As you allude to in the second section some of the parameters need to get tweaked in the US sure. Lobbying in politics is a huge one. Another big one for me is privatization of media without proper oversight. And a big part of this comes from our advertising culture which promotes a synergistic relationship between advertisers and outlets that can reach the largest proportion of people with expendable income. In the 20th century, readership numbers stopped being as important once advertising revenue won out. Over time, this led to the demise of outlets that spent their time focusing on issues related to the working class. And now in the 21st century I think we are seeing the repercussions of this as media outlets battle over two major demographics: young money founded on education and old money founded on generational wealth. And I feel that those unspoken for is the demographic becoming increasingly radicalized by populist, anti-establishment rhetoric. In this manner, this trend toward commercialization is one that is antagonistic toward maintaining a strong social fabric. There is no money to be made in it. And the resulting culture of individualism and consumerism erodes social factors that might otherwise mitigate the effects of income inequality. But you don't need to burn the whole system to the ground to change this, you just need to reign these issues in.