Thursday, June 7, 2012

Re: Islamist group seeks to submit NYPD, ban surveillance of potential Islamic terrorists

Plain Ol,
 
You, Whoopie Goldberg, and that fat red headed whore Joy Behar are just plain ol wrong on this one.  When is the last time you saw a Jew, or anyone from China (e.g.; a "xian")  attempt to blow up a plane,  or cut off anyone's head,  stone someone to death,  strap on a suicide bomb in the name of their God,  or wipe their ass with their bare left hand?
 
 

On Thu, Jun 7, 2012 at 4:31 PM, plainolamerican <plainolamerican@gmail.com> wrote:
go ahead and target the muslims ... just don't forget to target the
jews and xians

On Jun 7, 9:19 am, Travis <baconl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> **
>            New post on *Creeping Sharia*
> <http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/author/creeping/>  Islamist group
> seeks to submit NYPD, ban surveillance of potential Islamic
> terrorists<http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/2012/06/07/islamist-group-seeks-t...>by
> creeping <http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/author/creeping/>
>
> via Suit against NYPD asks that surveillance of Muslims based on faith be
> declared unconstitutional | NJ.com. The New York Police Department's
> years-long surveillance of Muslim businesses and mosques throughout the
> Northeast denigrated the Islamic faith and violated the constitutional
> rights of countless Muslim-Americans, according to a federal lawsuit filed
> in Newark today. In other [...]
>
> Read more of this
> post<http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/2012/06/07/islamist-group-seeks-t...>
>  *creeping <http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/author/creeping/>* | June
> 7, 2012 at 10:00 AM | Categories: Creeping
> Sharia<http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=4115925>,
> Jihad <http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=44409>,
> Legal<http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=2283>,
> Media <http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=292>, New
> Jersey<http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=22720>,
> New York <http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=4614>,
> News<http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=103>,
> Politics <http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=398>,
> Religion<http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=116>,
> Sharia <http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=29069>, Stealth
> Jihad<http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=10735225>| URL:http://wp.me/pbU4v-bKa
>
>   Comment<http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/2012/06/07/islamist-group-seeks-t...>
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>
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Re: Is socialism a good thing in moderation?

The real GDP per capita (growth rate) of an economy is often used as
an indicator of the average standard of living of individuals in that
country, and economic growth is therefore often seen as indicating an
increase in the average standard of living. However, there are some
problems in using growth in GDP per capita to measure the general well-
being of a country´s population. In fact, GDP was first developed by
Simon Kuznets for a US Congress report in 1934, who immediately said
not to use it as a measure for welfare. First, GDP per capita does not
provide much information relevant to the distribution of income in a
country. Second, GDP per capita does not take into account negative
externalities such as pollution consequent to economic growth. Third,
GDP per capita does not take into account positive externalities that
may result from services such as education and health. Finally, GDP
per capita excludes the value of all the activities that take place
outside of the market place such as free leisure activities or less
positive activities like organized crime.

On Jun 6, 3:24 am, Just Plain Jim <chinab...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I lived in a country, the USA that wears its capitalism on its sleeve.
> That is till the last six years were I now live in the PRC, commonly
> known as China, a retired vet working part time here.
>
> What I have learned over these years is that major industries and
> services are jointly owned by the government and private enterprise,
> and that small businesses are privately owned.
>
> This seems to have created a check and balance system within big
> business where the good of the country and private investors is
> protected while encouraging competition.  They have also seemed to
> have created a system that allows small businesses flourish. This has
> also created shared profits where the tax burden on the people seem to
> be far less.
>
> While the political and social impacts are obvious in their system,
> nevertheless this is not about that, this is about an economic system
> that enjoys 9% growth for the last few decades and that I believe we
> should take a few pages out of their economic playbook and learn to
> beat them at their own game.
>
> What are your thoughts?

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Re: Mark Levin: ‘Tea Party Is the Most Significant and Powerful Force in This Nation Today’

Levin was the Chief of Staff to Attorney General Edwin Meese ... and
had full knowledge of the crimes that the Reagan administration
committed in the Iran-Contra Affair.

yes ... he's a good republican

On Jun 7, 9:15 am, Travis <baconl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> **
>            New post on *therightplanet.com*
> <http://www.therightplanet.com/?author=2>  Mark Levin: 'Tea Party Is the
> Most Significant and Powerful Force in This Nation
> Today'<http://www.therightplanet.com/2012/06/mark-levin-tea-party-is-the-mos...>by
> Sard <http://www.therightplanet.com/?author=2>
>
> <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8StPxgGEAVs&w=640&h=480>
>
> Read more at The Right Scoop ...
> <http://www.therightscoop.com/mark-levin-the-tea-party-is-more-powerfu...>
>  *Sard <http://www.therightplanet.com/?author=2>* | June 7, 2012 at 9:57 am
> | Categories: American Culture <http://www.therightplanet.com/?cat=47565>,
> Conservatism <http://www.therightplanet.com/?cat=28071>, First
> Amendment<http://www.therightplanet.com/?cat=51156>,
> Main-Stream Media <http://www.therightplanet.com/?cat=31719>, Presidential
> Campaign <http://www.therightplanet.com/?cat=580604>, Tea
> Party<http://www.therightplanet.com/?cat=281876>,
> U.S. Constitution <http://www.therightplanet.com/?cat=4759908> | URL:http://wp.me/p1SHGG-5Qd
>
>   Comment<http://www.therightplanet.com/2012/06/mark-levin-tea-party-is-the-mos...>
>    See all comments<http://www.therightplanet.com/2012/06/mark-levin-tea-party-is-the-mos...>
>
>   Unsubscribe or change your email settings at Manage
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Re: Islamist group seeks to submit NYPD, ban surveillance of potential Islamic terrorists

go ahead and target the muslims ... just don't forget to target the
jews and xians

On Jun 7, 9:19 am, Travis <baconl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> **
>            New post on *Creeping Sharia*
> <http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/author/creeping/>  Islamist group
> seeks to submit NYPD, ban surveillance of potential Islamic
> terrorists<http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/2012/06/07/islamist-group-seeks-t...>by
> creeping <http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/author/creeping/>
>
> via Suit against NYPD asks that surveillance of Muslims based on faith be
> declared unconstitutional | NJ.com. The New York Police Department's
> years-long surveillance of Muslim businesses and mosques throughout the
> Northeast denigrated the Islamic faith and violated the constitutional
> rights of countless Muslim-Americans, according to a federal lawsuit filed
> in Newark today. In other [...]
>
> Read more of this
> post<http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/2012/06/07/islamist-group-seeks-t...>
>  *creeping <http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/author/creeping/>* | June
> 7, 2012 at 10:00 AM | Categories: Creeping
> Sharia<http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=4115925>,
> Jihad <http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=44409>,
> Legal<http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=2283>,
> Media <http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=292>, New
> Jersey<http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=22720>,
> New York <http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=4614>,
> News<http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=103>,
> Politics <http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=398>,
> Religion<http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=116>,
> Sharia <http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=29069>, Stealth
> Jihad<http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/?cat=10735225>| URL:http://wp.me/pbU4v-bKa
>
>   Comment<http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/2012/06/07/islamist-group-seeks-t...>
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Re: Free Birth Control!

and some wonder why Bill was banging the jewish chick

On Jun 7, 9:16 am, Travis <baconl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> **
>            New post on *Fellowship of the Minds*
> <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/author/eowyn2/>  Free Birth
> Control!<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/2012/06/07/free-birth-control/>by
> Dr. Eowyn <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/author/eowyn2/>
>
> All ready for your framing. :D
>
> Just click on the pic.
>
> Download.
>
> Print (using a color printer).
>
> Put it on your bed stand.
>
> Voila! and watch the magic happens!
>
> <http://fellowshipofminds.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/hillary.jpg>
>
> H/t FOTM's beloved Miss May.
>
> *~Eowyn*
>  *Dr. Eowyn <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/author/eowyn2/>* | June
> 7, 2012 at 2:00 am | Tags: Hillary
> Clinton<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?tag=hillary-clinton>|
> Categories:
> Humor <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?cat=376>,
> Liberals/Democrats<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?cat=74187125>,
> United States <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?cat=5850> | URL:http://wp.me/pKuKY-eRB
>
>   Comment<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/2012/06/07/free-birth-control/...>
>    See all comments<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/2012/06/07/free-birth-control/...>
>
>   Unsubscribe or change your email settings at Manage
> Subscriptions<https://subscribe.wordpress.com/?key=80d8873ee52adffe4e178d01c25562cf...>.
>
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Islamist group seeks to submit NYPD, ban surveillance of potential Islamic terrorists



New post on Creeping Sharia

Islamist group seeks to submit NYPD, ban surveillance of potential Islamic terrorists

by creeping

via Suit against NYPD asks that surveillance of Muslims based on faith be declared unconstitutional | NJ.com. The New York Police Department's years-long surveillance of Muslim businesses and mosques throughout the Northeast denigrated the Islamic faith and violated the constitutional rights of countless Muslim-Americans, according to a federal lawsuit filed in Newark today. In other [...]

Read more of this post

Comment    See all comments

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Free Birth Control!



New post on Fellowship of the Minds

Free Birth Control!

by Dr. Eowyn

All ready for your framing. :D

Just click on the pic.

Download.

Print (using a color printer).

Put it on your bed stand.

Voila! and watch the magic happens!

H/t FOTM's beloved Miss May.

~Eowyn

Dr. Eowyn | June 7, 2012 at 2:00 am | Tags: Hillary Clinton | Categories: Humor, Liberals/Democrats, United States | URL: http://wp.me/pKuKY-eRB

Comment    See all comments

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Re: Israel: Illegal Arrest and Incommunicado detention of Nabil Al-Raee

not an American concern
fund your own charities

On Jun 7, 4:16 am, William Gomes <williamgomes....@gmail.com> wrote:
> June 7, 2012
>
> Benjamin Netanyahu
>
> Prime Minister of the State of Israel
>
> Office of the Prime Minister
> 3 Kaplan Street, P O Box 187
> Jerusalem 91919, Israel
> Phone: +972-2-6753333
> Fax: +972 2 6521599
> E-mail: pm_...@pmo.gov.il
>
> *Israel: Illegal Arrest and Incommunicado detention of Nabil Al-Raee*
>
> *Dear Benjamin Netanyahu,*
>
> I am William Nicholas Gomes, Human Rights Ambassador for Salem News.com.
>
> I am writing to express my serious concern over the illegal arrest and
> Incommunicado detention of Nabil Al-Raee, the artistic director of the
> Freedom Theatre by the Israeli forces in the West Bank city of Jenin.
>
> According to the information received "The soldiers came around 3:00 am
> (0000 GMT). I live upstairs so I came out to see what was happening,"
> Jonatan Stanczak told AFP.
>
> He found the troupe's artistic director Nabil al-Raee surrounded by Israeli
> forces, who refused to say why they were detaining him.
>
> "The only answer you get is a gun in your face. When I went out I had three
> guns pointing at me, I was half-naked because I didn't want them to think I
> had any weapons," he said.
>
> Nabil's wife, Micaela Miranda explains what happened: "The dog started
> barking so I went outside and saw soldiers jumping over the gate and come
> into the yard of the house. They asked for my husband and I asked what for,
> that it's my right to know and it's my house. The soldiers replied that
> they were not going to tell me. They then took Nabil, brought him to an
> army jeep and drove off. We are very worried because we don't know where
> they took him and why."
>
> This is not an isolated case, more than half the employees of The Freedom
> Theatre were recently called to interrogations by the Israeli army,
> including Nabil Al-Raee. All came to the appointments as scheduled and
> answered to their best of their knowledge the given questions even though
> they were intimidated and even threatened.
>
> The theatre's Israeli-Palestinian director, Juliano Mer-Khamis, was killed
> in April 2011 in the city's refugee camp by an unknown gunman, and since
> then Israeli troops have arrested several members of the theatre, according
> to AFP
>
> I am gravely concerned by the use of incommunicado detention through the
> issuing of Orders Prohibiting Meeting with Counsel by the Israeli
> authorities, as this represents a violation of the detainees' rights under
> international law.
>
> I want to request you the following:
>
> i. take all necessary measures to guarantee the physical and psychological
> integrity of Mr. Nabil Al-Raee
>
> ii. guarantee that he is granted regular and adequate access to legal
> representation and family visits;
>
> iii. order his immediate release in the absence of valid legal charges, and
> if such charges exist, to ensure that he is given a prompt and fair trial,
> in which his procedural rights are guaranteed at all times;
>
> iv. order a thorough and impartial investigation into the circumstances of
> these events, notably the allegations of torture, in order to identify
> those responsible, bring them to trial and apply the penal and/or
> administrative sanctions as provided by law;
>
> v. guarantee the respect of human rights and the fundamental freedoms
> throughout the country in accordance with international human rights
> standards.
>
> I request your urgent intervention.
>
> Yours sincerely,
>
> William Nicholas Gomes
>
> Human Rights Ambassador for salem News.com
>
> Salem-News.com
> P.O. Box 5238
> Salem, Oregon 97304
>
> www.williamgomes.org
>
> http://www.williamgomes.org/israel-illegal-arrest-and-incommunicado-d...
>
> --
> *William Nicholas Gomes*
> *Journalist & Human Rights Activist *
> *80/ B Bramon Chiron, Saydabad,
> Dhaka-1203, Bangladesh.
> Cell: +88 019 7 444 0 666
> E-mail:**William [at] williamgomes.org* <Will...@williamgomes.org>*,
> editorbd[at]gmail.com <edito...@gmail.com>
> Skype: William.gomes9
> Face book: **www.facebook.com/williamnicholasgomes*<http://www.facebook.com/williamnicholasgomes>
> *
> Twitter: **twitter.com/williamgomes* <http://www.twitter.com/persecutionbd>*
> **Web site :www.williamgomes.org*<http://www.williamgomes.org/>

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**JP** Job Request

Dear Sir/Madam,


A graduate of University of Peshawar, Naveed Yousafzai mastered in Journalism and Mass Communication at Gomal University, Dera Ismail Khan.

Naveed was Programme Manager at Campus Radio, Gomal University, establishing Campus Radio FM 104.6, equipping the production studio and trained dozen of students and reporters in broadcast journalism.

 

Having chosen to focus on radio journalism, Naveed began an internship at the Media Training and Research Centre at the University of Peshawar, where he came into contact with PACT Radio.

 

Naveed worked first as PACT Radio's Zonal Coordinator in Dera Ismail Khan and developed production studio for PACT Radio programs and trained more then 20 reporters for PACT Radio live radio and pre-recorded programs. In 2008 he was appointed Deputy Head of PACT Radio and chief editor of the weekly borderline magazine.

 

Yousafzai also worked with the journalists' community working on both sides ofthe Pak-Afghan border region and he imparted radio training to them as well. He enjoys very cordial relations with all of them and a large number of radio stations who on aired various programmes under the auspices of Raabta Consultants and PACT Radio in the border zone.

 

Naveed also remained the team leader of our magazine team entitled Pakhtun Raabta and he proved a valuable asset to fulfill numerous challenges and tasks on time in shape of producing first-ever trilingual magazine.

 

The production proved a milestone for promoting peace, tolerance, anti-violence, awareness and solution-oriented journalism among the downtrodden strata in FATA and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

 

The achievement was proved by receiving unflinching appreciation and feedback in response of the magazine and radio transmission.

Recently i have completed media project with IMedia Associates but due to funding project has been closed, i am in dire need of job immediately, if you  kindly help and circulate my CV.

Regards,

Naveed Yousafzai
Skype. naveed.akbar1

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Re: [I-S] Walker wins one for the plutocrats - Salon.com

"Spittles Matthews"?   I literally laughed out loud on that one.....Who's Joan?
 
I saw Debbie "DoucheBag" Wasserman Schultz this morning on Piers Morgan.  She was not amused.....Blaming it all on the Republican outsiders' money.   Douchebag conveniently forgot about the 21 million Union monies that flowed into Wisconsin in favor of Barrett....
 


 
On Thu, Jun 7, 2012 at 10:44 AM, Bruce Majors <majors.bruce@gmail.com> wrote:
thanks for sharing, it allowed me to post a reply to Joan, one of my face hobbies

Permalink  Reply   Flag
BruceMajors
THURSDAY, JUN 7, 2012 04:40 AM EDT
Poor sad Demotard whores, used to voting for Democrat tax predators in exchange for a government job, a subsidy, a bailout, some walking around money, a Solynda slush fund grant, assume that a normal decent person also votes one way or another because of money. And here we have Joan again, still maintaining that those cock shots are not Anthony Weiner's because she knows what his junk looks like, and she knows it is a fabrication and a conspiracy. Joan honey you are a has been and a laughingstock and have been for years. Only Spittles Matthews ever interviews you and he has an audience of 3. You might as well just talk to him in his hot tub in the back of his $2 million house in his lily white Chevy Chase Maryland manse. You two can plot rounding up poor black kids and selling them to the educrat cartels for donations to your Demonazi candidates, the slave trade you have used to fund your socialist candidates for decades. Or you could get out. Move to Cuba or Iran before we kick your flabby skanky asses again in November. You rat toothed hag.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: S
Date: Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Subject: [I-S] Walker wins one for the plutocrats - Salon.com
To: "individual-sovereignty@yahoogroups.com" <individual-sovereignty@yahoogroups.com>


 

http://www.salon.com/2012/06/06/walker_wins_one_for_the_plutocrats/singleton/

Outspent 7-1, Democrats couldn't beat Scott Walker with a strong ground game. What does that say about November?

At about 3 pm Wisconsin time Scott Walker Tweeted: "President Reagan died on June 5, 2004. Let's win one for the Gipper!" It was moment of grandiosity for a man who endured the shame of a recall election, then ultimately spent enough to survive it, but it wasn't the first time Walker invoked Reagan on one of his big days.

While talking to a prankster who pretended he was billionaire GOP funder David Koch more than a year ago, Walker confided what he did at a dinner for his staff the night before he unveiled his union-busting agenda. "I pulled out a picture of Ronald Reagan and I said 'You know, this may seem a little melodramatic, but 30 years ago Ronald Reagan, whose 100th birthday we just celebrated the day before, had one of the most defining moments of his political career, not just his presidency, when he fired the air traffic controllers,'" Walker told the faux-Koch.

It turns out Walker's anti-union gambit was a defining moment for the modern Republican Party. When Reagan busted PATCO, the air traffic controllers' union, he accelerated the decline of the American labor movement, and American workers' wages have declined along with it ever since. When Walker moved against public employee unions, it was an effort to drive the final nail in labor's coffin, while defunding a crucial resource base for the Democratic Party. Plutocrats rewarded him handsomely for his work, shoveling money into Wisconsin and burying Democrat Tom Barrett with a 7-1 cash disadvantage.

Could it have been otherwise? Progressives got their hopes up in the last 24 hours, as polls tightened and reports of record turnout in Milwaukee and Madison let people believe an upset might be afoot. But the results were much what polls had predicted all along.  With hindsight, it was hard for it to turn out any other way. Wisconsin's was only the third gubernatorial recall election in history. I'm reluctant to cite exit polls that showed a much tighter race than the actual election, but 60 percent of voters polled said they didn't believe in recalls for anything other than "official misconduct." That was a tough hole for Barrett to climb out of.

He was also climbing out of a primary battle with labor favorite Kathleen Falk. Polls showed that people who made up their minds in the last month overwhelmingly chose Barrett, but that most people decided on the recall before May – when Democrats were fighting with one another and Walker was blanketing the airwaves with advertising. Most important, Barrett drowned in outside money, with two thirds of Walker's cash coming from out of state, floods of it from the usual suspects like the Kochs, Sheldon Adelson, Foster Freiss and Bob Perry. So some very local factors went into Walker's win, but Democrats nationally are likely to face a big fundraising disadvantage in this post-Citizens United world.

There were a few other interesting tidbits in those not entirely reliable exit polls. Walker won big with folks making more than $75,000, but essentially split the votes of those making between $35,000 and $75,000, a group that Barrett should have captured had his message gotten through. Better news for Democrats: Walker won men 58-41, but Barrett won women 53-46. And President Obama led Mitt Romney among voters polled 52 to 43 percent; in fact, 17 percent of voters who said they back Obama went for Walker.

Should Democrats take comfort in Obama's Wisconsin numbers? David Axelrod did, Tweeting it out as the polls closed. But in the end, the recall results probably tell us little about what will happen in November. I think the election could leave Obama stronger in the state, because the Democrats improved their ground game, even if it didn't turn out to be enough to unseat Walker. Yet there are reasons to look at Wisconsin and be worried about the national picture in November, chief among them the bottomless pockets of the GOP's plutocrat donor base.  The Democrats' stumble will also embolden those on the Occupy-left who want labor and progressives to abandon the party, while bolstering the case of centrist and Wall Street Dems that the party can't afford to alienate the wealthy lest it suffer a 7-1 funding disadvantage nationwide. As to whether Obama should have visited Wisconsin to bolster Barrett, I still think what I thought Tuesday morning: It's complicated.

When Reagan busted PATCO, he not only weakened an institution that protects workers, but one that had become a foundation of the Democratic Party. Both results helped give the wealthy much greater political power. With Citizens United, the John Roberts Supreme Court sent us back to the Gilded Age, undoing a cornerstone of Progressive era reform, campaign finance. Walker's victory is just one more example of the way the modern right has turned back the clock. When Tuesday's results were in, Mitt Romney crowed that they "will echo beyond the borders of Wisconsin. Governor Walker has shown that citizens and taxpayers can fight back – and prevail – against the runaway government costs imposed by labor bosses."

Reagan also took the first step in transforming "labor bosses," and particularly public sector unions, into the new "welfare queens" he loved to rail against. I had hoped (as I've written many times) that the anti-Walker uprisings in Wisconsin, and against Measure 5 in Ohio last November, signaled a recognition by the white working and middle classes that some of them – cops and nurses and firefighters and teachers – have become welfare queens to the modern GOP.  But that hasn't sufficiently happened yet, though it must be said that plenty of white working and middle class folks put their heart and soul into the recall.   Walker's victory is a reminder of what Democrats face in November. Maybe that's a good thing.

 

 

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Re: Witch-hunting For Robber Barons: The Standard Oil Story

Thanks for sharing this article Michael.   I wish it was in .pdf,  (and I might try to convert it)  as I would like to have it on my Nook.
 
I really do want to study some of these guys' thesis...Especially McGee's;  I had always been of the belief that Rockefeller and Standard Oil had minimized competition, by monopolizing the rail transportation, and making it virtually impossible for competitors to get product to market, as well as the "absorption";  and price cutting that is also discussed in the article.  I have only had a chance to peruse it,  (I am now in Deutschland)  and today is a holiday here.   I am looking for reading material!
 
By the way,  I just finished Robert Caro's,  "Lyndon Johnson:  The Passage of Power" on the flight.   A great read!

On Thu, Jun 7, 2012 at 2:30 PM, MJ <michaelj@america.net> wrote:

Witch-hunting For Robber Barons: The Standard Oil Story
Lawrence W. Reed
March 1980 • Volume: 30 • Issue: 3 •

Mr. Reed is Assistant Professor of Economics at Northwood Institute in Midland, Michigan. This article is based upon one of his lectures for s course, "Philosophy of American Life and Business."

Among the great misconceptions of the free economy is the widely-held belief that "laissez faire" embodies a natural tendency toward monopoly concentration. Under unfettered capitalism, so goes the familiar refrain, large firms would systematically devour smaller ones, corner markets, and stamp out competition until every inhabitant of the land fell victim to their power. Just as popular is the notion that John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil Company of the late 1800s gave substance to such an evil course of events.

Regarding Standard Oil's chief executive, one noted historian writes, "He (Rockefeller) iron-handedly ruined competitors by cutting prices until his victim went bankrupt or sold out, whereupon higher prices would be likely to return."[1 ]

Two other historians, co-authors of a popular college text, opine that "Rockefeller was a ruthless operator who did not hesitate to crush his competitors by harsh and unfair methods."[2 ]

In 1899, Standard refined 90 per cent of America's oil­the peak of the company's dominance of the refining business. Though that market share was steadily siphoned off by competitors after 1899, the company nonetheless has been branded ever since as "an industrial octopus."

Does the story of Standard Oil really present a case against the free market? In my opinion, it most emphatically does not. Furthermore, setting the record straight on this issue must become an important weapon in every free market advocate's intellectual arsenal. That's the purpose of the following remarks.

Theoretically, there are two kinds of monopoly: coercive and efficiency. A coercive monopoly results from, in the words of Adam Smith, "a government grant of exclusive privilege." Government, in effect, must take sides in the market in order to give birth to a coercive monopoly. It must make it difficult, costly, or impossible for anyone but the favored firm to do business.

The United States Postal Service is an example of this kind of monopoly. By law, no one can deliver first class mail except the USPS. Fines and imprisonment (coercion) await all those daring enough to compete.

In some other cases, the government may not ban competition outright, but simply bestow privileges, immunities, or subsidies on one firm while imposing costly requirements on all others. Regardless of the method, a firm which enjoys a coercive monopoly is in a position to harm the consumer and get away with it.

An efficiency monopoly, on the other hand, earns a high share of a market because it does the best job. It receives no special favors from the law to account for its size. Others are free to compete and, if consumers so will it, to grow as big as the "monopoly."

An efficiency monopoly has no legal power to compel people to deal with it or to protect itself from the consequences of its unethical practices. It can only attain bigness through its excellence in satisfying customers and by the economy of its operations. An efficiency monopoly which turns its back on the very performance which produced its success would be posting a sign, "COMPETITORS WANTED." The market rewards excellence and exacts a toll on mediocrity.

It is my contention that the historical record casts the Standard Oil Company in the role of efficiency monopoly­a firm to which consumers repeatedly awarded their votes of confidence.

The oil rush began with the discovery of oil by Colonel Edwin Drake at Titusville, Pennsylvania in 1859. Northwestern Pennsylvania soon "was overrun with businessmen, speculators, misfits, horse dealers, drillers, bankers, and just plain hell-raisers. Dirt-poor farmers leased land at fantastic prices, and rigs began blackening the landscape. Existing towns jammed full overnight with 'strangers,' and new towns appeared almost as quickly."[3 ]

In the midst of chaos emerged young John D. Rockefeller. An exceptionally hard- working and thrifty man, Rockefeller transformed his early interest in oil into a partnership in the refinery stage of the business in 1865.

Five years later, Rockefeller formed the Standard Oil Company with 4 per cent of the refining market. Less than thirty years later, he reached that all-time high of 90 per cent. What accounts for such stunning success?

On December 30, 1899, Rockefeller was asked that very question before a governmental investigating body called the Industrial Commission. He replied:

I ascribe the success of the Standard to its consistent policy to make the volume of its business large through the merits and cheapness of its products. It has spared no expense in finding, securing, and utilizing the best and cheapest methods of manufacture. It has sought for the best superintendents and workmen and paid the best wages. It has not hesitated to sacrifice old machinery and old plants for new and better ones. It has placed its manufactories at the points where they could supply markets at the least expense. It has not only sought markets for its principal products, but for all possible by-products, sparing no expense in introducing them to the public. It has not hesitated to invest millions of dollars in methods of cheapening the gathering and distribution of oils by pipe lines, special cars, tank steamers, and tank wagons. It has erected tank stations at every important railroad station to cheapen the storage and delivery of its products. It has spared no expense in forcing its products into the markets of the world among people civilized and uncivilized. It has had faith in American oil, and has brought together millions of money for the purpose of making it what it is, and holding its markets against the competition of Russia and all the many countries which are producers of oil and competitors against American oil.[4]


A Master Organizer of Men and Materials

Rockefeller was a managerial genius -- a master organizer of men as well as of materials. He had a gilt for bringing devoted, brilliant, and hard-working young men into his organization. Among his most outstanding associates were H. H. Rogers, John D. Archbold, Stephen V. Harkness, Samuel Andrews, and Henry M. Flagler. Together they emphasized efficient economic operation, research, and sound financial practices. The economic excellence of their performance is described by economist D. T. Armentano:

Instead of buying oil from jobbers, they made the jobbers' profit by sending their own purchasing men into the oil region. In addition, they made their own sulfuric acid, their own barrels, their own lumber, their own wagons, and their own glue. They kept minute and accurate records of every item from rivets to barrel bungs. They built elaborate storage facilities near their refineries. Rockefeller bargained as shrewdly for crude as anyone before or since. And Sam Andrews coaxed more kerosene from a barrel of crude than could the competition. In addition, the Rockefeller firm put out the cleanest-burning kerosene, and managed to dispose of most of the residues like lubricating oil, paraffin, and vaseline at a profit.[5]

Even muckraker Ida Tarbell, one of Standard's critics, admired the company's streamlined processes of production:

Not far away from the canning works, on Newton Creek, is an oil refinery. This oil runs to the canning works, and, as the newmade cans come down by a chute from the works above, where they have just been finished, they are filled, twelve at a time, with the oil made a few miles away. The filling apparatus is admirable. As the newmade cans come down the chute they are distributed, twelve in a row, along one side of a turn-table. The turn-table is revolved, and the cans come directly under twelve measures, each holding five gallons of oil -- a turn of a valve, and the cans are full. The table is turned a quarter, and while twelve more cans are filled and twelve fresh ones are distributed, four men with soldering cappers put the caps on the first set. Another quarter turn, and men stand ready to take the cans from the filler and while they do this, twelve more are having caps put on, twelve are filling, and twelve are coming to their place from the chute. The cans are placed at once in wooden boxes standing ready, and, after a twenty-four-hour wait for discovering leaks, are nailed up and carted to a nearby door. This door opens on the river, and there at anchor by the side of the factory is a vessel chartered for South America or China or where not­waiting to receive the cans which a little more than twenty-four hours before were tin sheets lying on flatboxes. It is a marvellous example of economy, not only in materials, but in time and in footsteps.[6]


Market Competition Protects the Public

Socialist historian Gabriel Kolko, who argues in The Triumph of Conservatism that the forces of competition in the free market of the late 1800s were too potent to allow Standard to cheat the public, stresses that "Standard treated the consumer with deference. Crude and refined oil prices for consumers declined during the period Standard exercised greatest control of the industry . . ."[7]

Standard's service to the consumer in the form of lower prices is well-documented. To quote from Professor Armentano again:

Between 1870 and 1885 the price of refined kerosene dropped from 26 cents to 8 cents per gallon. In the same period, the Standard Oil Company reduced the [refining] costs per gallon from almost 3 cents in 1870 to .452 cents in 1885. Clearly, the firm was relatively efficient, and its efficiency was being translated to the consumer in the form of lower prices for a much improved product, and to the firm in the form of additional profits.[8]

That story continued for the remainder of the century, with the price of kerosene to the consumer falling to 5.91 cents per gallon in 1897. Armentano concludes from the record that "at the very pinnacle of Standard's industry 'control,' the costs and the prices for refined oil reached their lowest levels in the history of the petroleum industry."[9]

John D. Rockefeller's success, then, was a consequence of his superior performance. He derived his impressive market share not from government favors but rather from aggressive courting of the consumer. Standard Oil is one of history's classic efficiency monopolies.

But what about the many serious charges leveled against Standard? Predatory price cutting? Buying out competitors? Conspiracy? Railroad rebates? Charging any price it wanted? Greed? Each of these can be viewed as an assault not just on Standard Oil but on the free market in general. They can and must be answered.


Predatory price cutting

Predatory price cutting is "the practice of deliberately underselling rivals in certain markets to drive them out of business, and then raising prices to exploit a market devoid of competition."[10 ]

Professor John S. McGee, writing in the Journal of Law and Economics for October 1958, stripped this charge of any intellectual substance. Describing it as "logically deficient," he concluded, "I can find little or no evidence to support it.[11]

In his extraordinary article, McGee scrutinized the testimony of Rockefeller's competitors who claimed to have been victims of predatory price cutting. He found their claims to be shallow and misdirected. McGee pointed out that some of these very people later opened new refineries and successfully challenged Standard again.

Beyond the actual record, economic theory also argues against a winning policy of predatory price cutting in a free market for the following reasons:

1. Price is only one aspect of competition. Firms compete in a variety of ways: service, location, packaging, marketing, even courtesy. For price alone to draw customers away from the competition, the predator would have to cut substantially­enough to outweigh all the other competitive pressures the others can throw at him. That means suffering losses on every unit sold. If the predator has a war-chest of "monopoly profits" to draw upon in such a battle, then the predatory price cutting theorist must explain how he was able to achieve such ability in the absence of this practice in the first place!

2. The large firm stands to lose the most. By definition, the large firm is already selling the most units. As a predator, it must actually step up its production if it is to have any effect on competitors. As Professor McGee observed, "To lure customers away from somebody, he (the predator) must be prepared to serve them himself. The monopolizer thus finds himself in the position of selling more­and therefore losing more­than his competitors."[12]

3. Consumers will increase their purchases at the "bargain prices." This factor causes the predator to step up production even further. It also puts off the day when he can "cash in" on his hoped-for victory because consumers will be in a position to refrain from purchasing at higher prices, consuming their stockpiles instead.

4. The length of the battle is always uncertain. The predator does not know how long he must suffer losses before his competitors quit. It may take weeks, months, or even years. Meanwhile, consumers are "cleaning up" at his expense.

5. Any "beaten" firms may reopen. Competitors may scale down production or close only temporarily as they "wait out the storm." When the predator raises prices, they enter the market again. Conceivably, a "beaten" firm might be bought up by someone for a "song," and then, under fresh management and with relatively low capital costs, face the predator with an actual competitive cost advantage.

6. High prices encourage newcomers. Even if the predator drives everyone else from the market, raising prices will attract competition from people heretofore not even in the industry. The higher the prices go, the more powerful that attraction.

7. The predator would lose the favor of consumers. Predatory price cutting is simply not good public relations. Once known, it would swiftly erode the public's faith and good will. It might even evoke consumer boycotts and a backlash of sympathy for the firm's competitors.

In summary, let me quote Professor McGee once again:

Judging from the Record, Standard Oil did not use predatory price discrimination to drive out competing refiners, nor did its pricing practice have that effect. Whereas there may be a very few cases in which retail kerosene peddlers or dealers went out of business after or during price cutting, there is no real proof that Standard's pricing policies were responsible. I am convinced that Standard did not systematically, if ever, use local price cutting in retailing, or anywhere else, to reduce competition. To do so would have been foolish; and, whatever else has been said about them, the old Standard organization was seldom criticized for making less money when it could readily have made more.[13]


Buying out competitors

The intent of this practice, the critics say, was to stifle competitors by absorbing them.

First, it must be said that Standard had no legal power to coerce a competitor into selling. For a purchase to occur, Rockefeller had to pay the market price for an oil refinery. And evidence abounds that he often hired the very people whose operations he purchased. "Victimized ex-rivals," wrote McGee, "might be expected to make poor employees and dissident or unwilling shareholders."[14 ]


Kolko writes that "Standard attained its control of the refinery business primarily by mergers, not price wars, and most refinery owners were anxious to sell out to it. Some of these refinery owners later reopened new plants after selling to Standard."[15]

Buying out competitors can be a wise move if achieving economy of scale is the intent. Buying out competitors merely to eliminate them from the market can be a futile, expensive, and never-ending policy. It appears that Rockefeller's mergers were designed with the first motive in mind.

Even so, other people found it profitable to go into the business of building refineries and selling to Standard. David P. Reighard managed to build and sell three successive refineries to Rockefeller, all on excellent terms.

A firm which adopts a policy of absorbing others solely to stifle competition embarks upon the impossible adventure of putting out the recurring and unpredictable prairie fires of competition.


Conspiracy to fix prices

This accusation holds that Standard secured secret agreements with competitors to carve up markets and fix prices at higher-than-market levels.

I will not contend here that Rockefeller never attempted this policy. His experiment with the South Improvement Company in 1872 provides at least some evidence that he did. I do argue, however, that all such attempts were failures from the start and no harm to the consumer occurred.

Standard's price performance, cited extensively above, supports my argument. Prices fell steadily on an improving product. Some conspiracy!

From the perspective of economic theory, collusion to raise and/or fix prices is a practice doomed to failure in a free market for these reasons:

1. Internal pressures. Conspiring firms must resolve the dilemma of production. To exact a higher price than the market currently permits, production must be curtailed. Otherwise, in the face of a fall in demand, the firms will be stuck with a quantity of unsold goods. Who will cut their production and by how much? Will the conspirators accept an equal reduction for all when it is likely that each faces a unique constellation of cost and distribution advantages and disadvantages?

Assuming a formula for restricting production is agreed upon, it then becomes highly profitable for any member of the cartel to quietly cheat on the agreement. By offering secret rebates or discounts or other "deals" to his competitors' customers, any conspirator can undercut the cartel price, earn an increasing share of the market and make a lot of money. When the others get wind of this, they must quickly break the agreement or lose their market shares to the "cheater." The very reason for the conspiracy in the first place­higher profits­proves to be its undoing!

2. External pressures. This comes from competitors who are not parties to the secret agreement. They feel under no obligation to abide by the cartel price and actually use their somewhat lower price as a selling point to customers. The higher the cartel price, the more this external competition pays. The conspiracy must either convince all outsiders to join the cartel (making it increasingly likely that somebody will cheat) or else dissolve the cartel to meet the competition.

I would once again call the reader's attention to Kolko's The Triumph of Conservatism, which documents the tendency for collusive agreements to break apart, sometimes even before the ink is dry.


Railroad rebates

John D. Rockefeller received substantial rebates from railroads who hauled his oil, a factor which critics claim gave him an unfair advantage over other refiners.

The fact is that most all refiners received rebates from railroads. This practice was simply evidence of stiff competition among the roads for the business of hauling refined oil products. Standard got the biggest rebates because Rockefeller was a shrewd bargainer and because he offered the railroads large volume on a regular basis.

This charge is even less credible when one considers that Rockefeller increasingly relied on his own pipelines, not railroads, to transport his oil.


The power to charge any price wanted

According to the notion that Standard's size gave it the power to charge any price it wanted, bigness per se immunizes the firm from competition and consumer sovereignty.

As an "efficiency monopoly," Standard could not coercively prevent others from competing with it. And others did, so much so that the company's share of the market declined dramatically after 1899. As the economy shifted from kerosene to electricity, from the horse to the automobile, and from oil production in the East to production in the Gulf States, Rockefeller found himself losing ground to younger, more aggressive men.

Neither did Standard have the power to compel people to buy its products. It had to rely on its own excellence to attract and keep customers.

In a totally free market, the following factors insure that no firm, regardless of size, can charge and get "any price it wants":

1. Free entry. Potential competition is encouraged by any firm's abuse of the consumer. In describing entry into the oil business, Rockefeller once remarked that "all sorts of people . . . the butcher, the baker, and the candlestick maker began to refine oil."[16]


2. Foreign competition. As long as government doesn't hamper international trade, this is always a potent force.

3. Competition of substitutes. People are often able to substitute a product different from yet similar to the monopolist's.

4. Competition of all goods for the consumer's dollar. Every businessman is in competition with every other businessman to get consumers to spend their limited dollars on him.

5. Elasticity of demand. At higher prices, people will simply buy less.

It makes sense to view competition in a free market not as a static phenomenon, but as a dynamic, never-ending, leap-frog process by which the leader today can be the follower tomorrow.


Rockefeller was greedy

The charge that John D. Rockefeller was a "greedy" man is the most meaningless of all the attacks on him but nonetheless echoes constantly in the history books.

If Rockefeller wanted to make a lot of money (and there is no doubting he did), he certainly discovered the free market solution to his problem: produce and sell something that consumers will buy and buy again. One of the great attributes of the free market is that it channels greed into constructive directions. One cannot accumulate wealth without offering something in exchange!

At this point the reader might rightly wonder about the dissolution of the Standard Oil Trust in 1911. Didn't the Supreme Court find Standard guilty of successfully employing anti-competitive practices?

Interestingly, a careful reading of the decision reveals that no attempt was made by the Court to examine Standard's conduct or performance. The justices did not sift through the conflicting evidence concerning any of the government's allegations against the company. No specific finding of guilt was made with regard to those charges. Although the record clearly indicates that "prices fell, costs fell, outputs expanded, product quality improved, and hundreds of firms at one time or another produced and sold refined petroleum products in competition with Standard Oil,"[17]
the Supreme Court ruled against the company. The justices argued simply that the competition between some of the divisions of Standard Oil was less than the competition that existed between them when they were separate companies before merging with Standard.

In 1915, Charles W. Eliot, president of Harvard, observed: "The organization of the great business of taking petroleum out of the earth, piping the oil over great distances, distilling and refining it, and distributing it in tank steamers, tank wagons, and cans all over the earth, was an American invention."[18] Let the facts record that the great Standard Oil Company, more than any other firm, and John D. Rockefeller, more than any other man, were responsible for this amazing development.


1.   Thomas A. Bailey, The American Pageant: A History of the Republic, 2 vols., 8th ed. (Boston: D. C. Heath and Company, 1966), 2:532.
2.   Gilbert C. Fite and Jim E. Reese, An Economic History of the United States, 2nd ed. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1965), p. 367.
3.   D. T. Armentano, The Myths of Antitrust: Economic Theory and Legal Cases (New Rochelle, N.Y.: Arlington House, 1972), p. 64.
4.   Thomas G. Manning, E. David Cronon, and Howard R. Lamar, The Standard Oil Company: The Rise of a National Monopoly, part 3: Government and the American Economy: 1870 to the Present, revised (New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1960), p. 19.
5.   Armentano, Myths of Antitrust, p. 67.
6.   Ida M. Tarbell, The History of the Standard Oil Company, 2 vols. in 1 (Gloucester, Mass.: Peter Smith, 1950), p. 240-241.
7.   Gabriel Kolko, The Triumph of Conservatism: A Reinterpretation of American His tory, 1900-1916 (New York: The Macmillan Company, 1963; reprint ed., Chicago: Quad rangle Books, 1967), p. 39.
8.   Armentano, Myths of Antitrust, p. 70.
9.   Ibid., p. 77.
10.   Ibid., p. 73.
11.   John S. McGee, "Predatory Price Cutting: The Standard Oil (N.J.) Case," Journal of Law and Economics, I (October, 1958), p. 138.
12.   Ibid., p. 140.
13.   Ibid., p. 168.
14.   Ibid., p. 145.
15.   Kolko, Triumph of Conservatism, p. 40.
16.   John A. Garraty, The American Nation, vol. 2: A History of the United States Since 1865, 3rd eel. (New York: Harper and Row, 1975), p. 499.
17.   TArmentano, Myths of Antitrust, p. 83.
18.   Fite and Reese, An Economic History, p. 366.

http://www.thefreemanonline.org/columns/witch-hunting-for-robber-barons-the-standard-oil-story/

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