Your OP exemplifies the folly of a profit driven free market economy.
Capitalism fully supports and maintains the pernicious global plutocracy that the human race currently suffers under. You can choose to be part of it's support, or you can do what you can to help dismantle it. — universeness
True. Easier said than done of course. We have a systematic obsession with material, namely money and thus all that money can acquire.
Its understandable as its hardwired into our fear of death and desire to survive, prosper and live in abundance.
We need material to survive, sure. That is a fact.
How much do we need? That is the next question.
In the face of capitalism, we need as much as we can get because others will always try to take it from us. If we value the same things, we are in endless competition for them. And the competition itself propagates the fear of losing and thus the behaviour of hoarding.
This is seen in nature - competition for mates, food, shelter and reflected in civilisation - competition for social status, physical prowess, health, beauty, power, food and property.
Therefore when we say dismantle capitalism I'm not sure if it needs to be abolished completely. However what it does need is regulation. And government is and should always be about equalising, checks and balances.
Hence capitalism only works when basic needs for survival are met so that people no longer need to fear for their lives if they fall into dire straits financially. Socialism steps in here to ensure that all people have food, shelter and access to health services regardless of circumstance.
The remaining desire for wealth is "healthier." You can live on a base/universal salary and be happy and live a long life or you can play the game and live wealthy and be happy with the same long lived life. Or anywhere in-between.
As in this case capitalism doesn't come at the direct cost of other people's lives. And it can't anyways. Because if it did, if capitalism was 100% pure, the world would be left with the 99% who perished/failing to secure finances to survive, and the remaining 1% which are no longer wealthy because there is no population of workers to hire, consumers to buy and services and luxuries to purchase.
Imagine a world with 1 quintillionaire and no one else. They have stacks of gold and currencies and own the entire planet. But they are alone.
Is their money and property useful anymore? Would you say pure unregulated run-away capitalism served them well?