Summary:
Much like in the first Gilded Age, antitrust enforcers today are hitting labor, not capital. This is thanks to Robert Bork’s radical and influential reinterpretation of antitrust law. In helping successfully rewrite antitrust, Bork left a legacy of corporate supremacy and individual powerlessness. Yeah, that Robert Bork as it "getting borked."PromarketHow Robert Bork Fathered the New Gilded AgeSandeep Vaheesan
Topics:
Mike Norman considers the following as important: anti-trust, Robert Bork
This could be interesting, too:
Much like in the first Gilded Age, antitrust enforcers today are hitting labor, not capital. This is thanks to Robert Bork’s radical and influential reinterpretation of antitrust law. In helping successfully rewrite antitrust, Bork left a legacy of corporate supremacy and individual powerlessness. Yeah, that Robert Bork as it "getting borked."PromarketHow Robert Bork Fathered the New Gilded AgeSandeep Vaheesan
Topics:
Mike Norman considers the following as important: anti-trust, Robert Bork
This could be interesting, too:
Jeff Mosenkis (IPA) writes IPA’s weekly links
Mike Norman writes “You Can Put the Monopoly Tiger in a Cage but You Cannot Transform a Tiger Into a Vegan” — TheMarket interviews Luigi G. Zingales
Mike Norman writes ProMarket — “The World Has Changed”: the New York Times on Luigi Zingales, the “Chicago School,” and the Threat of Tech Monopolies
Mike Norman writes Zero Hedge — Barr And State AGs Discuss Big Tech Monopolies As ‘Flipped’ Facebook Co-Founder Helps Devise Antitrust Action
Much like in the first Gilded Age, antitrust enforcers today are hitting labor, not capital. This is thanks to Robert Bork’s radical and influential reinterpretation of antitrust law. In helping successfully rewrite antitrust, Bork left a legacy of corporate supremacy and individual powerlessness.
Yeah, that Robert Bork as it "getting borked."
Promarket
How Robert Bork Fathered the New Gilded Age
Sandeep Vaheesan