Free enterprise capitalism has been the most revolutionary invention ever created by man. — Javier Milei

Free enterprise capitalism has been the most revolutionary invention ever created by man.

Author: Javier Milei

Insight: There's something genuinely destabilizing about free market capitalism that we often gloss over. It doesn't conserve the old order—it demolishes it. When you strip away regulations and let competition loose, established power structures crumble. Yesterday's industry leader becomes irrelevant. Fortunes evaporate. Entire professions vanish. That's why both the far left and the entrenched right fear it, even if they claim different reasons. The revolutionary part isn't the wealth creation—it's that capitalism doesn't care who you are or where you came from. A teenager with a laptop can outmaneuver a century-old corporation. An immigrant can build an empire. This terrifies people clinging to inherited advantages as much as it energizes people with nothing to lose. Most of us feel this tension in real life: we want opportunity and fairness, but we also want stability and security for ourselves and our families. The tricky part is recognizing that revolution cuts both ways. The same force that liberates also destabilizes. It's exciting when you're on the winning side and brutal when you're displaced. Understanding capitalism as revolutionary—not just efficient—helps explain why it generates such fierce devotion and fierce resistance. It's not actually about economics alone. It's about who gets to belong in tomorrow's world.

The system that refuses to stay still

Free enterprise capitalism has been the most revolutionary invention ever created by man.

There's something genuinely destabilizing about free market capitalism that we often gloss over. It doesn't conserve the old order—it demolishes it. When you strip away regulations and let competition loose, established power structures crumble. Yesterday's industry leader becomes irrelevant. Fortunes evaporate. Entire professions vanish. That's why both the far left and the entrenched right fear it, even if they claim different reasons.

The revolutionary part isn't the wealth creation—it's that capitalism doesn't care who you are or where you came from. A teenager with a laptop can outmaneuver a century-old corporation. An immigrant can build an empire. This terrifies people clinging to inherited advantages as much as it energizes people with nothing to lose. Most of us feel this tension in real life: we want opportunity and fairness, but we also want stability and security for ourselves and our families.

The tricky part is recognizing that revolution cuts both ways. The same force that liberates also destabilizes. It's exciting when you're on the winning side and brutal when you're displaced. Understanding capitalism as revolutionary—not just efficient—helps explain why it generates such fierce devotion and fierce resistance. It's not actually about economics alone. It's about who gets to belong in tomorrow's world.

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Javier Milei

Javier Milei is an Argentine economist, politician, and author born on October 22, 1970. He is known for his libertarian views and has gained prominence for advocating for radical economic reforms in Argentina. In 2021, he was elected as a member of the Argentine Chamber of Deputies and is recognized for his outspoken criticisms of the country's economic policies and government interventions.

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