Anyways, now that you know way too
much about my Monopoly habits, let me share the updated dining room with you guys (or the way it looked before we busted out the epic game of Monopoly that we are currently in).
Not exact matches
Suits you very well:)
About board game, I always like to play
Monopoly and scrabble, so
much fun!
The potential of the internet for the deepening and enhancement of democracy has been destroyed by the success of
monopoly capitalism and the internet has actually contributed as
much to inequality as it has to fostering equality and here I am particularly concerned
about the potential of the media to aid in the surveillance of citizens and well as the propagandizing against socialist alternatives to capitalism.
I also sure as shit don't want any corporation — especially one that deals with something I care
about as
much as I do literature and books — succeeding with anything that smells so strongly of an attempt at a
monopoly.
Not so
much squeezing authors or consumers... more becoming a natural
monopoly for publishing related advertising based both on availability of advertising space and on available customer data... or effectively claiming
about 15 - 30 % % of the book market for free.
I do not believe
much in financial cabals, although concerns
about monopolies and oligopolies seem quite real to me.
As a follow - up to this earlier post on law firm rankings, David Bernstein of Volokh complains that one reason that there's so
much focus on the U.S. News rankings is that the publication has a virtual
monopoly on the rankings, though others (like Leiter) provide more useful information to those concerned
about academic quality.
Well boys and girls, Santa can only offer so
much advice — and the more that I think
about it, I have to worry that I might be considered a
monopoly, or anti-competitive.