If a person is always working hard to make money, they most likely will, compared to a so-called "bum" who can't get welfare in this type of system. Capitalists believe that the only purpose of a government is to protect its citizens from force or fraud. They sometimes claim that the force is the protection of individual's rights. This is achieved in such ways as the use of police force to protect the rights of citizens at home, a military to protect citizens from foreign attack, and a court system to enforce contracts and settle disputes between residents. Capitalists also feel that using force can only violate rights, so the government only uses force in relation of the people who use it. For instance, if an individual can not start his/her own company, it is a violation of their freedoms. A capitalist's argument towards this statement would be that the governments" legal monopoly on utility companies prevents people from starting their own company. In a capitalist society all people can start any kind of business they want. The protections of monopolies are not there. If a person wants to take the chance on their own company, even if it is next to one that is successful, the outcome is in their "own hands." The only law capitalists clearly state, and one must follow is that members of society can not infringe on the rights of others. They give confidence to holding individual rights as absolutes, and freedoms as absolutes.
Capitalism played important roles as to how the American economy was a century ago. At the turn of the century a hundred years ago, the whole concept of producing goods changed. Now that machinery could be made to serve the role of humans, skilled labor wasn't needed greatly. From this, hundreds of thousands of people flocked to the cities to work in factories. Immigrants were arriving in America in vast numbers, due to the fact that if you able to make the long ocean journey, the only test that you would have to pass to become an American citizen is a simple health test.