Never pass up a chance to sit down or relieve yourself. -old Apache saying

Monday, March 27, 2023

Dan Rather

I really enjoy and appreciate having Dan Rather still around. His weekly "A Reason to Smile" is often like a soothing balm, which is nice, considering the hyper-culture we live in. You can find Dan on Steady.Substack.com

A Change Is Gonna Come
A Reason to Smile

by Dan Rather and Elliott Kirschner
March 26

Sometimes it feels like we are stuck on repeat, beset by headwinds that make progress seem excruciatingly difficult, if not unattainable. 


We wonder: Is change even possible? 


We recognize our nation’s uneven progress to a more just and equitable society. Looking back at our history, we can see periods of hope and forward movement. But there are also eras of backsliding and regression. 


Where do we find ourselves today? 


To change the status quo, especially one built upon the legacies of racism and injustice that permeated the nation at its founding, it’s important that we hold onto a sense that progress is possible. With this in mind, we felt that an apt song for our “A Reason to Smile” feature this week would be Sam Cooke’s iconic tribute to struggle and hope, "A Change Is Gonna Come." 


Cooke was moved to write a rousing call for civil rights after hearing Bob Dylan’s “Blowin’ in the Wind.” He was especially inspired by Peter, Paul and Mary’s rendition, which proved that a song about civil rights could be a hit. 


The song was also born from Cooke’s personal experience in Jim Crow America — particularly a formative incident when he, his wife, and his bandmates were turned away from a whites-only hotel in Shreveport, Louisiana. 


In 2019, the mayor of Shreveport at the time, Adrian Perkins, who is Black and a graduate of both the United States Military Academy at West Point and Harvard Law School, apologized to members of the Cooke family and issued them the keys to the city. This moment stands as a testimony that change is indeed possible. 


As Cooke wrote:


“It's been a long, a long time coming 

But I know a change gonna come, oh yes it will.”


Cooke’s recording of “A Change Is Gonna Come” was released posthumously in 1964, and we haven’t been able to find any video of him singing it. In the years that followed, there have been many wonderful covers of what has become an iconic contribution to American musical history.


We found one that brought an especially large smile to our face (and maybe a bit of mist to the eyes). And we’re apparently not alone. It has over 90 million views on YouTube — a duet between the singer Brian Owens and his father, Thomas.


(The clip can be viewed here.)


And as promised above, here is Peter, Paul and Mary singing “Blowin’ in the Wind.” We’re still smiling.


(The clip can be viewed here.)


And we actually found Sam Cooke singing “Blowin’ in the Wind” (along with the song “Tennessee Waltz”) from the pilot of the music show Shindig! in 1964. You can find “Blowin’ in the Wind” at the 2:24 mark. 


(The clip can be viewed here.)


Original. You can see the embedded videos at the Original link.


Thursday, March 23, 2023

ban the Bible

Seriously, the Bible should be banned, as long as Florida and other red states are banning books for indecency or sexualized content. Have you READ the Bible? You KNOW it is full of nasty stuff: slavery, incest, prostitution, genital mutilation, fellatio, bestiality, rape, murder, infanticide, more rape and more murder. Parents should be urging authorities to ban the Bible, especially in red states. There are redeeming qualities in the Bible you say? Oh, and there are absolutely no redeeming qualities in all the books being banned by conservative fascists?

Found on Vice.com

Parent Calls Bible ‘PORN’ and Demands Utah School District Remove It From Libraries

A parent is arguing that if banned books like 'Gender Queer' are pulled from shelves, the Bible—with its sex scenes, incest, and murder—should be banned, too.
March 23, 2023

A Utah parent has filed a request to ban God’s most popular blog, the Bible, from schools, citing and ridiculing a law passed last year that removed dozens of books from schools and libraries last year. “Get this PORN out of our schools!” they wrote in their request for the removal of the book.

In 2022, Utah passed a law banning books with “pornographic or indecent” content. The initial list of banned books included many titles that feature coming-of-age stories that also deal with themes of sexuality and gender, including Judy Blume’s Forever...Gender Queer by Maia Kobabe, and Nineteen Minutes by Jodi Picoult. 

By those standards, the parent—whose personal information was redacted by the Davis School District for privacy reasons—is arguing that the Bible should be on the list. 

“Incest, onanism, bestiality, prostitution, genital mutilation, fellatio, dildos, rape, and even infanticide,” the parent wrote in their request, according to the Salt Lake Tribune, which obtained a copy of the request. “You’ll no doubt find that the Bible, under Utah Code Ann. § 76-10-1227, has ‘no serious values for minors’ because it’s pornographic by our new definition.”

The Bible absolutely contains all of this and more. A personal NSFW favorite is Song of Solomon, a rapturous piece of erotica, describing a woman’s breasts in painfully horny detail as “two fawns” and “clusters of fruit,” and pleas for a man to eat the “precious fruits” of her “garden.” King David is overcome with lust for a woman named Bathsheba, who he’s been creeping on while she bathes, and commits adultery with her, later murdering her husband. Samson’s downfall is a femdom named Delilah. Noah’s son Ham catches his dad nude and drunk off his ass, and accidentally sees his dick; for this, Noah curses Ham’s bloodline to lives of slavery. Lot’s daughters get him drunk and rape him repeatedly while he’s blacked out. There are more references to, and encouragement of, killing babies in violent ways than I care to name but feel free to search that up. God gets really pissed at the citizens of Judah for smelting all the jewelry he gave them down into fucktoys. 

“I thank the Utah Legislature and Utah Parents United for making this bad faith process so much easier and way more efficient,” the parent wrote. Utah Parents United is one of several conservative groups pushing for more banson books in schools, which overwhelmingly feature Black people, people of color, and queer or gender-nonconforming characters. “Now we can all ban books and you don’t even need to read them or be accurate about it. Heck, you don’t even need to see the book! Ceding our children’s education, First Amendment Rights, and library access to a white supremacist hate group like Utah Parents United seems like a wonderful idea for a school district literally under investigation for being racist.”  

Utah is one of several states where libraries and teachers are undergoing attacks from right-wing groups and conservative parents who are demanding that libraries ban large swaths of books. In Florida, teachers risk going to jail if they don’t cover or remove books until they’re reviewed for “offensive” content. 

Parents can submit books for review by the school district, and there’s a backlog of books under review, which takes as long as 60 days, Davis School District spokesperson Christopher Williams told the Salt Lake Tribune. “We don’t differentiate between one request and another. We see that as the work that we do,” Williams said. 

In 2021, the Department of Justice and the United States Attorney’s Office for Utah investigated the district for race discrimination in the district’s schools, “including serious and widespread racial harassment of Black and Asian-American students,” according to a press releaseannouncing the settlement. In 2022, the mother of a Black ninth grader sued the school district for "racial harassment by students on a daily basis.”  


Saturday, March 18, 2023

capturing Trump

I found the writing below on the internet, thanks to noted atheist Seth Andrews, who shared it from another Facebooker. Thought it was worth re-printing. 

We like things that confirm our own biases, no?  I've been feeling the same as the writer lately, namely, that many of Trump's followers are not really "stupid" but are in fact kindred spirits to Trump. That is, racist, white supremacist, lying fascists who actually idolize the guy. There have probably always been people like this in America. Trump has a special talent for pulling them out of the woodwork.


“Talented and well-practiced in every vice, a stranger to compassion or empathy, a liar and a cheat so complete in perfidy that he has elevated his dishonesty to hold it up as an ersatz moral principle, violent, so long as he can order someone else to do the dirty work, grotesque in body, graceless in action, in possession of a wounded self-regard so colossal as to smother any spark of grace, treasonous, not only to country, but to every ally he has ever had, the poisoned fruit and rankest flower of racism and contempt for women, and utterly devoid of shame for his moral and spiritual bankruptcy.

That is your leader. That is to whom you give your money. That is who you follow and laud. That is whose banner you willingly carry. Why? Because he is a mirror, not a lighthouse. You see yourselves in him. He is what you would be, if you had inherited money and could shed the last vestiges of conscience and shame.

No, I do not “respect your choices,” nor do I admire your loyalty and dedication to this miserific, demoniac vision. You have demonstrated not only a lack of civic virtue, loyalty to the Republic and to the rule of law, but a willingness to engage in violence and sedition at his slightest expressed wish. And you will never, ever admit you were wrong.

Because you see your dark, twisted, resentful dreams in him. And to renounce him is to renounce yourselves.”
~ Advocatus Peregrini
Drawing
Stable Genius by Siegfried Woldhek, pen & ink, October 12, 2019.

Thursday, March 16, 2023

Trump Must Be Prosecuted

In order to survive, Trump must be prosecuted in New York, in Georgia, and by the Department of Justice. We have to remove this filthy stain from our country. There can be no other way.

Donald Trump Must Be Prosecuted
by Charles Blow, New York Times

Donald Trump may finally be indicted. Finally!

The Manhattan district attorney’s office has signaled that charges, related to Trump’s reported hush-money payments to the porn star Stormy Daniels, are likely.

But there’s also hand-wringing: about whether this is the best case to be the first among those in which Trump is likely to be criminally charged, the strength of this case compared to others and the historic implications of indicting a former president for anything.

And with regard to those implications, the central considerations always seem to be the importance of any precedent set by prosecuting a former president and the broader political significance — what damage it might do to the country. Often left out of that calculus, it seems to me, is the damage Trump has already done and is poised to continue to do.

Prosecution is not the problem; Trump himself is. And any pretense that the allegations of his marauding criminality are a sideshow to the political stakes and were, therefore, remedied in 2020 at the ballot box rather than in a jury box, is itself a miscarriage of justice and does incalculable damage.


Last year, around the time the House Jan. 6 committee was holding hearings, Elaine Kamarck, the founding director of the Center for Effective Public Management at the Brookings Institution, wrote: “Prosecuting Trump is not a simple matter of determining whether the evidence is there. It is a question embedded in the larger issue of how to restore and defend American democracy.”

I don’t see it that way. Any case against Trump must hang on the evidence and the principle that justice is blind. The political considerations, including gaming out what might be the ideal sequence of cases, across jurisdictions and by their gravity, only serve to distort the judicial process.

The justice system must be untethered from political implications and consequences, even the possibility of disruptive consequences.

For instance, could an indictment and prosecution of Trump cause consternation and possibly even unrest? Absolutely. Trump has been preparing his followers for his martyrdom for years and evangelizing to them the idea that any sanctioning of him is an attack on them. This transference of feelings of persecution and pain from manufactured victimhood is a classic psychological device of a cult leader.

Trump uses the passions he has inflamed as a political threat against those pursuing him: In 2019, when he was facing impeachment, he took to Twitter, citing a quote from Pastor Robert Jeffress, who’d appeared on Fox News and recklessly posited that if Trump were removed from office “it will cause a Civil War-like fracture in this nation from which this country will never heal.”


Last year, on a conservative talk radio show, Trump said that if he were indicted in connection with his alleged mishandling of classified documents, “I think you’d have problems in this country the likes of which perhaps we’ve never seen before. I don’t think the people of the United States would stand for it.”

Over and over, Trump has goaded his supporters in this direction: whether during the 2016 presidential race, urging rallygoers to “knock the crap out of” people who might disrupt the proceedings, or telling the Proud Boys, during a 2020 debate, to “stand back and stand by.”

On Jan. 6, 2021, he waited and watched the attack on the Capitol for hours, resisting pleas from his own advisers to try to stop it. When Trump finally made a statement, he downplayed the insurrection and reluctantly told the rioters to go home, but not without adding: “We love you. You’re very special.”

Trump is the impresario of incitement. He’ll use any attempt to hold him accountable to agitate and activate his loyalists.

That’s not a reason to avoid vigorously and swiftly pursuing him legally, but rather a reason to do it. If we establish a precedent that amassing a significant threat to society is a ward against enforcement of the law, it makes a mockery of the law.


It would reinforce what was already a persistent problem in the criminal justice system: unequal treatment of the rich and powerful, compared to that of the poor and powerless.

series of studies from more than a decade ago in The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that upper-income people were more likely to lie, cheat and literally take candy meant to be given to children. The researchers postulated that several factors could have contributed to this, including a lowered perception of risk, plenty of money to deal with the “downstream costs” of their behavior, feelings of entitlement, less concern about what other people think and a general sense that greed is good.

At the same time, as Jeffrey Reiman and Paul Leighton write in their book, “The Rich Get Richer and the Poor Get Prison,” “The criminal justice system is biased from start to finish in a way that guarantees that, for the same crimes, members of the lower classes are much more likely than members of the middle and upper classes to be arrested, convicted and imprisoned.”

The authors go further, theorizing that the goal of the criminal justice system isn’t even to prevent crime or provide justice, but rather to “project to the American public a credible image of the threat of crime as a threat from the poor.” When you think of it that way, it’s not hard to see how Trump and many of his admirers choose to see him as above the law. Indeed, if he weren’t rich and powerful, charges would almost surely have been filed long ago.

Prosecuting Trump wouldn’t break the country. On the contrary, it would be a step toward mending it, a step toward undergirding the flimsy promise of “equal justice under law.”


The eyes of the country are on these cases — the eyes of all those who’ve been badgered for minor violations, who’ve had the book thrown at them for crimes that others either got away with or served no time for. Not only are they watching, but so are their loved ones and their communities.

They, too, are America, and further damaging their faith in the country should matter as much as damaging the faith of any other part of our body politic.

To rehabilitate American justice, Trump must be prosecuted.


Original.


Tuesday, March 14, 2023

Thursday, March 2, 2023

Inefficiency

Another reason to like Trader Joe's. Too bad the closest one to us is 250 miles away in San Antonio.


In Praise of Inefficiency: Should We Serve the Economy or Should It Serve Us?

It’s become a virtual religion among America’s CEO class: maximize efficiency no matter what it does to customers, communities, or employees - Inefficiency, it turns out, has considerable upsides


by Thom Hartmann

Trader Joe’s VP Marketing, Tara Miller, announced on the store’s Inside Trader Joe’spodcast that they will not be installing self-checkout machines in their stores. Good on them.


“The bottom line here is that our people remain our most valued resource,” she said. “While other retailers were cutting staff and adding things like self-checkout, curbside pickup, and outsourcing delivery options, we were hiring more crew, and we continue to do that.”


In not using everything available to them to increase efficiency, Trader Joe’s is very much the outlier in America. That’s because — unless regulated — capitalism will almost always push for maximum efficiency because that’s the fastest way to maximize profits. 


It’s become a virtual religion among America’s CEO class: maximize efficiency no matter what it does to customers, communities, or employees.


The result has been an explosion of efficiency across the corporate spectrum, leading to monopoly, oligopoly, price-gouging, a crippled small-business sector, staggering profits, devastated downtowns, and even driving today’s inflation.


Efficiency, taken to extremes, can be destructive to both consumers and communities. 

Think about it. If there are forty different retail stores in your small town selling a whole variety of things from groceries to books to clothing to hardware, every one of them has to do their own bookkeeping, their own banking, their own inventory and store management, their own staffing and HR.


It’s inefficient, but it keeps communities alive and filled with vitality.


When you buy a book from the local bookstore they deposit those funds in the local bank, which then loans them out as mortgages for local people wanting to buy a house. The bookstore uses their revenues to pay rent to a local landlord and to pay well their local employees, who then spend that money in the locally owned clothing and grocery stores. They, in turn, pay their employees who go on to patronize other stores in town.


It’s a virtuous circle. Money spent in a local economy like this can take months or even years to leave the community, enriching it in multiple ways as it continues to re-circulate from business to business, hand to hand. 


It’s how America’s small towns and communities grew so prosperous between 1900 and 1980. It’s why Reagan’s 1983 decision to kill off local economies and family-owned businesses in favor of giant national corporations has impoverished so much of small-town America today.


A single Walmart, for example, can consolidate all of those 40 stores’ operations and HR functions under one roof. It’s far more efficient, which means it can both undercut the prices of the locals and make a larger profit for the investor class.


And it will wipe out those 40 small retailers in short order, leaving your small town depending on a single major employer, a single source for everything people want and need, and killing off the entire downtown.


Worse, every night when the Walmart closes, a store manager will push a button and every penny spent at the store throughout the day will instantly transfer to corporate headquarters in Bentonville, Arkansas. No more local funds for local entrepreneurs to start small businesses or homeowners to buy homes.


All to add to the money bins of the morbidly rich heirs of Sam Walton and fund the politicians they’ll buy to fight local tax increases (to make up for the lost revenue from all those empty stores downtown) and, federally, to fund politicians who will defeat anti-monopoly efforts in Congress.


Once a single company or small group of companies represent the largest share of local revenue to a town, they can then use that economic power to further extract cash from the town by doing things like challenging their property taxes.


That’s what’s happening right now in Houghton, a little town of around 8,000 residents in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. In 2004, according to reporting from Channel 6 News there, when Walmart wanted to expand, the city gave them everything they wanted:


“The city transferred the property to Walmart, created a public roadway, funded the relocation of utilities, and agreed to wetland mitigation work to help accommodate the expansion. In return, Walmart agreed to increase the taxable property value to $4,780,000, which allowed the city to justify these infrastructure investments.”

 

Now Walmart’s lawyers have come to town to demand that the bustling store pay much lower property taxes, at the same rate as the largely dead “dark stores” in downtown business districts and strip malls it has destroyed:


“The City of Houghton … is facing a potentially devastating property tax appeal by Walmart as the company uses a legal strategy called the ‘dark store theory’ to reduce its tax burden.”

 

The city notes they’re fighting a company worth a half-trillion dollars owned in large part by “the wealthiest family on the planet.”


“According to the city, the global company seeks a lowered valuation on its local store, spurring a six-year retroactive $1.2 million refund and a reduction in future property taxes. … If Walmart wins the case, it will dramatically reduce future budgets to local K-12 schools, veterans’ services, county medical care facilities, the local library and the City of Houghton.”

 

Houghton has become an American sacrifice zone, another town thrown on the pyre of profits and efficiency regardless of the costs to anybody except the corporation itself and its owners.


But it’s not just towns and cities being ravaged by this bizarre neoliberal economic and political religion that Reagan put into law and policy back in 1983. 


Because American business is so efficient, every American family pays $5000 a year, on average, more than Canadian or European families do for almost everything from cell phone and internet service to airfare and drugs.


In France, for example, high-speed broadband internet service can run as little as $15 a month and bundles — for example, 2 cell phones with 2 different numbers, free unlimited international calling, no cellphone internet data caps, unlimited high-speed broadband into your home, and hundreds of cable TV channels — are as little as $90 a month.


France enforces their anti-monopoly laws. That’s not happening here, however, because back in 1983 President Reagan directed the Federal Trade Commission, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the Department of Justice to stop enforcing American anti-monopoly laws that dated all the way back to the 1880s.


Mergers and acquisitions (“M&A”)  specialist banks on Wall Street worked with large corporations to buy up their medium-sized competitors, often by hostile takeover, radically shrinking the number of small- and medium-sized companies in America. It was the story of the Michael Douglas’ “Greed is good!” movie Wall Street.


At first it seemed like a consumer bonanza: prices were falling all over the place through the late 1980s. Giant national chains competed with small locally-owned stores on America’s Main Streets and malls. They initially offered lower prices — made possible by their increased efficiency — which local people loved.


Until they discovered those very scales of efficiency - only achievable by national buying power — drove their smaller, locally-owned competitors out of business. Small town America began to die.


Within two decades, around the turn of the century, we’d reached what I call the cancer stage of capitalism. Like a metastasis, giant companies drained nearly all the life force out of communities across the country and used it to fill the money bins of their CEOs and largest investors.


— Through the carrot-and-stick of campaign contributions and the threat to leave town, they now corrupt and even take over local politics to get themselves lower property taxes and taxpayer-funded subsidies to the tune of over $100 billion a year.


— Without local competition, they now charge whatever the market will bear, leading to that $5000 annual “monopoly tax” we all pay in higher prices because we live in Reagan’s America. Profits among America’s largest corporations soared so much in the past two years, unconstrained by competition, that they account for an estimated 60% of our problematic inflation.


— They also replaced quality merchandise with junk made by slave laborers overseas, forcing customers to regularly replace everything from toasters to washing machines to furniture that once lasted years or even decades. Cheap, it turns out, can be very expensive in the long run.


— Reagan’s changes to the enforcement of our antitrust laws are also why hospitals are marking up sutures 675% along with pretty much anything else they want to price-gouge you on: the local, community-owned hospital is dead and it’s almost all giant chains now. 


Every consequential industry in America, in fact, is now dominated by 3-5 companies that act as a cartel or oligopoly with the explicit goal of minimizing competition and maximizing profits. 


When one airline or cell phone company or internet service provider raises prices $10, every other one does the same within minutes, as I document in detail in The Hidden History of Monopolies: How Big Business Destroyed the American Dream (foreword by Ralph Nader).


This was a crime in America before Reagan. CEOs trying to rip off American communities would’ve gone to prison before Reagan.


Prior to Reagan’s 1983 rule-changes, anti-trust laws were so vigorously enforced that in the 1962 antitrust case of Brown Shoe Co. v United States, the Supreme Court blocked the merger of Brown and GR Kinney, two shoe manufacturers, because the combination of the two together would have captured 5 percent of the US shoe market. (For comparison, Nike today has 18 percent of the US shoe market.)


At some point we must all ask ourselves the question: what is our economy for? After all, economies — both local and national — are the creations of government.


Governments create the rules of the economy, just like the NFL creates the rules of football. Governments provide the stable currency and legal system that allow that economy to run, and they do it by enforcing laws and instituting policies.


So government is where the choice is made: is the economy they created here to serve the people, or are the people here to serve the wealthiest and most powerful who have the greatest control over the economy?


Prior to the Reagan administration, all the way back to 1929, the American consensus was that the economy is here to serve us. 


There was a top 91% income tax bracket to prevent the growth of obscene levels of wealth and maintain a strong middle-class. Anti-trust laws kept small businesses and local economies strong and vibrant while still allowing large corporations like Sears and General Motors to operate within reasonable boundaries.


Since the Reagan administration, however, we have re-organized our economy so that We The People serve the economy and its owners, rather than them serving us in exchange for our hard-earned dollars. 


We’re now experiencing America’s second great brush with monopoly and oligopoly. The first was during the late Industrial Revolution, when, in his 1888 State of the Union address, Democratic President Grover Cleveland pointed out:


“We view with pride and satisfaction this bright picture of our country’s growth and prosperity, while only a closer scrutiny develops a somber shading. …

 

“We discover that the fortunes realized by our manufacturers are no longer solely the reward of sturdy industry and enlightened foresight, but that they … are largely built upon undue exactions from the masses of our people. The gulf between employers and the employed is constantly widening, and classes are rapidly forming, one comprising the very rich and powerful, while in another are found the toiling poor.”

 

And what was causing this crisis for America’s 19th century working-class families? President Cleveland laid it out with a surprisingly blunt vehemence in the next sentence:


“As we view the achievements of aggregated capital, we discover the existence of trusts, combinations, and monopolies, while the citizen is struggling far in the rear or is trampled to death beneath an iron heel. Corporations, which should be the carefully restrained creatures of the law and the servants of the people, are fast becoming the people's masters.”

 

The people — and Congress — were listening. America was outraged at the way corporations and the morbidly rich were behaving, and President Cleveland gave voice to their anger. A mere two years later the Sherman Anti-Trust Act of 1890 was passed, criminalizing monopolies (called “trusts” back then).


The law opens with:


“Every contract, combination in the form of trust or other-wise, or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce among the several States, or with foreign nations, is hereby declared to be illegal.

 

“Every person who shall make any such contract or engage in any such combination or conspiracy, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and, on conviction thereof, shall be punished by fine not exceeding five thousand dollars, or by imprisonment not exceeding one year, or by both said punishments, at the discretion of the court.”

 

A short two decades later progressive Republican presidents Teddy Roosevelt and William Howard Taft were using that same law to break Rockefeller’s Standard Oil Trust into almost 30 pieces.


While Reagan abandoned enforcement of the 1890 Sherman Act (and its successors, including the 1914 Clayton Act and the 1976 Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act), most other developed countries around the world continue to protect their towns and consumers by defending the small and medium sized companies that make them vital.


Up until about two decades ago, India even had a law on the books making it illegal for a single corporation or family to own more than two of any kind of retail store or over a certain threshold of farmland in the country. 


Walmart and Monsanto, among others, came in with piles of cash to get that law changed. Now small businessmen and farmers in India routinely commit suicide as they’re pushed into indigence by giant transnational corporations.


Trader Joe’s, in rejecting at least one aspect of efficiency in favor of humanity and local employment, has taken a great step forward. It’s an example for all.


Now we need to reverse Reagan’s policies and, like Richard Nixon did when he initiated the breakup of AT&T in 1974, start forcing the monopolies and oligopolies that have seized control of America’s retail and other sectors to break themselves up into smaller companies to allow for competition.


We need to reset our economy so it serves We The People, rather than just the morbidly rich and their massive corporations.


For those concerned about their 401Ks invested in these giant companies, a share of AT&T stock before the breakup grew substantially in value when it became seven shares of stock in the six “Baby Bells” and Bell Labs/Lucent Technologies. And it led to an explosion of telcom innovation. 


Inefficiency, it turns out, has considerable upsides. Only the morbidly rich lose out when nations return to slightly inefficient but fully competitive marketplaces.


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