| United States. Supreme Court - 1949 - 974 pages
...Money (1933), p. 110. 293 Opinion of DOUGLAS, J. owners. Then there is a serious loss in citizenship. Local leadership is diluted. He who was a leader in...ceaseless growth in bigness on the part of industry. These problems may not appear on the surface to have relationship to the case before us. But they go... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Select Committee on Small Business - 1949 - 368 pages
...there is a serious loss in citizenship. Local leadership is diluted. He who was a leader in thevillage becomes dependent on outsiders for his action and...place of resident proprietors beholden to no one. Those are the prices which the nation pays for the almost ceaseless growth in bigness on the part of... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on the Judiciary - 1955 - 268 pages
...entrepreneurs become employees of absentee owners. Then there is serious loss in citizenship • * •. These are the prices which the Nation pays for the...ceaseless growth in bigness on the part of industry * * *." (See Standard Oil of California case (1940)). What ia bigness T The idea of bigness in business... | |
| 1976 - 258 pages
...businesses to be swallowed up by absentee owners. There follows a serious loss of citizenship. He who is a leader in the village becomes dependent on outsiders...place of resident proprietors beholden to no one. And so whenever he can, Douglas would interpret the antitrust [226] laws in favor of the maintenance... | |
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