Theory of the Firm, Industry Structure, and Regulation, Part One
In a recent comment on a thread at The Dark Wraith Forums, columnist and economist Paul Krugman was quoted: "My personal peeve it plays a role in the story I tell in COAL [The Conscience of a LiberalThe follow-up question posed was thus: "[W]ould big business agree with him? Or, would they prefer the economy as it is now, with less regulation, and less oversight?" This edition of Pulp Economics is the first in a three-part series that begins by addressing the matter of what 'big business' seems to want in terms of a lax regulatory environment versus what is not only preferable for both workers and the economy, but also perhaps more desirable, at least in some cases, for businesses themselves in large-scale industries dominated by only a few companies. A widely applicable answer to what business wants versus what it needs must necessarily address different industry structures, even when discussing 'big business' since at least several broad and fundamentally different kinds of firms populate the large-scale enterprise landscape. To address the different types, they must be categorized and distinguished, which will be done in the second part of this series. The third part will then use the classification system so motivated to demonstrate a somewhat surprising result for a certain type of industry, a result which renders the very concept of a "free," private market moot in the instance.
For this first part of the series, however, the focus will be on introducing and demonstrating the use of a few key economics concepts in industries dominated by a relatively small number of very large firms. The emphasis will be on how they naturally tend operate in a relatively free, unregulated environmentone they might seem to desireand the consequences to them of that freedom from a government exercising control over the competitive conditions they face.
What big business wants and what it needs are two different things; and what big business thinks it wants and what it really wants are two different things, also. Right now, large-scale business enterprises are simply delighted with the regulatory environment, although parts of the old system are still functioning, much to the chagrin of those who are still under the thumbs of those regulatory bodies. That general sense of joy notwithstanding, the business environment always has always had a love-hate relationship with regulation because, while there was plenty to dislike about administrative agencies courts were reticent to control, establishing strongly enforced, consistent, well-thought-out ground rules that every business had to obey was a godsend to business as a whole because it created a less risky, less speculative environment in which day-to-day and year-to-year operations could be managed.
Even big companies are beginning to grasp that being on their ownleft to their own devices to deal with certain forces to a greater or lesser extent beyond their controlhas created a fairly brutal environment, especially in the wide swath of corporations that operate in what economists call "monopolistic competition," where short-term economic profits can be garnered through product differentiation, while long-term competitive entry absorbs those short-term gains. In this sector, a set of clear, consistent, well-enforced rules applied by overseeing regulators at the federal level might be glad news; for one thing, the federal government exercising the full extent of its authority under the so-called "commerce clause" of the U.S. Constitution keeps states from getting into the act and passing crazy-quilt patchworks of legislation enforced by sometimes less professional, sometimes more parochial state officials. That "commerce clause"the clause that gives the federal government broad power to regulate commerce within the U.S.when properly utilized by the government and applied by the federal courts, allows businesses across the country to understand that there is a uniformity of procedural and operational standards from one coast to the other and from one state to the next. No business need concern itself with the several states having too-lax or too-aggressive enforcement within their own borders, and no business need worry about some competitor using a loose-regulation state as a platform from which to project unlawfully uncompetitive practices upon interstate competitors.
On the other hand, if the discussion is about industries where market concentration reaches what economists describe as "oligopoly" or possibly even near-"monopoly," there is going to be little cheer in board rooms for any level of regulation since the industries can self-regulate by one or another mechanism broadly called "collusion" (perhaps less harshly described as "congenial competition" or maybe even "touch football"). Unfortunately, wide exemptions in anti-trust laws have always allowed for collusive behaviors under the general banner of "self-policing" or some other such term. This is the case in industries such as major league sports, city newspapers, HMOs, and others. In some cases, this kind of internal regulation might work, but only when there remains a federal regulatory framework that can and will come down as needed on the self-policing bodies and those they are supposed to regulate.
The problem becomes deeper with larger and larger scales of enterprise. One of the most fascinating places to look is in industries where economies of scale extend to such large scales of production that the industries become dominated by "natural monopoly" types of companies, which will be surveyed in Part Three of this series.
Just short of pure natural monopolies is what can be an ugly world of brutish competition that quite frequently has undesirable effects both upon the companies therein and upon the wider, national economy. Such industries were arguably far better off when a deeply committed, federal regulatory environment allocated market share and oversaw pricing while maintaining an iron fist of regulatory control over the corporate beneficiaries. The balance of the present article will survey the characterizing cost structure of firms that are "nearly," but not quite, natural monopolies and how this cost structure can lead to dire long-run consequences for typical firms within such industries left to their own rational incentives and the harsh realities of more-or-less "free market" action.
The term "nearly" qualifies the description of certain firms because of the extent to which long-run economies of scale are realized. A firm is said to be realizing economies of scale if, as the company produces more output, the average costthat is, per-unit costof the output declines. For example, if the per-unit cost for a firm's first 10,000 units was $8.25, but the per-unit cost for that firm's first 12,000 units was $7.95, then the company was realizing economies of scale between 10,000 and 12,000 units. Economies of scale are quite frequently the result of huge, up-front, costs, the kind that exist even before output begins: as more and more units of output are produced, those massive start-up costs get spread, on average, over more and more units. Economies of scale are best considered a long-run kind of concept; most companies for a while realize falling average costs, but it's what happens over a longer period of timethe forces that shape the long-run structure of an industrythat should be the focus of policy at the government level, even though no firm, by itself, can or should think about the "long run" so long as the short run, attended as it is by everything from marketing products to meeting payroll, is nipping at the heels of executive decision-making.
Although Part Two of this series will reinforce this point, average costs for a company are driven by what economist call marginal cost: the cost of the very lastor very next unit produced. If the cost of the last unit produced is less than the average cost of all units produced so far, then the cost of that last unit will pull down the average cost. On the other hand, if the cost of the last unit produced is greater than the average cost of all units produced, then the cost of making that last unit will drive average cost up.
If that explanation of the relationship between average cost and marginal cost doesn't mean much, think about it this way. Suppose a bunch of people take a test, and the average comes out to be, let's say, 78 percent. In other words, the overall, per-person test score was 78. Now, suppose one more person takes the test, and this person (being, for example, a neo-conservative Republican) gets a 62 percent. His score, which is the last (or "marginal") score, is going to pull down the overall average when it gets entered into the calculation. Thus, when the last is below the average, it causes the average to fall. On the other hand, if the overall average was 78 percent to start with, and someone then took the test and scored, say, a 90 percent, that score would pull the average up. Thus, when the last is above the average, it causes the average to rise. This is why economists draw average and marginal cost curves as depicted at left, below.
Notice how the graphs show a mathematically necessary relationship between marginal and average: when the marginal cost of the last unit produced is under the per-unit cost, average cost is being pulled downward; but when the marginal cost of the last unit produced is higher than per-unit cost, average cost is being pulled upward. This is not some economic phenomenon; the example above was with test scores, not costs. The relationship between marginals and averages is purely an arithmetic result; it's just that this mathematical phenomenon plays a powerful role in how costs shape not just the decision-making within individual firm, but also the overall structures of industries.In the bestiary of industries prowling the planet, there are more than a few where extraordinarily steep fixed costs make per-unit costs very high at low output levels. For the most part, the cost of making the goods, themselves, isn't all that bad; it's just those up-front ("overhead") costs that are the killers, and it is these costs that create barriers to entry by young, start-up firms. That means the typical company in such an industry would, at low output levels, have its average cost curve way up and a marginal cost curve far below it. Recall from above that, in such a situationwhere marginal cost is below average costthe result would be a falling average cost curve. Not only that, the firm would experience falling average costs for a long while as it produced more and more and more, just because it would take a whole lot of output for per-unit cost to get down to the level of the cost of the last unit produced. That's the same thing as saying that the typical firm in such an industry would realize economies of scale (falling average cost per unit) over an enormous range of production levels, as depicted in the graph below, which shows a classical, "U"-shaped average cost curve.
The graph above exemplifies the usual situation, one where the marginal cost curve, hidden as it is in this picture, finally begins to close in from below on the average cost curve, slowly coming up to finally meet it, and then pulling above it, thereby ultimately drawing average cost per unit upward. The relatively flat part of the long-run average cost curve above might go on over quite a range of output levelsa range of output levels where constant returns to scale are being experiencedor the relatively stable per-unit cost might not exist over more than a quite narrow range; but it is depicted above to show all the possible long-run situations a firm might encounter. Sooner or later, though, the cost of the last unit, in many cases, will be greater than average cost per unit, and that is when a company is said to be experiencing diseconomies of scale. At what point this happens, if ever, is entirely dependent upon forces only partially within the control of the executive management of the company, itself.
If an industry is such that companies can configure themselves in a way so that their long-run average cost curves keep declining clear up to very large levels of output, the market will probably be dominated by these big behemoths since, the bigger they get, the cheaper the next unit is for them to produce. As long as such companies are realizing economies of scale, they will tend to keep expanding output, and this can go on in some cases to enormous output levels.
Nevertheless, unless the companies are what economists call the pure "natural monopolies" mentioned above, the economies of scale will eventually end: at some point, perhaps at a truly huge level of production, the cost of the last unit will be more the cost of the average unit, and the average cost curve will have bottomed out and begun the inexorable rise into the scale of output where diseconomies of scale are being experienced. The output level where long-run average cost bottoms out is called the minimum efficient scale of production, and it is a relatively logical long-term output level at which a firm would settle.
But what would happen in an industry where this long-term output level, even though huge, of the typical firm was well short of that necessary to satisfy the demand of the entire market? It is not difficult to imagine how such a situation would cause an industry to have awful cycles of entries and exits of giant competitor companies, with each downstroke attended by large-scale employee layoffs and substantial market disruptions.
Consider this example: an industry exists where the long-term minimum efficient scale of operation for the typical firm is at an output that would meet, say, 40% of the market demand at the prevailing price level. In other words, the cost structure of the industry is such that a single company would be at its long-term most efficient by providing the product to a very significant, but not overwhelming, part of the market. The graph below shows the scenario.
This is an industry where two very large companies could co-exist quite comfortably, pretending to compete against each other while enjoying a joint market share of 80%. It is possible in this industry for lots of small competitors to handle the other 20%, but that's not guaranteed since it could be the case that the reason economies of scale extend so far is because the fixed start-up costs are very high, which would create a more-or-less natural barrier to entry for small firms. Still, it is most definitely possible that, at least in some industries, we could see two-tiered competition; in others, however, those steep costs of entry would pretty much ensure that only big companies could even start, which means that their joint market share, 80 percent, would be insufficiently supplemented by smaller firms to satisfy the entire consumer universe of demand. That would mean the most logical route for the 20 percent deficit of output to be met would be through the entry of a third, very financially well-off company that could handle the high fixed start-up costs along with the attendant, low profits while ramping up to get unit costs down to minimum efficient scale. The big inducement to entry would most likely be prices in the industry. With only two competitors and 20 percent of a huge pool of demand not being met, the bait is almost too tempting to resist, especially for a firm that has known only success in its traditional arenas of activity.
But wait a minute. In this industry, minimum efficient scale for a typical company is at a production level satisfying about forty percent of the market, which means this new entrant is going to have to try to get big enough so that it and the other two companies are jointly producing one hundred twenty percent of what the consumer side of the market needs! That means the third entrant is going to kick the industry supply curve outward so hard that the three competing firms will all have to lower their prices and engage in the kind of competition that big companies have a really hard time handling because of the scales of their operations. First will come the price competition, which consumers will love and conservative pundits will declare as proof positive that a free market works; then, however, will come the company losses because of those massive fixed costs that made the long-run average cost curves so steeply downward-sloping in the first place. The lower prices they're being forced by competition to levy on consumers will force the companies to cut costs the only way possible: since, in the short run, the companies can't very well do anything about their huge fixed costs of operations, they'll have to go for the only type of costs they can affect: variable costs, the most vulnerable of which is labor. That's right: industry-wide, mass layoffs.
This won't fix the problem because, even though the three firms are, indeed, lowering total costs, they're also scaling back output, which means they're pulling back from that golden, minimum efficient scale of output. Long-term average costs are rising as the firms "downsize," and the competitive environment is still putting downward pressure on prices they can charge consumers, so sooner or later something is going to break; and it will probably be one of the three firms, which will finally go bankrupt, simply leave the industry, or, more likely, become so weakened that it will be receptive to a merger/acquisition arrangement with one of the other two companies. That, or it will become so debilitated that it will be vulnerable to a hostile acquisition by some other company, perhaps one that thinks it can make a buck in the industry that's already shown how it can wreck companies that step up to the plate without thinking deeply about long-run average cost curves, minimum efficient scales of operations, and market shares.
A market free of government interference will, of course, take care of the problems: over a long period of time, large firms will come and go, mass layoffs will happen, and industry consolidations will occur; then all will be well for a while, until the next time the incentive to enter a market with high profits and unmet demand draws in a large firm looking for a place to flex its competitive, well-financed muscles; and then the cycle will start all over again.
As an alternativethe one vigorously pursued in the Keynesian era of American economic policy-makingthe federal government could place a firm, steady hand of regulatory control over such industries. Policy could be to the end of ensuring that a sufficient number of companies was permitted to operate in an industry to satisfy most, if not all, potential demand, and the firms allowed to operate were guaranteed that, in exchange for abiding by tight regulation, they would be allowed to charge prices sufficiently high to earn a decent return on investment for their shareholders without breaking the wallets of consumers or making their industries so attractive that competitors would beat on the doors to get their shot at market penetration and eventual, almost inevitable, market disruption.
But that was the way things used to be done, for a while, anyway, during the era when the country was doing pretty darned well and even most of the conservatives bawling for free markets didn't believe their own drool. Fortunately for the United States of that era, neither did the politicians.
The Dark Wraith will continue this series in the weeks to come.
Comments
Wrote Minstrel Boy:
Wrote Cloud:
As a youngster I was (and still am) constantly trying to formulate axioms to make sense of this complicated world I found myself in. One of them was: Laissez-faire is ideal and desirable where land and resources >> population; but this has not been the case on Earth for quite some time.
On the other hand, Jeffersonian-Heinleinian-MalReynoldsian that I am, I say that one can never trust a government. It seems to me that however benign a socialism you install, it will eventually turn into a cabal where the costs remain socialized but the benefits become more and more privatized. (And if you start out with a half-socialism like the U.S. post-WWII, this state will be reached more rapidly -- I daresay it was completed under Reagan.)
Historically I see the beginnings of this modern-style oppression in those collusions between merchants and governments, the East India Companies.
Question: If laissez-faire doesn't work in a spaceship, but government always corrupts itself and oppresses you, what, then, is the right way to run the globe?
Answer: Cloud doesn't believe in God (or at least not a good one); hence, he estimates a high probability that no "right" answer exists.
More Laconic Answer: we're fucked.
Wrote Dark Wraith:
Good afternoon, Cloud.
A good way exists. It's much easier than people think and far more difficult than they can imagine.
Someday, I'll tell the secret.
The Dark Wraith will then leave the room while folks say, "Well, yes, that's... nice."
Wrote trog69:
Good aftermoon, Cloud.
I clicky you linky up dere. Thanky but no. From The Wilderness done gived me the lowdown on how close to inevitable the fall of civilization has tracked. According to all the medical reports on alcoholism, smoking, smoking, and the ingestion of certain pharmaceuticals, I don't have any brain cells to spare on contemplating these scenarios. I much prefer burying my head in the sand, by reversing, when and where possible, my profligate ways, energy-wise. Also I have started working on my physical conditioning since, for one thing, eating less means consuming less, and because the people that are out of shape, or crippled in other ways, will be easy pickins if worst comes to worse. Heehehehehaha!
Someday, I'll tell the secret. Someday my ass; I'll tell ya his lily secret rat now! His plan is first to outlaw abortions for any reason. I mean OUTLAW, as in the death penalty for even contemplating doing any harm to that special little bundle of...well, fuel! Oh that's right, fuel. And, once production begins in earnest, a very nutritious food supply as well. What's the #1 source of society's ills? Thass right, too many humans overconsuming too few resources.What if the source of the problem could become the solution? Win-win-win-(loss)-win!!1!1!
Wrote trog69:
Good afternine, Dark Wraith.
I'm afraid I need a little more time to complete the assignment. I am still a bit stuck at marginal costs. I'm looking around for a definition that has some kind of actual situation to show how it's used. I will get it, never fear. I would just prefer to understand what the basics are so that I don't get even more behind later.
Yeah, yeah, I know...I couldn't possibly get to be more of a behind!
Wrote Dark Wraith:
Good afternoon, trog.
Let's try this. You run a business, and you need someone to make cooking bowl suitable for roasting and serving dog.
That's right: dog.
Your fixed materials cost is, let's say, $50. As it turns out, only three people have the specialized labor skill required, so you hire one of them and agree to the wage demand of $100.
Happy as this story sounds, things get ugly; you get a new order for another dog serving dish, so you have to go back to the labor market to retain the services of another dog serving dish maker.
Is this second guy going to accept your offer of $100?
I think not. He knows very well that you've drawn down the labor supply, so he has more bargaining power. You have to agree to pay him, let's say, $150.
Whew. Production can now proceed.
Uh-oh. You get an order for a third dog serving dish. That means you have to tap that labor market for the third guy, who now represents an extraordinarily limited supply.
Is he going to go for your offer of $100? How about $150? Naw, the supply has become so tight that he can command whatever. Let's say he asks, and you agree to, $250.
Now, let's look at total cost, average cost, and marginal cost.
Total cost:
1 bowl: $50 + $100 = $150
2 bowls: $50 + $100+$150=$300
3 bowls: $50 + $100+$150+$250=$550.
Average total cost:
For 1 bowl: $150 divided by 1 bowl = $150
For 2 bowls: $300 divided by 2 bowls = $150
For 3 bowls: $550 divided by 3 bowls = $183
Marginal cost: (the extra cost of the last bowl made)
1st bowl: $150
2nd bowl: $150
3rd bowl: $250.
Marginal cost can be flat or actually downward sloping for a short while, but it inevitably starts to rise. In this very short example, notice how the extra cost of that third bowl was above the average cost of the first two bowls, so it made the average cost of the third bowl higher than it was for thost first two.
That's a very brief example. I'll do more if you'd like here in comments, and I'll be hitting this same topic again in second installment of this series.
The Dark Wraith is bound and determined to get the microeconomics of this series clear for readers before hitting the macroeconomics, third part.
Wrote trog69:
Thanks DW. I have sumpin else I'm working on that I think will fill in the blanks for me. I do get what you pointing at. When you say that eventually it will rise...that's because raw materials, labor, etc. go up in price?
Wrote Dark Wraith:
Good evening, trog.
To some extent, materials go up in price, and this would be the result, as in my example, of progressively tightening supply conditions.
The broader and more fundamental reason is because of what is known as the Law of Diminishing Marginal Productivity, which I shall explain in detail in Part Two of this series. The idea is quite straight-forward, though, and it really doesn't have to do with economics, per se; it's just a principle of nature: the more of anything that's done, the more it takes to do the last. In economics, this means that, for example, the 500th unit produced will require more inputs than the first unit produced.
Think about it this way: suppose you do fifty push-ups. By the time you get to the 50th, you're expending far more energy (at least in terms of grunting) than you did on the first.
For some processes, the first few units of production (be it widgets, push-ups, or whatever) might show an increasing marginal productivity, what one might call "building steam," or something like that; but sooner or later, the Law of Diminishing Marginal Productivity will set in, and the process will require increasing amounts of inputs to get any further output.
That means, even though total product will rise for a long time as more inputs are used, the rise will become less and less pronounced. Eventually, the process might even have a place where total productivity actually starts to drop if too much of the inputs is thrown in (especially if done too quickly).
One way or the other, that marginal (last unit) product is fairly early on in the output growth going to be a declining number. Flip that over and think about costs, and that means marginal cost will be increasing as output increases.
Now, trog, if you get what I've just explained above, you officially have, in your inventory of academic and business understandings, several of the most important concepts in basic microeconomics.
The Dark Wraith always knew that, sooner or later, he would be able to face getting these microeconomics principles out on the cyber-blackboard.
Wrote trog69:
The picture getting...less fuzzy. similar to the tongue finally finding that point where the toothache is really at, (thought you'd like that one!) you've hit on where I need to focus on. I'm doing that now, teach! I'll have more questions just as soon's I find more to confuse me.
Shouldn't be long, now.
Wrote trog69:
A sincere thank you for...all of it! you know how much I just love to suck your...brain!
Wrote Cloud:
A good way exists. It's much easier than people think and far more difficult than they can imagine.
Someday, I'll tell the secret.
... Global implementation of a Dark Wraith Theocracy. It's our only hope.
A sincere thank you for...all of it! you know how much I just love to suck your...brain!
Good God! Get a room!
Wrote Dark Wraith:
Good evening, Cloud.
I don't know if you've been around long enough to have read that, among other things I've done in my misspent life, I was for a brief time part of a traveling gospel ministry.
Sometimes, the money was good, sometimes not. I suppose the most interesting churches were in the South; the strangest were in West Virginia and Kentucky. The worst places were where folks like Anita Bryant's enforcers were present at the huge revival-type events.
Yes, I'm talking about another era, back when thugs like Bryant were forcing themselves to be influential and when the real heavy-hitters, like Graham, and star-quality performers, like Boone (wh0se people stood up to Bryant), were on the scene, along with hundreds and hundreds of itinerant acts like ours swirling around the country trying to be almost famous but never getting even close.
That was a long time ago, back when I thought there was an easy way to be almost famous. As it turned out, being in a traveling performance group wasn't easy at all. As a matter of fact, it was an awful lot like work.
So was trying to be almost famous.
The Dark Wraith now blogs.
Wrote trog69:
DW, I received your message from BBB, and of course understood and zipped. By chance did you get the first msg to this site? Just curious if we're connectin' here?
Wrote trog69:
Good God! Get a room!
Do I detect some jealousy? Not to worry, my friend. Our love has transcended far beyond mere physical lust, to a plane very few may attain...the "bullshit" level, which is 'bout knee deep, I'd say!
Wrote Dark Wraith:
I really, really need to get those pool tables moved into the main lobby from the storage shed.
Wrote My Pet Goat:
Good evening Mr. Wraith,
One too many tequilas make this a hard lesson to follow at the moment. I do admire your use of the word bestiary though. Quite fitting I would say.
Off topic - your The Art of Grousing is a nice addition.
Wrote Dark Wraith:
Good evening, Mr. Goat.
I was sort of wondering if anyone had noticed my new sidebar item.
The Dark Wraith was in dire need of an expressive outlet like The Art of Grousing.
Wrote trog69:
Speaking of which, One of my co-workers was such a great storyteller that we each had our favorite tale, and we would nudge the new guys when a good one was coming up. Anywho, he told us about the one time he was in a 7-11 standing in line with, well, probably beer, when an unfortunately timed gurgling was erupting from his gut. With a casual look back, he says, and seeing the coast clear, he let rip with an extremely noxious boiled eggs and beer-fueled venting. "Dear lord" was heard in a small voice, which came from a teeny-tiny old woman who'd received a face full because, unknownst to him* she'd been standing there the whole time.
*Those of us who had worked for years with this guy knew that his stories had more embellishments, and less loose ends, as the years progressed; We'd still be rolling on the floor, laughing like hyenas!
Wrote Moody Blue:
I was sort of wondering if anyone had noticed my new sidebar item.
The Dark Wraith was in dire need of an expressive outlet like The Art of Grousing.
- Dark Wraith, 10/26/07 at 00:27:08
Yes, and "Nobody" ever mentioned it, either.
Pbbbbbtht. ;->
Wrote Dark Wraith:
Good evening, Moody Blue.
The "anybody" was more of a thought of general notice.
I've had things in the sidebar for months that only a handful of the more dedicated readers catch. At one point, back when I had a large advertising section, for a few weeks I had a link to a pretty steamy retailer whose ads were rather on the racy side.
Not only did no one ever mention it, but not one reader ever clicked on the ad. Now, that's pretty grim news because racy ads are the most likely to get click-through activity. I am quite certain some readers saw it, but the people who saw it apparently weren't the kind who would click on something of that nature.
So much for the old saying that "sex sells"; it certainly doesn't. Not here, anyway.
The Dark Wraith will stick to selling Sierra Club Christmas cards... and maybe French cream pies.
Wrote Peter of Lone Tree:
DW, you know this guy?:
Jim Rogers quits dollar after declaring US recession
British Telegraph article begins: "Jim Rogers, the veteran investor who predicted the 1999 commodities rally, declared that the US economy was "in recession" as he said he would take flight from the dollar and switch his investments into currencies including the Chinese yuan."
Wrote Moody Blue:
Well, my dear Wraith, I do try to check out everything in the side bar on a regular basis. For one thing, I did notice that you need to put up a link for your 2008 calendar, for those early shoppers...
...and for another thing, I also noticed this one.
:0)
Wrote Cloud:
I was for a brief time part of a traveling gospel ministry.
Cloud is amazed at the variety of the Dark Wraith's experience.
Maybe my perceptions are skewed, since as a young boy the principal author I read was Heinlein. (Of course, the social climate of mid-twentieth century America is only incidental to most of his stories, but it nevertheless shines through like ... something grimy.) Anyway, as I was saying, the thing that strikes me about Heinlein is that whilst reading, I get the odd, ironic feeling that he is the author who portrays 1950s America as she really was -- seduced by a surreal combination of blatant consumerism and religious conviction. It was, perhaps, the imagination that could conceive of the feverish worlds of If This Goes On-- and Job: A Comedy of Justice that first embarked me on a voyage which eventually led to my apostacy from my childhood religion (though I was unconscious of this journey for many years).
Wrote trog69:
Well, speaking as one who religiously follows the goings on at the sidecar, I-I mean sidebar, your lily vignette concerning aliens and the poor poor pitiful put upon Chinese; What if the aliens blow up the US as an example to the Chinese? After their five or ten years of mourning, do you think they'll have learned their lesson?
Wrote trog69:
Oh and to PoLT, I think Wraith's plan to harvest Infinks and other degenerates as food and fuel also includes using cash (paper or plastic?) as accelerant for the boilers. Maybe even as playful types of clothing too!
Wrote Dusty:
Hello again Dark Wraith,
I surely did notice your new addition on the sidebar but didn't know if it was something I had previously missed or a new addition. Thank you for clarifying that for me. It's a very nice touch. :)
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one of my favorite "old hollywood" stories involves a falling out (over cocktails of course) that john wayne and john ford had. ford was a hard core new deal democrat, who had scrabbled through the depression shooting film and stills for the WPA. his career as a hollywood director was interrupted by WWII. his combat footage remains today as some of the most riveting scenes captured in that war. many times photographers and other members of the film crew were killed by enemy fire. john wayne chose to stay home and make war movies. his career was at a transition point from matinee idol and serial player into becoming a full fledged star and he didn't want to miss his moment. after the war wayne became a full on batshit crazy conservative. he was hanging with deweys and tafts (at one republican convention he even screamed at dwight eisenhower's limosine "why don't you just wave a red flag?") ford's question, which pissed wayne off to the point of physical violence was this: "you've made a lot of money in this country duke. why would you want to dismantle the engine of prosperity that has made you so rich?"
the two of them remained very successful collaborators in film, but they were never close friends again.
when i saw the steel workers, teamsters, auto workers, honest laboring union men and women all flocking to the republican banner under nixon i was shocked. i could hear the sounds of them readying to dismantle the very engine of their prosperity.
they killed the goose what laid that golden egg and didn't even get a drumstick out of it.