Posts Tagged “price fixing”

Dane County Circuit Judge Maryann Sumi recently upheld an old Wisconsin law, the Wisconsin Unfair Sales Act, that actually forces gas station owners to price gouge consumers. This law is the reason that gas is cheaper across the border in Michigan. The purpose of the law is to benefit the state of Wisconsin so that it can control the private property of gas station owners. Currently, it also protects the profits of big businesses from creative small business entrepreneurs that want to create discount programs to benefit their local communities.
In this case, the Wisconsin gas station owner wanted to raise the standard of living for the elderly by giving them a 2% discount on gas and a 3% discount to those who donated to the youth sports league in Merrill, Wisconsin. Dane County Circuit Judge Maryann Sumi, however, gave her ruling that this social cooperation between a local gas station owner and his community is illegal activity and that the law will not be repealed despite the fact it blatantly violates the human rights of individuals.
Again, we see that the bureaucrats in Wisconsin, such as Dane County Circuit Judge Maryann Sumi, have absolutely no problem with destroying the lives of individuals like the elderly and the young by trampling on the human rights of individuals like this gas station owner who wants to create a better society. Again, we see that it is government bureaucrats and their legislation that create monopoly prices, not a free market society.
The wonderful individuals at the Institute for Justice are fighting for the human rights of the gas station owner and his community in this case. See their website for details on this case as it moves forward after this recent tyrannical ruling by Judge Maryann Sumi of Dane County. We must help our neighbors in Merrill, Wisconsin by demanding that the tyrant, Judge Maryann Sumi, stop upholding violent and destructive monopoly price fixing. We owe it to our senior citizens and our youth.
Contact info:
Maryann Sumi
Phone: 608-266-4234
Fax: 608-266-4079
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Tags: big business, Dane County Circuit Judge Maryann Sumi, institute for justice, monopoly, price fixing, small business entrepreneurs, standard of living, Wisconsin Unfair Sales Act
5 Comments »

This fetish for price-gouging the consumer is for the benefit of Rep. Collin C. Peterson (D-Minn.) and his special interest group—corporate-welfare farmers. What’s next Collin, shall we pass legislation to burn down millions of old homes to prop up housing prices? Wait, that’s not one of the special interest groups that pay your extortion fees election fees. Skip that one.
Obviously, consumers aren’t one of Collin’s special interest groups either. They don’t pay his extortion fees election fees. Which is why they get the shaft. Consumers will continue to pay higher prices if Collin and his corporate farming criminals get legislation like this passed. Collin and the corporate-welfare gang benefit at the expense of the consumer.
- This scheme was exposed by Hazlitt long ago in Economics In One Lesson, and his writing on this is wonderful: Chapter 13: “Parity” Prices
- And for some great laughs check out the definition of “Bureaucracy: American Style” under The Classic Cow Model of government. Try not to die laughing!
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Tags: consumer, corporate welfare, economics in one lesson, henry hazlitt, price controls, price fixing, rep. collin c. peterson, retire cows, special interest group, wisconsin cows
2 Comments »

Did FDR’s New Deal prolong the Great Depression? I think so. If you’ve got a moment, check out these multimedia resources and see if you’ve been fully informed. I placed the 10 reasons why I believe many of FDR’s New Deal programs prolonged the Great Depression near the bottom of the post.
P.S. The video and podcasts/audio are very excellent.
Material that is Readily-Accessible and Free:
Video:
Podcasts/Audio:
Articles:
Books:
Material that can be Purchased:
Books:
- Depression, War, and Cold War: Studies in Political Economy
– Economist, Robert Higgs
- Economics In One Lesson – New York Times editorialist, Henry Hazlitt
- 33 Questions About American History You’re Not Supposed to Ask
– Historian, Thomas E. Woods (see question #24 – Did Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal Lift The United States Out Of The Depression?)
- Roosevelt Myth – Journalist (liberal), John T. Flynn
- New Deal or Raw Deal?: How FDR’s Economic Legacy Has Damaged America
– Economic historian, Burton W. Folsom, Jr.
- FDR’s Folly: How Roosevelt and His New Deal Prolonged the Great Depression
– Historian, Jim Powell
- Out of Work: Unemployment and Government in Twentieth-Century America
– Economists, Lowell E. Gallaway and Richard K. Vedder
My Opinion On Why FDR’s New Deal Prolonged the Great Depression Based On The Material Above:
- FDR’s Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA) program had pigs slaughtered and had corn and oat fields burned to keep prices high (to benefit farmers); this was food that could have fed the poor who were starving.
- FDR’s programs fixed prices and wages which lowered the standard of living for those that had to pay the higher prices for food and other goods.
- FDR’s Fair Labor Standards Act created minimum wage laws which created unemployment. See Hazlitt’s book which I linked to above on how minimum wage laws hurt the under-skilled.
- FDR allowed unions and industries to become cartels and push wages and prices higher during a time of mass unemployment.
- FDR’s Reconstruction Finance Corporation, the Home Owners Loan Corporation and other government agencies took money away from successful businesses which could have employed more people if they had been able to keep their earnings to employ.
- FDR’s Banking Act of 1935 gave powers to the Federal Reserve to change reserve requirements for banks. The use of these new powers caused uncertainty in money markets (such as we are experiencing now with the uncertainty government has created during this credit crisis).
- FDR’s hostility to businesspeople through new laws and regulations decreased investment in long-term projects by private investors afraid of the business environment FDR created.
- FDR raised taxes to the top marginal rate in 1935 to 79%. This destroyed the means to create new employment.
- FDR’s make-work programs lowered the standard of living as resources were diverted away from profitable use by companies and were used by government workers in unprofitable, wasteful work that did not raise the standard of living for workers or customers because not all of the services/goods created were actually wanted.
- Even FDR’s World War II did not get us out of the Great Depression either. Higgs’ research suggests it was the buildup of wealth and the transformed expectations of the business environment that paved the way out.
What Are Your Opinions?
Please post a comment with any of your thoughts and resources that you have that are insightful.
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Tags: agricultural adjustment administration, banking act, burton folsom, cartelization, cartels, economist, fdr, great depression, henry hazlitt, historian, home owners loan corporation, jim powell, john t. flynn, make-work programs, mises.org, murray rothbard, new deal, price fixing, prolong, prolonged, reconstruction finance corporation, robert higgs, russell roberts, thomas e. woods, thomas j. dilorenzo, unions, world war ii
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