Alright, you got me riled up with the Ayn Rand jab. After that I might have reacted a little over sensitively.
But I think the question about who's holding the reigns in the Pope's vision of capitalism is valid. Especially since he is referencing the nonexistent boogeyman of unbridled capitalism. Maybe he just doesn't like who's holding the reigns at the moment?
But I think capitalism is more of a threat to the Pope than the Pope is to capitalism, that is, if the Pope legitimately wanted to attack it. That's essentially what I was saying in my OP.
FYI, I'm not a worshiper of Ayn Rand. She has no qualifications as an economist or as a philosopher. She also had the gall to name her "philosophy" Objectivism, while she freely modified it to justify her own failings.
I'm also not advocating for some anarchist version of capitalism.
But I do find it humorous that the Pope would speak out against it, especially since it is typically right-wing religious conservatives that typically freak out about supposed socialists and communists in our midsts.
I did not think you were a worshiper of Rand. I assumed you're familiar with her, however. I realize that her ideas are pretty much ignored in academia. But I can't help bring her up because "libertarians", much like hippies, rub me the wrong way. A lot of them act like their ideas are based upon a life-long pursuit of philosophy, when it is about as deep as a teenager mocking the fakeness of suburbia. But it is petty, and I will be mindful not bring her,or anyone else, up out of context. It is like Dutch always bringing up Obama.
As for the subject of the pope, as Dalamon pointed out, Christians have been talking about this forever. Through out history, there had been countless Christian sects that lived free of possessions. Those movements were at their height during the Middle Ages, when CAPITALISM WAS BORN. I think both capitalism and Christianity are here to stay for the foreseeable future. I don't think either can survive indefinitely. I think it is likely that technology will eventually make both systems obsolete. Capitalism requires scarcity, and Christianity requires death. I highly doubt that either of those will prove a permanent condition for humanity.
Now THAT would be a far more interesting subject for discussion than the pope's boring statement.