If someone ridicules everyone they come in contact with that doesn't make them a good person because they are exercising their right to free speech. It just makes them a douche bag.
Not every outcome of the free market is a moral outcome. Mitt Romney personifies that. He has every right to engage in leveraged buyouts (LBO). Through this method Bain made a significant amount profit off the dividend recaps, thereby sticking the poor company he swindled with the bill after they jettisoned their stock. Despite Mittens' right to engage in such a practice, it still makes him a douche bag. (I'm not going to even get into the chop shop aspects of Bain Capital)
On the other hand you have moral capitalists like Warren Buffet, who make their money the old fashioned way: investing money in a company in the hopes it will become profitable in the long run, which is incidental to LBO firms.
Not surprisingly in a 2010 interview - well before the Bain controversy - Warren Buffet expresses his disdain for the moral deficiencies of LBO firms like Bain Capital:
Buffett Shuns Buyout Funds, Says `They Don't Know the Business'
Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway Inc.’s billionaire chairman, said he avoids acquiring companies from leveraged-buyout firms because they focus on “exit strategy.”
“We have an entrance strategy,” he said in pre-recorded remarks broadcast yesterday at a San Francisco conference for the International Corporate Governance Network, a London-based nonprofit whose members include institutional investors. Buyout firms “don’t love the business,” he said.
Buffett, 80, built Omaha, Nebraska-based Berkshire into a $205 billion provider of insurance, energy and consumer goods through four decades of stock picks and takeovers. He looks for companies with durable competitive advantages and leaves their managers in charge. He said he prefers to retain former owners after acquisitions, and let them run the business, because they have a “passion” for the company and “know it well.”
“I look in their eyes and see if they love the money or love the business,” Buffett said. “Everyone likes money,” he said. “We count on people loving the business.”
[snip]
Private-equity firms pool investor money to take over companies, financing the purchases mostly with debt, with the intention of selling them later for a profit. Blackstone Group LP, led by Chairman Stephen Schwarzman, 63, is the biggest private equity firm, followed by Carlyle Group.
“We haven’t bought a single company from an LBO operator,” Buffett said.
[snip]
There are two takeaways here. One is that Buffet views LBO firms of having shoddy business practices, and therefore are untrustworthy to deal with. Second is that Romney doesn't like running businesses or the responsibilities of being an executive. He just likes making easy money and shuns hard work regardless of what impact it has on society.