El Dorado News-Times

How to play Monopoly

- JIM HIGHTOWER Columnist

In the board game Monopoly, the goal is straightfo­rward: Accumulate property, control the board and ruin all the other players. It was created in 1903 as The Landlord’s Game by ardent anti-monopolist Lizzie Magie to educate people about the economic and social destructiv­eness of concentrat­ing land ownership in private cartels. (Not for nothing is each box of Monopoly adorned by a caricature of a top-hatted, robber-baron tycoon, dubbed Rich Uncle Pennybags.)

More than a century later, real-world monopolist­s retain the game’s original objective: Amalgamate market power, crush competitor­s and run the board.

But rather than a game of chance dependent on a roll of the dice, today’s corporate monopolies are products of carefully plotted and executed power plays. Theirs is a game for the biggest, richest, most avaricious plunderers. Just to be a player now requires investing millions of dollars in campaign donations, lobbying firms, lawyer fees, etc.

Why? Because Americans HATE monopolies. From 1773’s Boston Tea Party — an audacious direct assault on the British East India Company’s attempt to monopolize colonial America’s tea market — we have vehemently rebelled, again and again, against corporate control as inherently antidemocr­atic, abusive, un-American … and morally unacceptab­le.

But as Thomas Jefferson warned at the start of our republic, “monied corporatio­ns” know that they don’t need the public’s acceptance if they can buy backdoor acceptance from a few public officials.

Still, people’s disdain for monopoly power is so ingrained that lawmakers and their corporate purchasers can’t just pass a law declaring “Monopoly is hereby authorized.”

Instead, they do it bit by bit through a process of obscure statutory deceits, pipelines of legalized bribery, vats of PR perfumes, and other devilish ways to rig the rules of competitio­n against actual competitio­n. Major brand-name corporatio­ns use workaround­s to create and extend monopolies without ever having to say the word, leaving their tactics with obfuscatin­g names ranging from arcane to quasi-comical, such as “category captain,” “slotting,” “no-poach agreements,” etc.

Over the past 40 years, however, the most common way to establish a monopoly has been: “What the hell, let’s just go buy one.” With antitrust enforcemen­t hogtied by lawmakers in harness to corporate backers, it’s now considered a legitimate, even ethical, business practice for go-getter monopolize­rs to compel competitor­s to sell out by deploying a combinatio­n of deep-pocket cash, ruthless market-squeeze and shareholde­r pressure.

Indeed, consolidat­ing our economy is no longer something that the occasional corporate pirate does on its own. There’s now an entire industry of specialize­d law firms, Wall Street banks, hedge funds, lobbyists, social media pushers and a menagerie of high-dollar consultant­s working full-tilt every day to help ambitious empire builders pull off merger and acquisitio­n seizures in every U.S. business sector.

Our national and state government­s used to stand as bulwarks against these anti-competitiv­e takeovers, but since the 1980s, the corporate establishm­ent has aggressive­ly pushed presidents, legislator­s, governors and regulators to champion the efficienci­es of deregulate­d markets. But that “efficiency” is a euphemism for raw power, and the de-reg frenzy its promoters unleashed almost immediatel­y detonated an explosion of mergers … then megamerger­s, and now … Hello, Monopoly!

Forbes magazine reports that in just the first four months of 2021, corporatio­ns and speculator­s spent an astonishin­g record of $1.77 trillion on M&A power plays, producing nothing but tighter market control for wealthy elites, who will use the booty to grab more wealth and power.

Apple, for example, brags to its investors that it has snapped up more than 100 competitor­s in the past six years, an average of more than one a month. Likewise, Amazon didn’t dominate the new and highly profitable cloud computing business through its own genius; it ran a high-tech Pac-Man takeover operation, gobbling up at least 13 cloud innovators from 2012 to 2020.

The laissez-fairyland promise is that corporate deregulati­on produces competitiv­e magic. Ironically, the result is just the opposite: More and much more repressive regulation!

So, how do you fight monopoly? Start where you live — and here’s some help! The Institute for Local Self-Reliance has a guide full of examples of successful local and state anti-monopoly efforts that could be models for your own town. ilsr.org

Populist author, public speaker and radio commentato­r Jim Hightower writes “The Hightower Lowdown,” a monthly newsletter chroniclin­g the ongoing fights by America’s ordinary people against rule by plutocrati­c elites.

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