gipper
Diamond Member
- Jan 8, 2011
- 67,183
- 35,787
- 2,605
It seems that progressives and other big government types do. Though it might be unknowingly. Clearly their leadership LOVES big business.
Can the following comments be disputed?
Pigs at the Trough
By Bionic Mosquito
June 3, 2017
Big business loves regulation, and the more complex the better. Complex regulation kills off the little guy, the start-up. Complex regulatory requirements drive up the cost of the product, which drives up revenue and margins.
Big business loves government-created markets which force consumers to buy products (that only big business can produce) that they would otherwise not want to buy.
Big business loves government programs, as big business does not then have to market and sell to millions of individual consumers but instead to a handful of bureaucrats.
Big business is four-square against killing this deal. I can offer words of hope to these CEOs: don’t worry, it isn’t over yet; Trump is looking to a repeal and replace strategy. You can get an ever better deal if you focus on this.
Albeit, your respite will, eventually, prove temporary. The economy cannot sustain continued decrease of the productive (those who provide market-demanded goods) in support of the increase in the unproductive (those whose primary service is supported, directly or indirectly, by the government).
As this day approaches, who will win? Who will have priority? Grandma and grandpa? The military-industrial complex? Solar panels and windmills?
Can the following comments be disputed?
Pigs at the Trough
By Bionic Mosquito
June 3, 2017
Big business loves regulation, and the more complex the better. Complex regulation kills off the little guy, the start-up. Complex regulatory requirements drive up the cost of the product, which drives up revenue and margins.
Big business loves government-created markets which force consumers to buy products (that only big business can produce) that they would otherwise not want to buy.
Big business loves government programs, as big business does not then have to market and sell to millions of individual consumers but instead to a handful of bureaucrats.
Big business is four-square against killing this deal. I can offer words of hope to these CEOs: don’t worry, it isn’t over yet; Trump is looking to a repeal and replace strategy. You can get an ever better deal if you focus on this.
Albeit, your respite will, eventually, prove temporary. The economy cannot sustain continued decrease of the productive (those who provide market-demanded goods) in support of the increase in the unproductive (those whose primary service is supported, directly or indirectly, by the government).
As this day approaches, who will win? Who will have priority? Grandma and grandpa? The military-industrial complex? Solar panels and windmills?