Thanks for sharing. While I found the article informative, I wish it was more cautious in its criticism of the free market.
For example, the article says the free market does not produce the “right” price. I wish this was modified to say the free market does not ALWAYS produce the “right” price. Capitalism generally does produce the “right” price in many, many situations.
And when it doesn’t, as in the case of climate change, I actually think market-based solutions are the best ones. I.e., impose a cost of carbon to capture the externality. Let consumers and producers set new prices taking that into account, and investors put capital into new projects taking this cost into account.
And it does a far better job at setting prices than any other system - especially the trade guilds and mercantilism that it originally replaced, and the systems of communism that came later.
So I agree with Moyers but I wish his criticism of unbridled capitalism included the context that the rise of capitalism has been a positive step forwards. I think we want to supplement capitalism where it fails, and not go back to the days of trade guilds, colonialism and mercantilism, and their attendant inevitable wars. Not to mention communism.
“Look at Venezuela” is a hollow criticism of universal health insurance ... but I think it’s a valid criticism of communism (and of course, authoritarianism). This should be acknowledged when pointing out capitalism’s insufficiencies, in my view.