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Friday, June 19, 2009
Jonah Goldberg :: Townhall.com Columnist
Et Tu, Big Business?
by Jonah Goldberg
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


Once-proud companies like GE have become seduced by global warming schemes, because they recognize that there's more money to be made selling white elephants to Uncle Sam than there is selling competitive products consumers want. Indeed, cap-and-trade taxes promise to deliver precisely the protectionist industrial policies the left has dreamed of for decades, only under a "progressive" label.

This week, Philip Morris, the biggest of the Big Tobacco companies, supported and won passage of an "anti-tobacco" bill that will make it easier for Philip Morris (a subsidiary of Altria) to sell cigarettes by making it harder for smaller, more innovative firms to compete. One way it will do that is by curtailing the First Amendment rights of tobacco companies, making it harder to advertise their products (including healthier alternatives to normal cigarettes). Philip Morris, maker of Marlboro and other established brands, already controls 50 percent of the market. That's why it lobbied government to keep it that way.

Also this week, the White House announced its plan to deal with "systemic risk" in the financial markets. The basic idea is that big firms -- giant banks, insurance companies, etc. -- cannot be allowed to fail if their failure threatens something called "stability." The Obama administration is confident that with its new organizational flow charts and enhanced job description for the Federal Reserve, bureaucrats will suddenly see clearly what they couldn't see before. These regulators will know exactly when bubbles get too big, when booms last too long, and when tens of thousands of managers, investors, actuaries and bankers make bad or sub-optimal decisions.

The problem, other than the shortage of Jedis and shamans to fill these posts, is that big companies will understand the surest way to attain immortality is to become too big to fail. Once they've achieved that privileged status, these companies will become de facto wards of the state, insured for life at taxpayer expense like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and in exchange they will do whatever Uncle Sam asks.

It's too soon to tell which companies will leap at the opportunity to sell their souls for immortality, but you can bet that many of those already suckling the TARP teat will be among the first to celebrate the sagacity of the new system.

While doctrinaire socialists might feel betrayed by liberalism's cozy embrace of big business, their betrayal pales in comparison to the bitterness of free-marketers who defend big business's freedom to operate, only to see these businesses use that freedom to hide behind the skirts of the nanny state. Real freedom means the freedom to fail as well as succeed. Big business wants to be protected from the former and deny competitors the latter. And their betrayal, more than anything, disheartens those who would defend both freedoms.

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About The Author
Jonah Goldberg is editor-at-large of National Review Online.
 
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Glad to Hear Big Biz Finally Called Out
You nailed it, Mr. Goldberg! Well-said. What self-destructive fools!

I used to work for Washington Mutual - remember them? How WELL DESERVED A FAILURE I can attest! Their assets (said to be approx $307B) bot by JP Morgan Chase for... $1.5B. Pretty sweet deal! Has no one noticed that Big Fish have been swallowing up Smaller Fish more and more and on the cheap? (WaMu gobbled up my previously efficient company in 2002; they had a 5-Yr Plan for getting in on the real estate boom. They swept aside our industry-lauded, good lending practices & brot in massive Easy Loans for Minorities, Affirmative Action hiring/promotion on Steroids, & Taking City Tax Breaks for nothing in return; plus outsourcing to India & massive layoffs, while telling us "If you don't like how we do things, LEAVE!". All lousy for sustaining business; soon THEY were prey.) Gobbling smaller companies, eventually only Big Boys left - that's how we end up with fewer companies, less competition, Too Big to Fail. Inevitably WILL FAIL nonetheless.

I highly recommend "Meltdown" by Thomas E. Woods, Jr. A succinct and solid argument for why laissez-faire economics isn't to blame, but GOVERNMENT INTERFERENCE IS.


Et TU, NRO!
Oh no, no, no, no you don't, Jonah Goldberg! How dare you pin this on big business?

The fault for this situation lies squarely on the shoulders of the SELL-OUT CONSERVATIVE INTELLECTUALS who were willing to accept some degree of statism to achieve "moral" or characterological utopian ends, because after that, they simply had no consistent, principled defense of laissez-faire capitalism. I think you know who the Typhoid Mary of that plague was--and it wasn't Ayn Rand. It was the founder of your sad, sad little partialitarian rag: William F. Buckley of the National Review. He was a lousy, miserable little parasite who sold the country and conservatism down the river, even as he claimed credit for saving them. If your intellectual forebears had exercised some integrity and gone with Ayn Rand instead of that phony baloney, we would not be in this situation now.

Big business works within the framework established by YOU THE INTELLECTUAL, because the intellectuals determine the politico-ideological course of the country. Simple game theory will tell you that if there must be some statism, then there must be even more statism, and once a country goes down that road, companies must make a choice between saving their hides and becoming a martyr. They cannot be blamed en block like this if too many of them decide to choose the former. You made them choose it. And when they get Stockholm Syndrome and shill for fascism even more enthusiastically, that just compounds YOUR guilt, not theirs.
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