This is a lengthy article, so I
read it over the course of a month. According to the article, a
prominent plank among 1930's New Deal Democrats was a commitment to
anti-trust policies: smaller business is better than big business. In
the 1960's, however, economist and Kennedy advisor John Kenneth
Galbraith expressed hope that monopolies could promote social justice.
During the 1970's, when Democrats were elected to Congress in the
aftermath of Watergate, many of these Democrats rejected the populist
anti-trust beliefs of the 1930's Democrats. Bill Clinton would amplify
this 1970's non-populist stance as President.
I've been watching the Little House
TV series lately. I was wondering if I would enjoy the books. From
this post, the impression that I get is that the books are not like the
TV series! I'd still like to read them for myself, sometime.