Amazon is simply the best store that ever existed, by far, with incredible selection and unearthly convenience. The price: cheap.

    Facebook, Twitter, and other social media let us socialize with our friends, comfortably meet new people, and explore even the most obscure interests. The price: free.

    Uber and Lyft provide high-quality, convenient transportation. The price: really cheap.

    Skype is a sci-fi quality video phone. The price: free.

    Youtube gives us endless entertainment. The price: free.

    Google gives us the totality of human knowledge! The price: free.

    That’s what I’ve seen. What I’ve heard, however, is totally different. The populists of our Golden Age are loud and furious. They’re crying about “monopolies” that deliver firehoses worth of free stuff. They’re bemoaning the “death of competition” in industries (like taxicabs) that governments forcibly monopolized for as long as any living person can remember. They’re insisting that “only the 1% benefit” in an age when half of the high-profile new businesses literally give their services away for free. And they’re lashing out at businesses for “taking our data” – even though five years ago hardly anyone realized that they had data.



kleinbl00:

    History textbooks are full of populist complaints about business: the evils of Standard Oil, the horrors of New York tenements, the human body parts in Chicago meatpacking plants.

...go on...

    To be honest, I haven’t taken these complaints seriously since high school.

- and SCENE


posted 1743 days ago