Capitalism Today: A System That Feeds on Its Critics
Criticising the Wrong System We have never lacked critiques of capitalism. Inequality widens, crises recur, politics appears increasingly hollow—yet nothing fundamentally shifts. The language of critique is everywhere, from academic theory to social media, and still the system persists with remarkable stability. This raises a more unsettling possibility: the problem is not simply the system itself, but the way it is criticised. What if critique has become one of its most efficient operations? The persistence of capitalism may not be due to a failure of critique, but to its success—its integration into the very logic it claims to oppose. Marxism as Part of the Problem For over a century, Marxism has provided the dominant framework for analysing capitalism. Its central categories—production, labour, and value—organise critique around exploitation and material inequality. Capital extracts surplus value from labour; its contradictions generate crises; history advances through antag...