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by skrebbel
5443 days ago
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I'm rather impressed that US states can, apparently, really make the case that protecting particular businesses against competing businesses is a "state function". What the hell? Shouldn't the exact opposite be a state function? Is this common in the US? (governments openly and clearly admitting to favouring A over B, because people high up like A better) It sounds like the direct opposite of a free market to me, and isn't that what the US is supposed to be all about? I mean, here in the Netherlands, we'd call that corruption and a scandal would ensue (which doesn't mean it doesn't happen; it just means that governments wouldn't admit such practices so openly). Note: I don't mean to judge; I just genuinely wonder how these things are viewed by common Americans. |
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Case in point: [1] Caperton v A.T. Massey Coal Co: A recent case from my former home state where a coal operator effectively bought a judge, who then ruled in favour of said coal operator. The U.S. Supreme Court eventually made sense of it [and unfortunately the case was later dismissed on a technicality], but there are many, many other examples of this type of "corruption" that never make it to a higher review.
So in that sense, no, we don't really have a free market. We have a Corporate Republic that protects the interests of its largest citizens.
[1]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caperton_v._A.T._Massey_Coal_Co.