The Confessions of a Monopolist

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出版者:General Books
作者:Howe, Frederic Clemson
出品人:
页数:38
译者:
出版时间:2012-1
价格:$ 15.98
装帧:平装
isbn号码:9781151645937
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  • 资本家 
  • 发家史 
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This is the story of something for nothing--of making the other fellow pay. This making the other fellow pay, of getting something for nothing, explains the lust for franchises, mining rights, tariff privileges, railway control, tax evasions. All these things mean monopoly, and all monopoly is bottomed on legislation. .

And monopoly laws are born in corruption. The commercialism of the press, of education, even of sweet charity, is part of the price we pay for the special privileges created by law. The desire of something for nothing, of making the other fellow pay, of monopoly in some form or other, is the cause of corruption. Monopoly and corruption are cause and effect. Together, they work in Congress, in our Commonwealths, in our municipalities. It is always so. It always has been so. Privilege gives birth to corruption, just as the poisonous sewer breeds disease. Equal chance, a fair field and no favors, the "square deal," are never corrupt. They do not appear in legislative halls nor in Council Chambers. For these things mean labor for labor, value for value, something for something. This is why the little business man, the retail and wholesale dealer, the jobber, and the manufacturer are not the business men whose business corrupts politics.

No law can create labor value. But laws can unjustly distribute labor value; they can create privilege, and privilege despoils labor of its product. Laws pass on to monopoly the pennies, dimes and dollars of labor.

But monopoly does not end here. Even the sacrifice of our political institutions, even the shifting of taxes to the defenseless many, even the control of all life and industry by privilege, do not measure the whole cost of monopoly. These are but the palpable losses, the openly manifest ones. Monopoly palsies industry, trade, life itself. It encloses the land and the nation's resources. It limits opportunity to work. It erects its barriers about our resources; not to use them, but to exact a monopoly price from those who do. Monopoly denies to man opportunity. It fences in millions of acres of soil, of coal and iron mines, and of city lots. It closes the door to competition and to labor. This is why America is not only the richest, but in some respects the most poverty marked of nations. This is why enterprise is strangled, and labor walks the streets looking for a job.

Here is the confession of a monopolist. It is the story of no one monopolist, but of all monopolists. It shows the rules of the game. The portrait presented is not the portrait of any one monopolist Senator; it is the composite of many, and the setting may be laid in any one of the Northern States. For the United States Senate is the refuge of monopoly. Its members no longer are representatives of the Commonwealths which name them, but of the big business interests whose directors, attorneys and agents they are.

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The book intends to avow a simple formula of material prosperity in capitalistic society: being rich = making the society working for you and bonding business with politics. The author drew much of these conclusions from his own experience as a railway in...

评分

The book intends to avow a simple formula of material prosperity in capitalistic society: being rich = making the society working for you and bonding business with politics. The author drew much of these conclusions from his own experience as a railway in...

评分

The book intends to avow a simple formula of material prosperity in capitalistic society: being rich = making the society working for you and bonding business with politics. The author drew much of these conclusions from his own experience as a railway in...

评分

The book intends to avow a simple formula of material prosperity in capitalistic society: being rich = making the society working for you and bonding business with politics. The author drew much of these conclusions from his own experience as a railway in...

评分

The book intends to avow a simple formula of material prosperity in capitalistic society: being rich = making the society working for you and bonding business with politics. The author drew much of these conclusions from his own experience as a railway in...

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资本家第一人称叙述的发家史。简述商业资本的发展必须要与政治结合。

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资本家第一人称叙述的发家史。简述商业资本的发展必须要与政治结合。

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资本家第一人称叙述的发家史。简述商业资本的发展必须要与政治结合。

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资本家第一人称叙述的发家史。简述商业资本的发展必须要与政治结合。

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资本家第一人称叙述的发家史。简述商业资本的发展必须要与政治结合。

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