Who Owns America?: A New Declaration of IndependenceHerbert Agar, Allen Tate Houghton Mifflin, 1936 - 342 pages This volume is the classic sequel to I'll Take My Stand, the famous defense of the South's agrarian traditions. |
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Page 73
... corporate perma- nence and corporate inertia long after the economic ad- vantage of their first grouping has disappeared . Corporate permanence beyond a single generation with the prospect of an indefinite continuance surely encourages ...
... corporate perma- nence and corporate inertia long after the economic ad- vantage of their first grouping has disappeared . Corporate permanence beyond a single generation with the prospect of an indefinite continuance surely encourages ...
Page 75
... corporate affairs , it seems to me that they might well make their regulation of intrastate and local corpora- tions less complicated than is now the practice in ... corporations . Such a general declaration Corporate and Private Persons 75.
... corporate affairs , it seems to me that they might well make their regulation of intrastate and local corpora- tions less complicated than is now the practice in ... corporations . Such a general declaration Corporate and Private Persons 75.
Page 78
... corporate debts , an increase which is not only explosively dangerous in periods of depression , but which implies such progressive expansion of the fields of corporate exploitation that periodic collapse of the entire structure of ...
... corporate debts , an increase which is not only explosively dangerous in periods of depression , but which implies such progressive expansion of the fields of corporate exploitation that periodic collapse of the entire structure of ...
Contents
AMERICA AND FOREIGN TRADE | 9 |
BIG BUSINESS IN THE PROPERTY STATE | 18 |
AGRICULTURE AND THE PROPERTY STATE | 36 |
Copyright | |
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agrarian agricultural amendment American Big Business big corporation capital capitalist cent cerns chain store charters citizens co-operative collectivism communist competition concentration Constitution cotton debts decentralization develop distribution dollars economic system effective efficiency enterprise exchange-value exports factory farm farmer fascism Federal finance-capitalism Fourteenth Amendments freedom Hamiltonian HERBERT AGAR holding companies human important income individual industrial interests Jefferson Jeffersonian joint-stock labor land liberty living mass production means means of production ment million modern monopoly natural ness nomic operation organization owners ownership perhaps planter political possible practice principles private property problem profit protect public ownership real property regional regulation religion responsibility sense small town social society South Southern Supreme Court tariff tenant thing tion United use-value wages wealth women workers writer