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Sean Mann's avatar

I've often thought the best anti-hero would be the laughably evil billionaire who explicitly states his intentions so that people quickly turn against capitalism. (not that I think that's what Hoffman is doing)

I recently read Dark Money and have a post coming out about it Sunday, but what really struck me in the book is how so many evil billionaires learned quickly that most people actually hate their ideology, so they told all their wealthy friends in donor calls "Hey, what we want is unpopular. We have to disguise our intentions and make people think what we want is actually good."

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Stephen Breyer's Ice Cream's avatar

In a perfect world, yes! Totally! Antitrust benefits mostly the same people that Unions benefit! But, and you discuss it but I don't think enough, Union members will vote most often for their best interest. And sometimes their best interest is antithetical to antitrust. This will probably always be the case until Union membership is strong enough to survive strong antitrust enforcement.

But for now it's just the state of things, and I think that's okay. I don't see it as fighting over scraps from a wealthy villain, but rather two competing forces pulling at corporate dominance. I'd bet a bunch of money that Microsoft would have rather not gotten out of CWA's way but did what it had to do because of the threat of antitrust. This is a good thing! At least, it seems like a good thing! If the end result of antitrust is to drive more companies to embrace Unions, that's at least an acceptable outcome, right? Not perfect, but acceptable?

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