I'm distressed that pollution and abuse of workers' rights is somehow seen as being "capitalistic." Capitalism, or market-based economies, in fact are all about upholding private contractual agreements and protecting private property rights. That includes paying people for their labor. It's also all about avoiding externalities, which means not allowing damaging pollution (e.g. by creating property rights where a rightsholder can sue). Institutions, too, are part of market-based economic analysis (more so as of late, to be fair) and turn out to often provide very efficient mechanisms, hence why labor safety boards and tradeable pollution permits are superior to having hundreds of thousands of lawsuits brought against every other market participant. (Also because property rights are efficient only when there are zero transaction costs, whereas litigation is just about the opposite of "costlessly and immediately resolved.")