There are ways to change this. It's going to be slow and gradual, but there's a good starting point: Occupy Wall Street. It should turn to neighborhood and labor organizing now. The act of just protesting has pretty much run its course for them. They should realize that people are overwhelmingly on their side, and that given the right degree of organization they can start to seriously make changes. There's a well-documented inverse correlation between labor organization and the level of income of the so-called 1% (which isn't an exact number but it's basically the right visual). That's also why so much effort was put in effectively dismantling labor unions, and why they're so demonized today.
Last year I fronted a Social Justice group at my college of fairly respectable size - we marched at G20, did a lot of local activism work in the community protesting the lockouts of local steel workers and what not, stuff like that. We worked with other local sustainability groups and stuff like that.
As much as their efforts did inspire me in many ways, and definitely changed the way I view these matters, it also really made one thing clear to me: As much as these groups do want legitimate change, they are VERY us vs them. If you are not supportive of their efforts down to the last letter, they are not terribly interested in your support. They SAY they are, but in practice they are not. The ISSUE here is that people in our society are not black and white like this, they're typically fairly grey. They want change, but they want changes that they can interact with at their convenience. That's large in part due to our acculturation, but it goes deeper. If it cuts into something they care about (sports, TV, hell even just their leisure time) they are almost guaranteed unwilling to make the effort. PARTICULARLY because most leftist groups are pretty doom and gloom, they love using images of the evil man, love celebrating anything vaguely anarchistic, and are often so unrelenting in their beliefs that it makes it difficult for people to want to work with them. Instead of either speaking in language that alienates people and loses joe citizen, OR for that matter instead of speaking in overtly positive and lovey dovey terms (which alienates a whole different section of the population) where we want to convince a society that has been rooted in preservation of the self, not the whole, that it DOES want to care for its fellow man irregardless of the conditions that have been in place for centuries negating this. We need to be speaking to people with broader strokes, being a little more honest with the facts of the situation as opposed to yeah, just trying to convince people we're either all going to die in a year or that you should want to help your brothers because it's the right thing to do because humanity's the best (which even if it IS, does not compute with the way we actually live, at least not here in North America).
For those reasons and more, I eventually became disillusioned with their efforts. They're not really connecting with a percentage of the population whose ACTUAL opinions should be considered valid and necessary for making long-standing change, and instead wish to, knowingly or not, impose a different sort of ideological hierarchy based around beliefs that half the people they wish to help simply don't believe in. Capitalism is massively flawed and short-sighted, but flawed or not its roots are long-standing and one cannot simply flip a switch and everything starts over, social change cannot come without great upheaval and I don't think as a society we're quite WILLING to make the sacrifices that would come with. Hell, I'm not so sure I even am and I've been involved with this shit. If push comes to shove, that's likely to change, but it hasn't for enough yet. The question is how much will it take at the end of the day, and how many concessions will we be willing to make in the name of fear. And for that matter, is there ANY possible way of re-structuring a society so social elitism doesn't rise to the top again? That almost sounds impossible to me, we virtually left egalitarianism behind when we settled down thousands of years ago.
Sorry if this sounds rambly, I find it hard to keep my posts together on this little box (though I just realized that apparently it's because I am using the quick reply!)