Sometimes there are no good solutions. Sometimes things get broken beyond repair. Which is why we should try not to break them in the first place. But capitalism doesn't care who gets broken, or how many. All it cares about is maximizing profits for those who have investment capital. And it's driving all our decisions, and corrupting most of our personalities. And it's destroying a lot of human beings.
There can be no solutions until we can acknowledge the problem. And so far that's not happening. Especially not among those who are being rewarded by capitalist greed and indifference. And because capitalism is what it is, they are in control.
Again, I understand your point of view. And if may speculate further, correct me if I'm incorrect, I think I understand what kind of Christianity you like: which is actually the most authentic kind - the doom-pilled Jesus was in fact, a brute realist about the fatality of material conditions. 'The poor will
always be with you.' 'woodworms will eat your rotting earthly gold.' 'gaining the whole world profits you nothing.' My question to you, is to ask if you take all of that as literally as possible
I myself, as a follower of other philosophies, cannot fully forsake the material part of the world, since everything else is built on it. Spirituality, creativity, and motivation all require the material world. It is not doomed, for the sake of hope in heaven, it's instead the foundation of everything else.