Obviously a man should be rewarded with talent and virtue. I despise the school system's method of raising test scores to meet minority standards and I also despise affirmative action.
You can't have it both ways, sir. Either a man is rewarded commensurate to his expended effort, and is the owner of that reward, or he is not and does not. One will always create a society in which the best and brightest are productive, the other will always create a society where those men ignore their gifts, having no incentive to exercise them.
Liberalism and capitalism has been a curse, not a blessing, for the worker of today.
That wasn't my question. You argued that if capitalism were a better, more efficient form of economics, why did it take so long to develop. I contrasted that with the long period between the fall of man and the arrival of his Redeemer. I notice that you did not respond to that. I'm not surprised.
An obsession with economics is very liberal. The philosophies argued that king, queen, parasite aristocracy, bishops, priests, etc. would all have to be eradicated else the people would never be set free.
Show me a man that does not eat, nor sleep, nor suffer at the hands of the elements. Then I'll believe that preoccupation with economics is unnecessary.
Who is stealing anything? A man's greatness is called for the service of the nation, not his own self-centered individualism.
It is not your place, nor the place of the State, to put a price on the fruit of a man's mind.
Capitalism has never been condemned.
As I said, capitalism has never been condemned.