AT&T-T-Mobile Merger Delayed

A few months ago, the FCC said it would hand down a decision on whether to allow AT&T and T-Mobile to merge within 180 days. August 26 was day 83. The FCC decided to reset the clock to zero. So now it will be as long as another 6 months before the FCC announces its verdict.

There’s a comment to made here about regulatory uncertainty. There’s another one to make about the value of the FCC keeping its word. But instead I’ll concentrate on Sen. Al Franken’s recent remarks. “I am very suspicious of consolidation of power,” he told MinnPost.com.

“Big is bad” is an old argument. Age has not given it wisdom, however. Suppose a super-size phone company like a merged AT&T-T-Mobile is so big, clunky, and inefficient that it has to charge higher prices. What a golden opportunity for smaller, leaner competitors like Verizon and Sprint to swoop in and gain market share.

Now suppose instead that the merger gives AT&T and T-Mobile better economies of scale and a faster, more reliable network. Consumers flee their previous networks to join a better, cheaper one. This is hardly consumer harm – which after all, is the usual rationale for antitrust regulations.

Nobody knows if the proposed merger will work or not. But a company’s size doesn’t have much to do with whether a merger should be allowed. If a merger gives diseconomies of scale, consumers will punish it. If it improves service and prices, consumers will reward it.

Unlike the FCC, markets are impartial. Consumers are the proper arbiters of this proposed merger. Let them hand down the verdict.

Brewers 6, Cubs 4

With another win, the Brewers will be guaranteed a non-losing season. The team is currently 80-54. They have an afternoon game today, get Monday off, then host the Cardinals.

Those Cardinals had a rough day, with the Pirates shutting them out, 7-0.

The magic number is 19 with 28 games to play.

Brewers 5, Cubs 2

Last night the Brewers won at home yet again. They’ve had the best home record in baseball for most of the season. Now that they’re also winning on the road, they’ve won a sterling 25 of their last 30 games.

The Cardinals edged the Pirates 5-4 in St. Louis.

Milwaukee’s magic number goes down by one. It is now 21, with 29 games left.

Hurricane Irene Update

Here’s another natural disaster-related note for family and friends who may be worried. DC will escape the worst. Everyone here should be just fine.

Around dinnertime tonight we’ll start to see sustained 40 mph winds. The rain should total 2 to 4 inches. Our friends on the coast won’t be so lucky; hopefully the damage there won’t be severe. But in these parts, it will be more like a bad rainstorm than a hurricane. Some people will probably lose power, but that’s par for the course during a bad storm. Nobody seems to be panicking. Nobody in the Inertia Wins household is, at least.

Stay safe, everyone. And dry.

Regulation Roundup

Some of the stranger rules I’ve dug recently:

  • In New Hampshire, ventriloquism is a licensed occupation.
  • A 1482 English law states that only royalty may own or touch swans. It was never repealed, and causes difficulties to this day.
  • In Turin, Italy, failing to walk your dog at least thrice daily is punishable with a €500 fine.
  • In Juneau, Alaska, regulations prohibit animals from entering barbershops. Unlike Florida’s recent bestiality law, Alaska does provide a definition of “animal” that excludes humans.
  • It is illegal to counterfeit cat and dog tags in Grand Forks, North Dakota.
  • In New Hampshire, it is illegal to have a ferret in your possession while on your way to a hunting trip.
  • According to § 7-1-1(Q) of Minooka, IL’s village code, it is illegal “To suffer any bitch or slut.”

Creative Destruction at Work

Gawker and 7 Other Formerly Popular Sites That Are Dead or Dying

(via Iain Murray)

CEI Podcast for August 25, 2011: Mr. Fuddlesticks

Have a listen here.

Mr. Fuddlesticks is an anonymous YouTube user who posted embarrassing videos about the Renton, Washington police department. They convinced a judge to let them request Mr. Fuddlesticks’ personal information from Google, YouTube’s parent company. While the charges were eventually dropped, Research Associate Nicole Ciandella thinks this highlights a major problem in applying telephone-era laws to the Internet era.

The Sidewalks of Madison

George Will took a trip to Madison recently and had this to say about some graffiti he found:

“Solidarity forever” was perhaps painted by a graduate student forever at the University of Wisconsin.

Insults are not always needed to make one’s opponent look bad; they often do that themselves well enough:

The authors of the sidewalk graffiti have at least read Jefferson: “The tree of liberty is watered by the blood of tyrants.” The tyrant is “$cott Walker American Fa$ci$t.”

Fascists started World War II and attempted to wipe every Jew from the face of the Earth. All in all, fascist governments directly killed more than 14 million souls. Scott Walker is the governor of Wisconsin.

A word of advice to Wisconsinites who are upset with Scott Walker’s policies: if someone wants to be taken seriously, they first have to be able to be taken seriously.

Pirates 2, Brewers 0

Pittsburgh earned a series split by shutting out the Brewers. Milwaukee will take today off, then take on the Cubs at home tomorrow.

St. Louis succumbed to the Dodgers, 9-4. They begin a series against the Pirates today.

Despite the loss, Milwaukee’s magic number is down to 22.

Logic Based Reasoning Services

Out of a $3.8 trillion budget, the federal government spends a mere $196,600 on logic based reasoning services.

Hard to tell if that’s a good thing or a bad thing.