets up groups of people to serve as scapegoats -- for the National Socialists of Hitler's Germany it was wealthy Jews, for the international socialists of the Communist Party it was the bourgeoisie, for the Occupy Wall St. crowd "the One Percent". etc. And of course implicit in this politics of envy and class warfare is the idea that if you were to just eliminate this "evil" scapegoated group of people, then your life would be happy and prosperous.
For all of the complaints about police abuses in America or similar rants, those are nothing compared to the horrors that socialist governments have unleashed upon the innocent. The largest mass killings in history have all been conducted by socialist governments against their own people. Literally hundreds of millions of innocent people were tortured and killed because the politics of envy deceived enough people to believe that if only they were to give the government enough power to eliminate some scapegoated group -- that society would be transformed into a paradisal utopia.
Is capitalism perfect? Far from it. But its' abuses are laughable when compared to the monstrosity of many of the socialist governments that plagued mankind during the last century. America is the first civilization that I know of where the "poor" are typically obese rather than starving to death. Should we seek to address income inequality? Of course. But the route that traditional socialism takes has been shown by a centuries' worth of oppression to be a way that is implicitly evil.