
by Sally Hubbard
Rating: 3.8 ⭐
• 4 recommendations ❤️
An urgent and witty manifesto, Monopolies Suck “lucidly explains how monopolies threaten democracy, worsen inequality, and imperil the American Dream—and why it’s more important than ever to take action” (David Cicilline).Something’s not right. No matter how hard you work, life seems to only get harder. When your expenses keep going up but your income stays flat, when you’re price-gouged buying medicine for your child’s life-threatening allergy, when you live in a hyped-up state of fear and anxiety, monopoly power is playing a key role. In Monopolies Suck , antitrust expert and director at the Open Markets Institute, Sally Hubbard, shows us the seven ways big corporations rule our lives—and what must be done to stop them.Throughout history, monopolists who controlled entire industries like railroads and oil were aptly called “robber barons” because they extracted wealth from everyone else—and today’s monopolies are no different. By charging high prices, skirting taxes, and reducing our pay and economic opportunities, they are not only stealing our money, but also robbing us of innovation and choice, as market dominance prevents new companies from challenging them. They’re robbing us of the ability to take care of our sick, a healthy food supply, and a habitable planet by using business practices that deplete rather than generate. They’re a threat to our private lives, fair elections, a robust press, and ultimately, the American Dream that so many of us are striving for.In this “accessible guide” (Zephyr Teachout, author of Break ‘Em Up ), Sally Hubbard gives us an easy-to-understand overview of the history of monopolies and antitrust law, and urges us to use our voices, votes, and wallets to protest monopoly power. Emboldened by the previous century when we successfully broke up monopoly power in the US, we have the tools to dismantle corporate power again today—before their lobbying threatens to undermine our economy and democracy for generations to come.
by Sally Hubbard
Yesterday’s Water is Sally Hubbard’s journal of months spent caring for her husband Charles Hubbard. She is a former associate editor of Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 at Rice University in Houston, a lifelong singer, and occasional poet—her muse only speaks during the hard times. Sally and Charles retired initially to the Four Corners area following an interest in Southwest Anasazi archaeology, and then to her hometown of Sewanee on Tennessee’s Cumberland Plateau in 2005.
by Sally Hubbard
The Rev. Canon Gideon Byamugisha of Uganda (b. 1959) was the first religious leader in Africa to announce publicly that he was HIV+ (1992). His leadership against stigma, shame, denial, and discrimination, and his ministry to uphold the dignity and human rights of people living with and affected by HIV/AIDS, have brought him numerous national and international awards. Canon Gideon is a teacher (Makerere University), a pastor, and a theologian (Bishop Tucker College, Mukono and University of Birmingham, UK). His boarding and day high school near Kampala, Hope Institute, has to-date educated 1,000 orphans and vulnerable children. He is in the process of establishing a three-year university in Semuto. In 2013, Byamugisha was a Brown Foundation Fellow and visiting professor at the University of the South in Sewanee TN, where he formed strong relationships with faculty, students, and the community. He lives near Kampala with his HIV+ wife Pamela and his three HIV- daughters, Patience, Love, and Hope.