Check out Kevin Carsons latest C4SS research paper: MOLOCH: Mass-Production Industry As a Statist Construct.
Minimal Update
I turned in my paperwork to the lawyer yesterday (along with his fee); hes going to use it to negotiate with the tax cops.
This afternoon in the mail I got a tax lien notice (dated July 20th but postmarked yesterday); I dont think it represents anything especially new, but I called the lawyer. He asked me to bring it by his office tomorrow morning. I asked any news otherwise? He said, not yet.
Ive added a new tag for this topic.
Tarzan In Toronto
Readers of the Tarzan novels may recall that Tarzan had a scar on his forehead (from a youthful fight with Terkoz the ape), as well as a tendency to get bonked on the head and suffer temporary amnesia.
What I learned only recently is that these aspects of Tarzans story appear to be based on the authors own experience.
Interim Update
To those following (or, in some cases, literally invested in) my ongoing financial saga: I met with the lawyer today, and he gave me a phonebook-sized (well, Auburn-phonebook-sized, not Manhattan-phonebook-sized) stack of financial info forms to fill out, plus he needs copies of my old tax returns etc., so thats my homework for tonight.
In other news, Ive paid my rent for the month thanks to the generosity of my readers. More developments as they unfold ….
Selling Out or Buying In?
I have two problems with this story.
First is its title. Walmart has consistently promoted, and benefited from, neofascist interventionism for quite a long time. Switching from one form of neofascism to another shifting the governments mode of intervention from slightly more indirect to slightly more direct is not selling out, and so describing it pays Walmarts past self an undeserved compliment.
Second, in any case the switch is not as recent as the phrase after years of strenuous opposition implies, since Walmart had already started pushing for greater government involvement in health care two and a half years ago. (CHT Peter Suderman.)
That Loony Lefty Rothbard
In a 1966 letter which has not yet been published (Peter Klein quotes from it here), Rothbard writes:
For some time I have come to the conclusion that the grave deficiency in the current output and thinking of our libertarians and classical liberals is an enormous blind spot when it comes to big business. There is a tendency to worship Big Business per se … and a corollary tendency to fail to realize that while big business would indeed merit praise if they won that bigness on the purely free market, that in the contemporary world of total neo-mercantilism and what is essentially a neo-fascist corporate state, bigness is a priori highly suspect, because Big Business most likely got that way through an intricate and decisive network of subsidies, privileges, and direct and indirect grants of monopoly protection.
Seems like a useful passage to quote to our right-Rothbardian comrades whenever they accuse us of unlibertarianly treating bigness as automatically suspect or exaggerating the neofascist nature of contemporary kapitalism.