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Address your e-mail to
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the editors to [email protected]. Please include your address and daytime phone
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number (for confirmation only).
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Advertising by Numbers
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David Plotz writes in his
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June 6 "Assessment" of Tina Brown, "In 1997, [ The New Yorker 's] six
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double issues and three other special issues accounted for 35 percent of the
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magazine's advertising pages."
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By my count, the six double
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issues (at two weeks per issue) and three special issues (one week each) total
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15 weeks, or 28 percent of 1997. Is it so impressive that 28 percent of the
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year accounted for 35 percent of the ad pages?
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I'm
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reminded of Dilbert's boss, who was outraged to find that 40 percent of company
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sick days were being taken on Mondays or Fridays.
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-- Andrew
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Solovay Belmont, Calif.
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The
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New Yorker
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Turned Brown
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David
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Plotz claims ("Assessment") Tina Brown "supplemented the already prodigiously
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talented staff with her own snazzy hires." She also lost a prodigious lot of
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talent, either by firing people, forcing them out, or forcing them first to
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throw up and then to give up. You're right about the magazine's sameness,
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however; it's the same damn thing each week, and it's the same as the other
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slick, self-referential, celebrity gossip mags around. As for the chattering
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classes, they chatter almost exclusively to one another, and they are very dull
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people--far duller than the old New Yorker .
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-- Susanna
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Margolis
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Yes,
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Sex, Please--We're Scientists!
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In
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"Today's Papers" for June 5, Scott Shuger writes:
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The NYT ,
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LAT , and WP fronts herald the discovery that the sub-atomic
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particle called a neutrino, which is chargeless and was formerly thought
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massless too, in fact has mass. The papers assure us this is earth-shaking.
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"The Universe May Never Be the Same" is slugged over NYT Universe
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reporter Malcolm Browne's dispatch. The Times says the discovery was
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announced by 120 physicists at a "neutrino conference." Hoo-boy, bet the
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bartenders and hookers go on vacation during that one.
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Science reporting in the
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United States is hampered by the deep-seated conviction that the press knows
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even better than the people that it's just a bunch of pinheads nattering about
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nothing. Well, these little nothings called neutrinos have a lot to say, if
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only we could find a press willing to pass on the message. I applaud the New
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York Times for trying to convey some of that excitement and say woe to you
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for dipping to such cynicism. Uncharacteristic, I might add.
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Oh, and
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by the way, scientists get lots of sex.
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--Rob Pike Bell
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Labs
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Organ
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Music
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I have several problems with
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Richard Epstein's June 3 comments on organ peddling ("Dialogue"):
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1) Epstein writes: "Better
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that we have 200 people alive with one kidney each than 100 people alive with
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two kidneys." I mention that point to my medical students (150 presumably
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healthy young people) every year in an effort to get them to agree to a
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utilitarian plan making it mandatory to remove one kidney from each of them to
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be made available for donation. Every year they reject this plan. Something
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about personal autonomy being more important than utilitarian calculus in
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certain situations. It just may be they are right--that utilitarian math may
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not be the highest virtue when dealing with organ procurement (one murder could
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net two kidneys as we are likely to find out from the Chinese prisoner
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situation--should we trade one life for two?).
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2) Epstein writes: "Look it
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up on the Web. ... If it is possible to do this kind of research with standard
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illnesses, it should be possible to do it with organ transplants." The point
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being that access to good information fosters legal markets. The Web example
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proves just the opposite: Much of the information people get about illness on
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the Web is incomplete, imprecise, or just plain wrong. There is absolutely no
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guarantee that good information will create legitimate markets for organ sales.
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The likelihood is the opposite--that bad (misleading, coercive) information
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will be disseminated to entice people to sell their organs and ignore the very
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real risks that people incur when they give up their organs. (Donating organs
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can bring consequences to the donor far more momentous than buying a fake Rolex
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on Fifth Avenue.)
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3) How
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would such markets ever be regulated? No regulation? Without some screening
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(who will the brokers and middlemen be?), not only will donors suffer (see
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above) but some recipients will receive unsuitable organs. While Epstein can
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argue that this happens currently, consider what wholesale expansion of an
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unregulated market would bring in terms of the number of complications. In
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fact, there are reports that in some countries where organs may be sold and the
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process is not monitored closely, the numbers and types of infections in
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recipients are much worse.
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-- C.M. Franklin,
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M.D.
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Microsoft Über Alles ?
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In "Monopoly Shopping,"
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Steven E. Landsburg sings a paean to the vertically integrated monopoly. He
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argues mainly that including the Internet Explorer browser as a free part of
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the Windows 95 operating system will ultimately benefit the consumer since a
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rival browser would be sold as a separate profit center.
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I happen to agree that one
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predominant browser architecture would ultimately benefit the consumer, but for
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a different reason--it would create a market standard for developers and
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consumers to focus their investments. I expect Microsoft to prevail, despite
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Netscape's better technology and implementation and despite the government's
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well-intentioned efforts to intervene. I would certainly hope, however, that
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resources would continue to be dedicated to innovation in this arena until the
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technologies had matured to the point where they were clearly superior and
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worthy of becoming a standard.
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It's odd to read this whole
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economic argument in light of Netscape's pledge to distribute Navigator (and
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its source code) for free in perpetuity. But even if Navigator were to be sold
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at some point, the ultimate cost to the consumer would come not from the cost
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of the browser itself, but from the ramifications of Microsoft's control of the
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emerging desktop software interface to the internet. The focus in the browser
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wars and legal wranglings has already begun to move away from browser choice
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and toward the more important issues of gateways and the branded services they
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feature.
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The
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configuration of computers when sold will determine to a large degree which
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services a consumer encounters. Note how the cable companies have profited from
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control of the channels that they carry, some of which they own fully or in
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part. Note also how the Baby Bells have profited from charging for advertising
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in their Yellow Pages. Consider then the value of a gateway when it contains
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not just a few dozen TV channels or local business listings, but the emerging
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broadband multimedia marketplace only a few years away. Do we want to allow
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Microsoft to parlay its control of the desktop architecture into control of the
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content that appears on the desktop?
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-- Mark Safire
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How About
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Windows $94?
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In his article, "Monopoly Shopping,"
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Steven Landsburg notes that Windows 95 costs about $90 and suggests what would
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happen to Microsoft if it tried to raise the price.
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A better topic to examine is
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why the price of Windows 95 hasn't come down in three years on the market.
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My
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understanding of the economies of scale suggests the Windows iterations being
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produced today should be costing less to produce than the first ones that
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entered the pipeline. Prices of Intel processors, laser printers, fax machines,
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etc., all drop as the learning/production curve results in lower costs. Why not
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Windows 95? Could the lack of competition have anything to do with it?
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-- Marvin Katz
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Virtual
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Criticism
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In
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"Peep
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Show," David Edelstein writes:
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Would I welcome The
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Truman Show for what it is--a sharp-witted, visually layered, gorgeously
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designed, meticulously directed piece of formula pablum--if I hadn't been
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bludgeoned by pre-emptive raves in Esquire , Time ,
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Entertainment Weekly , and the New York Times that proclaim it
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some sort of subversive postmodern masterwork?
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Did
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Edelstein read Janet Maslin's review in the Friday, June 5, New York
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Times ? In her review, Maslin acknowledges the mania surrounding The
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Truman Show (in the first paragraph, no less) and concludes that, while it
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is a good film, it has been lauded excessively by critics. Maslin gives no
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indication she thinks the film is a masterwork of any kind.
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-- Dan Flynn
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David Edelstein
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reponds: It's too bad that Slate doesn't pass along letters critical of
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its contributors before posting them. I share the general disdain for lengthy
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tit-for-tat replies, but when facts are at issue, it's only fair to give a guy
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a chance to set the record straight. Dan Flynn suggests that I misread Janet
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Maslin's review of The Truman Show in the New York Times , which
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indeed begins in much the same vein as mine. In fact, her review and mine were
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published the same day, so I didn't read hers. The "pre-emptive rave" to which
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I referred was by columnist Frank Rich; it came more than a week before the
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film opened. I saw no reason to name Rich, whose work I respect, but his
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column--along with those of critics in Esquire , Entertainment
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Weekly , and Time --sure fit the description in my review.
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Don't
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Knock the Rock
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"In God He ...
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," Brent Staples' review of Titan: The Life of John D. Rockefeller Sr.
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perpetuates a few misconceptions about Standard Oil's business practices.
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For example, he repeats the
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myth that Standard pursued a "predatory pricing" strategy (though that was
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indeed among the charges brought against Standard by the U.S. government).
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Though Standard did indeed buy out many of its early competitors, that was due
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chiefly to their tremendously inefficient processes--Standard ended up
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mothballing most of the refineries it bought, while expanding output from its
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own, efficient facilities. Furthermore, if Standard did pursue a predatory
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pricing strategy, it sure didn't work. Standard faced constant competition both
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in America and abroad throughout its corporate existence, causing the price of
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oil to slope ever downward.
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Second, Staples claims that
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the trust system "disallowed genuine competition." Far from it. As Chernow
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himself puts it: "With additional oil strikes in California, Indian Territory
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(later Oklahoma), Kansas, and Illinois in the early 1900s, the industry became
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too vast and far-flung for even Standard Oil to control. It might not be too
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much of an exaggeration to say that the antitrust cases brought against the
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trust in the early 1900s were not just belated but were fast becoming
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superfluous." In other words, the marketplace was already bringing Standard to
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its knees, and Rockefeller did indeed end up "eclipsed by others"--without
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government intervention.
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The reason
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monopolies are bad is that, in theory, they lead to high prices and less
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product. Staples points out, though, that Standard Oil provided a product which
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was "consistently good--and cheaper to boot." In other words, it acted exactly
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as a theoretical monopoly should not. While Standard's practices may have led
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to, in Chernow's words, "misery all around" for producers, the low prices and
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improved product they brought to the refining industry meant nothing but good
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news for consumers.
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-- Ananda
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Gupta Research assistant, Competitive Enterprise Institute
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Address your e-mail to
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the editors to [email protected]. Please include your address and daytime phone
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number (for confirmation only).
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