Monopolies Killed My Hometown

The "Attack on American Free Enterprise System" memo, or as it's better known The Powell Memo. Lewis Powell wrote this memo for the education committee of the American Chamber of Commerce two months before he was nominated to sit on the US Supreme Court.
This is part 2 of my analysis of this memo and its impacts on us and our communities.
In part 1, I look at how this memo read like a moral panic.
In part 2, I talk about the four areas Powell suggests the business community focus on to make sure they are "fair" to the business community - the campus, the media, politics and the courts.

Show Notes

The "Attack on American Free Enterprise System" memo, or as it's better known The Powell Memo. Lewis Powell wrote this memo for the education committee of the American Chamber of Commerce two months before he was nominated to sit on the US Supreme Court.
This is part 2 of my analysis of this memo and its impacts on us and our communities.

In part 1, I look at how this memo read like a moral panic. 
In part 2, I talk about the four areas Powell suggests the business community focus on to make sure they are "fair" to the business community - the campus, the media, politics and the courts. 

The ideas laid out in The Powell Memo have influenced Canadian universities. For instance, Tom Traves (president of Dalhousie University from 1995 to 2013) was a founding board member of the Atlantic Institute of Market Studies, a think tank that was promoting research to benefit the business community; Ray Ivany (president of the Nova Scotia Community College from 1998 to 2005 and Acadia University from 2009 to 2017) was the Chair of the One Nova Scotia Report, which promoted similar ideas to what Powell promoted in this memo. I spend the bulk of the episode discussing the college campus, and quickly cover the media, politics, and the courts. 

Links from this episode:

What is Monopolies Killed My Hometown?

Do you wonder why small towns, small businesses and people seem to be falling behind and you don’t know why? Feeling helpless about whether any of us can do anything to halt the decline of the places we love? Well, we know a secret. Our society fought the same battles about 100 years ago, and small towns won.

Join Andrew Cameron, the founder of the Center for Small Town Success and small business owner, every other week as he rediscovers our Canadian Anti-Monopoly tradition. The goal is to learn how we successfully fought back against Monopolies in the 1900s so we can restore power to small towns, small businesses and individuals today.

Listen to this podcast if you want to learn more about Canadian Competition Policy and to join the Anti-Monopoly movement. #freeboswell #cdnpoli