Saturday, June 4, 2011

Something conservatives say ALL THE TIME about business; yet business doesn't follow

I just finished watching Bret Baer's Special Report on Fox. Yes, I know, you're thinking, "Fuck, what crawled up Wilks ass, besides the possibly of colon or prostate cancer, to make him sound off on Baer?". Hey, this site is MY SOUPBOX; so if you don't like it, go somewhere else. But those of you who love to hear shit thrown @ Fox, like MSNBC, the kyke Jon Stewart on Comedy Central, or HBOs Bill Maher, stick around; do I have shit to throw.

Yes, I talk major shit about Fox. But I talk major shit about them (& most other not-under-contract-to-Fox conservatives) b/c they are pro things I am anti & they defend certain corporate ideas that, if one talked to big businesses like those who sponsor Fox (asked about the "facts" aired on Fox), really aren't put into action, only spoken. Fox also aires more ads than content, which is why they can command higher salary than those on MSNBC & AS HIGH A SALARY BRACKET AS THE HEADS OF THOSE SAME ADVERTISERS.

I speak about the confusion between the ACTIONS of Fox advertisers & the VIEWS of Fox correspondents, what am I but a CORPORATE HEAD: #15 on the Forbes 400 (worth $30 billion), #12 on the Fortune 500 (WGE's market cap is between $50-75 billion as of FY 2010).

I am the classic big businessman. Why I talk shit about Fox is b/c they may TOW business, but they tow it WRONG. Now it comes full circle to what I started w/: On Special Report w/ Bret Baer Paul Ryan was on & he said the thing that gave birth to this post. It was something I have heard in sound bits since SOMEONE elected a NIGGER as PRESIDENT:

Conservatives say business loves competition.

Insert expletive of your choice here. Business does NOT like competition. Exxon & Mobile? JP Morgan & Chase Manhattan Bank? TD WaterHouse & AmeriTrade? Bank of America & Merrill Lynch? Citibank & Travelers Group? Budweiser & a brewer in Belgium? Ford & Volvo? THE J. Pierpont Morgan (one of my former employers) buying out Andrew Carniege's (another of my former employers) Carniege Steel, to form US Steel Corp, (now called USX)? AT&T & T-Mobile? Google & Youtube? AOL & Huffington Post? Really Fox (& every other medium to large business)? Business likes competition? Of all the combines I just rattled off, sounds like the two of you (Fox & Wall St) are not saying the same thing.

Fox is saying business likes competition, but all those combinations, merges & acquisitions, really doesn't make me think that.

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