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Additionally, the forum gets a "bounty" for various offers at Amazon.com. For instance, if you sign up for a 30 day free trial of Amazon Prime, the forum will earn $3. Same if you buy a Prime membership for someone else as a gift! Trying out or purchasing an Audible membership will earn the forum a few bucks. And creating an Amazon Business account will send a $15 commission our way.
If you have an Amazon Echo, you need a free trial of Amazon Music!! We will earn $3 and it's free to you!
Your personal information is completely private, I only get a list of items that were ordered/shipped via the link, no names or locations or anything. This does not cost you anything extra and it helps offset the operating costs of this forum, which include our hosting fees and the yearly registration and licensing fees.
Stay safe and well and thank you for your participation in the Forum and for your support!! --Deborah
Here is the link:
Click here to shop at Amazon.com
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Miscellaneous And Off Topic Subjects
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There used to be nearly 8000 publicly-traded companies in the United States.
Today the number is half of that.
In sector after sector, industry after industry, a few megacorporations now dominate entire markets.
In the realm of health insurance, as just one example, the seven largest companies (with Kaiser and UnitedHealth at the top) have more than a majority share of the entire health insurance market.
Some health insurance companies no longer offer or provide actual health insurance; they simply manage Medicare and Medicaid accounts, so long as they are large enough to play all the bureaucratic games of red-tape demanded by the United States Department of Health and Human Services.
These companies would be quite happy if ALL health services, eventually, were funded by the government and provided by a few politically-connected crony government contractors, and no one else. Soviet-style health care, anyone?
One finds similar stories in the realms of Big Pharma, Big Banking, Big Tech, Big Energy, Big Ag, etc: Fewer publicly traded companies, fewer alternatives, little competition, and much of the market share controlled by a few crony megacorporations. What little market share is untapped by the big crony companies are the scraps upon which a few small entrepreneurs feed.
What do all these various and different industries have in common? They are highly regulated.
Highly regulated industries, over time, have less and less competition because smaller businesses do not have the capital to spend on regulatory compliance — and the armies of lawyers, accountants, and bureaucratic consultants compliance requires.
The result of many regulations is something approximating a near-monopoly for a few crony megacorporations that have cozy insider connections with regulators, government bureaucrats, and elected officials.
For those of you who insist we need more regulations, not fewer -- for you progressives who shame and scold anyone who dares to suggest maybe we should scale back the administrative regulatory state -- those megacorporations thank you. You've made their monopolies possible, and they encourage you to keep up your activism and advocacy on their behalf. Progressive political elites, whose careers are funded by those crony megacorporations and their union allies, thank you too.Shut the fuck up Donny!
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Tip of the iceberg, Wiz. But healthcare is a prime example of what over-regulation creates. It's almost a non-sequitur as there are legitimate calls for health care benefits managers - middle men in the health care industry - to be subject to regulations. What's going on here doesn't fit a fiscally conservative narrative. Health care is not a market based industry at present. The benefits managers have conspired to prevent free market capitalism to self-regulate pricing.
I was shocked at my EOB for some eye-drops I use. My Medicare insurance were billed nearly $1400 for frigging eye drops. They paid just under $1000, my supplemental insurance paid the rest save a $76 co-pay I paid. Insane.Mission to CFB's National Championship accomplished. But the shine on the NC Trophy is embarrassingly wearing off. It's M B-Ball ..... or hockey or volley ball or name your college sport favorite time ...... until next year.
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