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Mantra Logic II

Posted by Bob on January 10th, 2007 under How Things Work


To avoid lawsuits, let me make this theoretical.

When cable television was first getting started, most cities licensed somebody with pull to have a city monopoly. Reader’s Digest had a feature article telling how cities which did NOT give our monopolies got much better service and lower prices.

DUH!

In any given city, the people with the head start set up the bureaucratic, rigid, inefficient and expensive cable systems we have today. Today they are one solid mass of monopolies.

Some cable systems had a problem. Someone had read the Reader’s Digest articles and some towns made room for start-up, efficient cable. In such cities, an advisor was called in and he said what Bob’s Mantra logic says, “You want to protect your monopoly. Start a campaign against monopolies.”

This gentleman called a Ralph Nader-type consumerist group which took on such matters. The consumer group was a biggy, and their agenda is making government bigger, using consumers as their excuse as similar groups with t heir own agenda use the environment or minorities.

So the TV monopoly’s advisor called them up, as he had before, and asked their help in fighting the town monopoly. Lawsuits were brought, regulation was increased. The cable monopoly was part of a national chain. So when the consumer group came to town, all this big company had to do was turn this paperwork over to its legal staff. They had dealt with the whole thing before and everything they needed was already in the file.

But for the tiny start-up cable groups all this paperwork was entirely new. They were good at CABLE. They knew how to set up a cable system, but they had no idea what to do about the lawsuits or how to deal with the city, state, and county governments, community groups, the Federal Communications Commission and everything else a “consumerist” group could throw at them. They could not afford to hire lawyers by the hour to catch up on this stuff for them.

All competition with the monopoly folded.

So the bottom line was what it always is. In the name of anti-monopoly, we now have monopoly cable in every jurisdiction I know of.

By the way, the cable monopoly showed how it did not mind consumers watching it by making a huge contribution to the anti-monopoly watchdog group. Such good deeds never go unrewarded. The city approved a rate increase to cover the monopoly’s legal and paperwork costs and the contribution.

Hate is routinely promoted in the name of anti-hate.

But back to monopolies. In the 1880s the monopoly aspect of the railroad industry, the price agreements made openly, caused a reaction. The South was kept in absolute poverty until after World War II by agreed-on freight rates that absolutely prohibited industry in the South. No one mentions this today, of course. Historians say the South was poor because it was Evil.

So the government took action on railroad freight states. It set up the Interstate Commerce Commission to regulate those rates. The ICC then made those price agreements into law. Every regulatory agency belongs to the industry it “regulates.” What the ICC did, as anti-monopoly movements usually do, was to give the worst aspects of the gougers a matter of law.

Once the ICC was under way, railroad magnates never had to worry about competition in the railroad industry again. Reagan finally abolished the ICC after almost exactly 100 years of existence. He did so specifically to allow competition. The ICC had been keeping any other means of transportation from competing with the railroads by using the rails. For example, they made it difficult to piggyback trucks.

The National Association of Manufacturers, which represents big business, is more liberal, or “reasonable,” about government regulation than is the Chamber of Commerce, which has a small-business constituency. Whe ti comes to Federal regulation, the CC comes off as a bunch of greedy fanatics, whereas the NAM is good and solid and moderation incarnate.

If anybody were able to think, they would realize that the NAM is more than moderate about these things. Big government means that nothing but big business is viable. No company with less than several billion dollars in assets can get into the auromoboile industry today. Environmental regulations dictate the exact shape of every car. The list of agencies at every level to which a car company must report is endless, and each one has plenty of reasons to make things hard on them.

The public cheers. The NAM “gracefully accepts” the government regulation while laughing up its sleeve.

This is ALWAYS the case. This is the most standard tactic on earth, but nobody gets it. You won’t read about it anywhere but here.

The National Association of Manufacturers, which represents big business, is more liberal, or “reasonable,” about government regulation than is the Chamber of Commerce, which has a small-business constituency. When it comes to Federal regulation, the CC comes off as a bunch of greedy fanatics, whereas the NAM is good and solid and moderation incarnate.

Jerry Fordism triumphs again.

If anybody were able to think, they would realize that the NAM is more than “moderate” about increased government regulation. Big government means that nothing BUT big business is viable. No company with less than several billion dollars in assets can get into the automobile industry today. Environmental regulations dictate the exact shape of every car. The list of agencies at every level to which a car company must report is endless, and each one has plenty of reasons to make things hard on them.

The public cheers. The NAM “gracefully accepts” the government regulation while laughing up its sleeve.

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  1. #1 by Peter on 01/10/2007 - 5:23 pm

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    So few are in a position where they WANT to see or CAN see this, because they either have a nice little niche or they are so struggling that they haven’t got time. I think the god of this world is evil indeed. Shari

  2. #2 by Pain on 01/10/2007 - 6:20 pm

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    There you go. This article is perfect.

    I have no seen no article that better unites the POPULAR Left and Right and racial loyalty.

    You have proven how regulation in the name of “reform” currently maximizes corruption. Regulation worsens everything it is supposed to cure. Regulation tightens the grip of corrupt leadership on us the People.

    The LEADERSHIP of the Right attacks regulation to promote big business. The LEADERSHIP of the Left promotes regulation to promote big government.

    Big business is united to big government, so promoting one helps the other.

    The leadership of both Left and Right need each other, and they want us people to shut up.

    Have you ever noticed how the regulators use abstractions to call what they are supposedly trying to help, such as “consumerism” and “environmentalism”? They seem to shun simple terms such as HELPING the “people” or the “land,” since those things are exactly what they are HARMING.

  3. #3 by Dave on 01/10/2007 - 7:14 pm

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    Every industry is enabled by a few key lawyers and their law firms working with the money interests and key regulators to get deals done. If the deals require some modification in statute, the role of elected officials is simply to rubber stamp these deals in exchange for political contributions. If changes are required only at the level of administrative codes and regulations, hell, the bureaucrats are happy to that without the involvement of an actual elected official as long as it creates a new budget justification.

    The public, of course, always benefits as a result of these deals, as any plausible lie will justify things. Any plausible lie will do, it doesn’t even have to be a clever lie.

    That, then, tells you how important the public interest really is in determining outcomes. In fact, the public interest is wholly irrelevant. Nothing new in this, the system is as old as the hills.

    But what gets me, at least in the hey day of railroad industry rip offs, at least America’s farmers and manufacturers knew they were being ripped off.

    Not so today, as PC ideology, drummed into us through astounding repetition asserts an astonishing ontology: We are told as a matter of religious conviction that anybody receiving large payoffs is ipso facto a benefactor of society’s need for capital formation.

    “These people are not thieves, they are the very ones making American capitalism work!”

    We are at the point of enslavement at present where only Mantra thinking will do. There needs to be a modification in the very structure of our brain cells. It needs to happen instantaneously through the defeat of wordism in all of in manifestations.

    Accordingly, following the money is really very easy. Seeing through the Vdare’s and various “reform” movements is just as easy also. Apprehending the ridiculous regimens of “plausible lies” is no problem either.

    It just requires a new way of seeing and hearing of what others do not see and what others do not hear.

  4. #4 by Peter on 01/11/2007 - 10:32 am

    Just wanted to point out that the NAM is made up of both large and small manufacturers – in fact, 40% of US production is made by smaller manufacturers and 60% of U.S. manufacturing employees are in small/medium manufacturing.

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