A woman I once worked with used to say "money comes to money" ; a variation on the theme, that I heard later, was "the best way to get a job is to have a job". I also did a financial management course at one point which started with the declaration:
just about everyone will earn a million over the course of their working life; the challenge is to keep it.
People like to spend their money on what's familiar, and on what makes them feel good, so if you want to relieve other people of at least part of their million, you need to offer them a feel-good familiar experience. And inspire them with confidence. Unfortunately, whether you like it or not, whether it's consistent with your personal values or not, if someone says they were a millionaire and they gave it all away, that's not a great inducement to hand over more money
(unless you've built up a see-no-evil personality cult, of course ... )
Your frustration with the injustice of the world of finance is evident, and understandable - to an extent. After a chance encounter with a reality TV show in France, I started watching a YouTube vlog by a woman who bought a cheap chateau about half an hour from where I live. At the time I discovered her, she'd been here only a year less than me, and was not much further along in her renovation than I was with my farmhouse. One pandemic year later, she's raking in 20000 $£€ a month, and people are sending her exotic and expensive gifts (she now has a whole sub-channel dedicated solely to opening these) for no good reason at all. Her editing is crap, her sound is hit-and-miss, her narration is dire - everything is "unbelievable" or "amazing", it looks like all she knows about video production and presentation has been learnt from her reality TV appearances.
And yes, there are days when I think it's "unfair" that she's wallowing in cash while I'm trying to save 4€ on the delivery of a spare part for my strimmer ... but then again, she first spent fifteen years living hand-to-mouth in a damp, draughty building, she's been hospitalised twice due to exhaustion and complications arising therefrom, and she's effectively put her whole life on display to the entire world, with all that that entails ... So no, in the end, I think its perfectly fair that she's got the cash but I've got my privacy, and thanks to a couple of other YouTubers, I've been motivated to make the changes and improvements to my own property that make a difference
to me. Oh, and I have a mini-excavator; she doesn't!
I've said it before, and make no apology for saying it again: it sounds like SavePoint is eating you up. Take a break. Within the limits of Covid restrictions, get away from where you are - physically and mentally - and live in an alternative reality for a while.