The DoJ's antitrust lawsuit against #Google triggered an avalanche of pearl-clutching editorials from establishment lawyers and economists who argue that such a move is both counterproductive and legally incoherent. These Very Bad Takes are only to be expected, since they emanate from ideologues who volunteered to serve as Renfields for vampiric monopolists.

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If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this thread to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/02/13/the-last-man-to-die-for-a-mistake/#dont-let-the-door-hit-you-in-the-ass-on-the-way-out

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Pluralistic: Obama’s turncoat antitrust enforcer is angry about the Google breakup (13 Feb 2023) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

A prime example is the *Washington Post*'s unsigned editorial, which starts with the conclusion that monopolies are both legal and generally beneficial, then works backwards to invent facts to support that conclusion:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2023/02/11/justice-department-google-antitrust-lawsuit-promise/

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Why this Google antitrust lawsuit has promise

This lawsuit is good, old-fashioned antitrust enforcement.

The Washington Post

As @jasonkint writes, the editorial simply handwaves away the factual record cited in the 153-page lawsuit, with howlers like "no one is forcing advertisers and publishers to use Google’s advertising services" - this is, in fact, *exactly* what the DoJ alleges:

https://twitter.com/jason_kint/status/1624866873882861570

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Jason Kint on Twitter

“Not sure I’ve read a more ill-informed take by WaPo Editorial Board in recent years. Super disappointing. Headline was promising but then contorts itself into arguing the lawsuit is weak but may lead to legislative fixes. 1/5”

Twitter

They back that allegation up with some pretty damning eviddence of deceptive and illegal tactics that Google used to block competitors and punish publishers who tried to use their service. Kint's got a great breakdown of the case:

https://twitter.com/jason_kint/status/1618029720599408643

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Jason Kint on Twitter

“ok, let's do this. I've now read all 153 pages of United States vs Google filed earlier today. As I've said earlier, Google is royally screwed. The suit is super well-written building on prior work investigating Google’s market power abuse leveraging advertising technologies. /1”

Twitter

It's wild to see the *Post* go all in on the idea that monopolizing the ad market is legally sound and economically beneficial, given how much of the DoJ suit turns on the fact that Google (and Facebook) have been stealing ad revenues from publishers like the *Post*.

Why does the establishment fall all over itself to invent reasons that the DoJ's case is both wrongheaded and doomed?

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They may not be particularly invested in defending Google itself. Rather, they represent the last gasp of a 40-year-long conspiratorial legal ideology that embraced the Reagan-era idea of "consumer welfare":

https://pluralistic.net/2021/08/13/post-bork-era/#manne-down

This ideology begins with #RobertBork, Nixon's crooked solicitor general, whose crimes scuttled his Supreme Court nomination (his failed confirmation hearing was so cringe-inducing that it spawned the term "#borked").

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Pluralistic: 13 Aug 2021 – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

Bork codified this ideology in a 1978 book called "The Antitrust Paradox," arguing that monopolies are engines of efficiency.

You can tell they're efficient because they're able to take over their markets. Attacking monopolies is counterproductive - why should we punish companies for success? This is the heart of the #ConsumerWelfare theory, but it's underpinned by a much weirder and risible idea: not only is this how the law *should* be written, it's how the law *is* written.

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That is, Bork claimed that a close reading of existing antitrust laws - the #ShermanAct, the #ClaytonAct, the #FTCAct - would reveal that Congress didn't want regulators or judges to prevent or break up monopolies. No no no! These laws were only drafted to punish *bad* monopolies.

A "bad monopoly" is one that uses its market power to raise prices or lower quality.

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These bad monopolies hurt "consumers" - but (Bork says) they probably don't exist, because if they did, new companies would spring into existence to compete them out of existence. For Bork, America's landmark antitrust laws exist to fight a mythical bogeyman, the "bad" monopoly, which probably doesn't exist, and if it does, it only lives long enough for entrepreneurs to take notice of it and hunt it to extinction.

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This is just bonkers. It's what physicists mean when they say something is "not even wrong." As a technical matter, it's plain that monopolists can capture their markets and use that market capture to prevent new companies from taking the field and disciplining them with competition - that's painstakingly obvious from the factual record developed in the DoJ brief against Google.

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But even more bonkers is the conspiracy theory at the heart of consumer welfare economics: the idea that not only *should* antitrust laws tolerate monopolies, but they actually *are* tolerant of monopolies, and everyone who enforced these laws from their inception until the Reagan era was reading them wrong.

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That is laughable. I mean, think about Senator Robert Sherman's senate-floor speech in support of America's first antitrust law, Sherman Act: "If we will not endure a King as a political power we should not endure a King over the production, transportation, and sale of the necessaries of life. If we would not submit to an emperor we should not submit to an autocrat of trade with power to prevent competition and to fix the price of any commodity."

https://marker.medium.com/we-should-not-endure-a-king-dfef34628153

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We Should Not Endure a King - Marker

Antitrust is a political cause, not an economic one. “We Should Not Endure a King” is published by Cory Doctorow in Marker.

Marker

Those are not the words of a man designing a law to shield monopolists from government overreach except in those rare instances where a monopolist turns out not to be a benevolent dictator. Rather, Sherman - and, later, Henry "Clayton Act" Clayton - didn't want *any* monopolies.

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These laws were unambiguously animated by lawmakers' fear that if corporations grew too powerful, they would be too big to fail and too big to jail. In other words, a "benevolent dictator" was still a dictator:

https://doctorow.medium.com/small-government-fd5870a9462e

I want to draw a parallel here to #chiropractic. On the one hand, chiropractic's theoretical foundation has some serious scientific problems that should give potential patients pause:

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2690192/

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Small Government - Cory Doctorow - Medium

Next week (Feb 8–17), I’ll be in Australia, touring my book Chokepoint Capitalism with my co-author, Rebecca Giblin. We’ll be in Brisbane on Feb 8, and then we’re doing a remote event for NZ on Feb…

Medium

But beyond the *technical* critique of chiropractic, there's also some profound foundational problems, including the fact that the founder of chiropractic said that he learned how to fix people's backs from a ghost:

https://nationalpost.com/health/the-first-chiropractor-was-a-canadian-who-claimed-he-received-a-message-from-a-ghost

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The first chiropractor was a Canadian who claimed he received a message from a ghost

Daniel David (DD) Palmer invented the field of chiropractic care. He said the idea for chiropractic care came to him from the 'other world' during a séance

National Post

Consumer welfare antitrust is like chiropractic, then, in that it has serious technical deficiencies - monopolies do exist, they do raise prices and lower quality, markets don't correct them, and they can and do corrupt the political process, and therefore Bork-believing economists are factually wrong and bad at managing economies.

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But then there's the *other* way in which consumer welfare is like chiropractic: its foundational tenets are just *bonkers*. Chiropractic's founder talked to ghosts, and Robert Bork found gnostic meaning in Qanon-grade close readings of the text of the Sherman, Clayton and FTC Acts that revealed that their drafters were secretly in favor of monopolies. That's the "not even wrong" part.

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Even skeptics of chiropractic have largely forgotten that it is ghost-based medicine, and even skeptics of consumer welfare have largely stopped talking about whether the string of court decisions that followed from Bork's ascendancy are simply wrong as a matter of law (that is, even if you think these cases resulted in good economic policy, the judges clearly misinterpreted the law).

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American antitrust law always was, and continues to be primarily concerned with *power* - namely, the power of large companies to usurp democratic accountability and act with impunity, able to use their economic might to buy off or scare off lawmakers and regulators who would otherwise hold them to account.

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The fact that we've largely forgotten this truth - a truth that can be easily verified simply by reading the Sherman Act and its successors - isn't an accident of history. Some of the richest people in the history of the human race poured enormous fortunes into burying it. Take the #ManneSeminars, lavish junkets for federal judges that bamboozled them with the Bork's conspiratorial account of antitrust laws' true intent:

https://www.npr.org/2022/09/22/1124477182/federal-judges-economics-boot-camp

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40% of the federal judiciary processed through the Manne Seminars when they were running, including Supremes like #RBG, who later parroted their dogma in their written opinions, which shifted measurably and dramatically to support monopolies:

https://www.nber.org/papers/w29788

Bork-driven antitrust's ghost-based foundations were so thoroughly buried that anyone who broke from its orthodoxy was considered a lunatic-fringe radical.

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Ideas Have Consequences: The Impact of Law and Economics on American Justice

Founded in 1920, the NBER is a private, non-profit, non-partisan organization dedicated to conducting economic research and to disseminating research findings among academics, public policy makers, and business professionals.

NBER

Until, that is, Biden appointed three effective, brilliant, charismatic trustbusters who dared to speak the long unspeakable truth that monopolies are both bad, and illegal.

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These three - #TimWu, recently departed from the White House; #LinaKhan at the FTC; and #JonathanKanter at the DOJ - wasted no time turning word into deed, taking on mergers, addressing anticompetitive conduct (like blocking #noncompetes and protecting #RightToRepair), and filing suit against abusive firms:

https://pluralistic.net/2022/05/09/rest-in-piss-robert-bork/#harmful-dominance

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Pluralistic: 09 May 2022 – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

This naturally triggered an exodus of the government economists and lawyers who'd presided over the ghost-based antitrust era in which monopolies were encouraged and celebrated. Economists who'd built their careers on this collapsing idea wept into their beers, describing this as the end of "independent thinking" at the FTC ("independent thinking" being a synonym for "repeating billionaires self-serving dogma"):

https://www.techdirt.com/2021/07/28/ftc-is-driving-away-good-economists-favor-political-henchmen/

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The FTC Is Driving Away Good Economists In Favor Of Political Henchmen

Shut up and get in line — that’s the message Federal Trade Commission Chair Lina Khan recently broadcasted to FTC staffers. Within her first month as a new commissioner, Khan ordered a …

Techdirt

This was genuinely surreal! Imagine if a new NIH chief declared a commitment to evidence based-medicine and think-tankies published feverish editorials lamenting the brain-drain as chiropractors and reiki healers left government service.

This requiem for the ineffectual monopoly-enablers of the waning Bork era continues to this day.

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The DoJ's Google suit has triggered fresh rounds of garment-rending from corporate shills who once presided over catastrophic mergers while drawing a public salary.

Writing for #TheAmericanProspect, @jeffhauser and Andrea Beaty from the #RevolvingDoorProject do what they do best - reveal the glaring conflicts of interest these monopoly enablers fail to disclose in attacking the DoJ's case:

https://prospect.org/power/2023-02-13-justice-department-antitrust-attack/

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The Difference Between Expertise and Marketing

Attacks on aggressive antitrust enforcement from ‘fellow Democrats’ who work for monopolists should be seen for what they are.

The American Prospect

@pluralistic It's too bad Bork confined his theories to economics and didn't consider politics. Because in the Borkian model, bad forms of government (such as dictatorships) wouldn't exist because alternative, "good" governments would spring into existence and -- enjoying the support of the people -- would swiftly replace bad governments.

And, just like monopolies who see their dominance threatened, bad governments wouldn't lift a finger to head off their competition. Hallelujah!

@angusm @pluralistic Uh, you really think Robert Bork of the Nixon Administration didn't know EXACTLY what he was doing "politically"? Yeah, the guy who fired the Watergate Special Prosecutor for Nixon when everyone else resigned when asked?

Hmm... Better read up on the Saturday Night Massacre... (esp as so MANY GOP bad policies are directly linked to folks who served in Nixon Administration:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturday_Night_Massacre

Saturday Night Massacre - Wikipedia