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by guerrilla
1481 days ago
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> Monopolies are illegal if You're moving the goalpost and still wrong [1]. I don't know why you want to talk about this so badly if you don't know what you're talking about. Anyway, as I said, it's discretionary regulation and power comes in many forms. > The way to get rid of the Government would require bloodshed. You don't need to get rid of "the government" if you control the state and everyone's minds via lobbying, corruption, propaganda and other means. > Can we agree that that n corrupt and power-abusive Government is far more dangerous than Amazon (or any other corporation) could ever be? Absolutely not. "The government" is the puppet, the owners of companies like Amazon are the puppeteers. Power comes in many forms. Coercion comes in many forms. 1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_antitrust_law |
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(Also, let's not get into the fact that the news are about changes in Denmark and you are using an wikipedia link to argue about US Antitrust Law. The world does not spin around D.C)
So, yeah, we can drop the talk about monopolies.
> power comes in many forms.
I'm not arguing about power by itself. I'm arguing about how dangerous an institution can be if they abuse the power they do have. You and I might dislike all the data collecting from Amazon (and Google et caterva), but none of them can put me in jail. The Government can. And since you want to think of terms of American politics: think of all the abuses that were made in the name of "The War on Terror" and "The War of Drugs". Don't forget the Obama administration getting the IRS to go after Tea Party organizations.
Mind you, this is no way a defense of the corporations, and I already have an idea of how I would like to see people fighting the concentration of power [0]. But I find weird seeing people who understand how bad it can be when power gets too concentrated in the hands of a few, and yet they just want to put it all in the hands of the government, the one entity they have no recourse against. To me, those wishing to give the government more power than it already has shows a case of naivety at best and a serious authoritarian inclination at worst.
[0]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31317641