I'm probably missing the point, but in Indonesia, the US, Argentina and Brazil I would say your problems come down to, respectively, corruption, over-legislation, fascism and (again) over-legislation. Can these be present, even persistent, in a capitalist system? Yes. But are they inherent?

I realize that attempting to posit a complete dichotomy between political and economic issues is inaccurate and misleading, but I believe it is still a point that bears repeating. I would assume from your writeup that you are strongly anti-communist and anti-socialist, due to the fact that regimes operating under these economic systems have been victim to rampant abuses of power.

Your problem seems to be more with corrupt political leaders enacting anti-capitalistic (anti-free market) legislation, or making deals in which they trade away things that are not theirs to trade. It's a matter of power... who it belongs to and how it is exercised; these are the people who try to twist any existing system to their advantage. If you would argue that capitalism is more vulnerable to twisting of this nature, then the preceding arguments leave me unconvinced. I would say that it is more indicative of current (and developing) problems with western democratic processes.

As for the Netherlands issue, I don't even know if I should bother. Although I believe it is a very defensible position (most scientists would agree) that global warming IS happening (although not undeniably so), whether or not we are causing it is another matter entirely. This issue has been heavily covered elsewhere (global warming, global warming denier, or check out The Skeptical Environmentalist by Bjorn Lomborg). Even if it IS happening, and it turns out WE are a major cause, I'd say that the blaming this on 'bribes' is an extremist position at best... the fact is, the populace has NOT been convinced... at least not enough to curb excessive consumption. If you want to blame this on anything, let's blame corporate media.

I started off my 'political life' with a very leftist bend... but lately the leftist majority has have been driving me away... mostly due to excessive concentration on the symptoms rather than the causes. I think globalization, excesses of consumerism, rampant advertising culture and environmental and political unconsciousness are all problems in the world today... but ones more symptomatic than causal. Is there any chance you may be blaming current 'capitalist' trends for the state of the populace of which it is merely a reflection? Just an alternative point of view.... I HEARTILY AGREE that the above examples show that SOMETHING is going (perhaps drastically) wrong... I'm just not necessarily in agreement about what.