ArcWinter said:
Valid and Reasoned points, not posted for reasons of avoiding the quote-tree of doom.
1. No luxury item is universally enjoyable. Take, for example, a chess board. I like chess. I suspect you do (all communists like chess, after all). But for many people, chess is overly complex, boring or just not their prefered means of relaxation. The same can be said for a pack of cards, a television, a computer - all of them are not in the slightest bit universally enjoyable. That is where the free market's genius comes in - if there is money to be made is producing something someone wants, it will be made. In essence, you can guarantee that no matter what your tastes, there is something for you.
2. My point is, fundamentally, humans are hardwired to be greedy and violent, and if we were not, we would not survive as a species. Greed and violence are survival traits, and highly useful on a societal level as well. Greed pushes men to compete, violence, to contest for what resources are available. It forces man to become faster, stronger, more efficent and in all ways better. Why, take the internet for an example. By means of a market system, the exchange of ideas, of ideals, concepts, debate, reasoning, philosophy - has expanded thousandfold in the last decade or so. In essence, the desire for of men for wealth has had the entirely unintended benefit of creating close to an entire generation of humans (in the developing world) who will be the best-informed group of people on the planet.
3. Sounds good to me. Meet me at Rekjaviek airport in 6 hours.
4. Peace of mind is too widespread and different an ideal to be achieved. It is, fundamentally, an abstract, and a subjective one at that. For some, it may be a wife, children, a house and a comfortable life ahead. For others, it's howling through the skies at Mach 2 with death tucked beneath your wings. For some, it's simply the comfort of knowing you will be remembered. Budgeting for that is rather like attempting to budget for a Van Gogh, a Monet, a Bach - you may place a value on it after it's creation, but beforehand, no economic force can compell it's beauty.
In essence, the reason people fail to find peace of mind, is because they fail to look.