I think I see what you're getting at here, in that the social constructs that surround capitalism lead to communism.
I think the breakdown is in the parenting between the generations:
Manual labor generation, works hard, teaches kids value of education and marketable skills. We'd probably call this the greatest generation.
White collar generation, relatively well off middle class. These split up, some of them teach their kids value of education and marketable skills, these go on to be the business owners. The others teach their kids to "follow their passion" and they can do whatever they want. This started with the boomers, but the boomers that had business owner kids in Gen X follow the same sort of split, so you've got some of their kids going business and others to passion.
Passion generation, this is where everything breaks. These kids go off and follow their passion and their passion sucks and doesn't provide any value. Now they are older and unqualified and the best option would be to go back to manual labor. They likely could even get high-end manual labor with the right work. But they shouldn't have to because it's not their passion, so they work at Starbucks and bitch to the government about the rich people (their parents no less) not giving them free shit and we've got the commie push.
I know myself I'd be in the later half of this, but growing up I was always encouraged to find things I like that also were valuable skills.
I think I see what you're getting at here, in that the social constructs that surround capitalism lead to communism.
I think the breakdown is in the parenting between the generations:
I know myself I'd be in the later half of this, but growing up I was always encouraged to find things I like that also were valuable skills.