Living under capitalism doesn't somehow make you a hypocrite when you're against it.
I don't disagree with this, I often get the inverse argument: "You claim to be a libertarian, yet you drive on government roads. Curious."
And I have never appreciated the "don't criticize [thing] if you don't have a better solution" meta. Identifying problems is a prerequisite to finding solutions, and even if no solution exists the criticisms can still be valid and useful.
In this case, the criticisms are (imo) not valid. They either apply in general, and therefore are not unique criticisms of capitalism in comparison to other systems, or they misidentify the cause of the issue, as in: 'authoritarian government turns out to be bad instead of good (Pikachu face); it must be capitalism's fault somehow'.
they admire her but they don't live what she said in her books
She fled the soviet revolution when her family was literally being hunted for being business owners, she became not only a preeminent novelist (writing in a second language at that) at a time when it was structurally difficult for women to do so generally, but she also became one of the world's most famous public intellectuals of her time. A true O.G. girlboss without any of the identitarianism. There's a lot to admire there.
No more free checked bags; gotta get on first if you want any overhead space.
Ever had to wait for the entire plane to disembark so you can get to the last row where your luggage ended up? I'd much rather don the noise canceling headset and start a movie a few minutes sooner on the front end than wait on the backend, especially on multi-leg flights.
Had to disable the 'learning' on my nest, it was awful. Every one-off change was instantly perma-enforced, but things like seasonal adjustments or change in work schedule it could never pick up on.
Six mo anniversary, congrats! I have 6 year anniversary tomorrow. That reminds me, gotta pull the anniversary present out of the hiding spot behind the book shelf and wrap it.
So you can do something shitty and it not be immoral?
Sure, and I'm surprised you seem to think that would be notable.
Are there some things that are wrong, but not a sin?
Well, my morality isn't rooted in religion. I'm agnostic as to the concept of "sin", but if I'm recalling my parables correctly, I think the prodigal son did a bunch of "wrong" stuff, but I don't think the implication was that it was all sin.
would Jesus show the post to the person's manager?
I mean, I suspect not... Though he did flip those tables in the temple that one time, so today would he have doxxed the money-changers instead? Who knows 🤷♀️