if you think that no regulation by the govt would magically turn corporations into people-loving puppies, i want some of what you're smoking.
Great point, but this regulation will not make corporations behave either, they're not charities, nor are they magical fairies. This regulation just puts the government between
you and the
seller leading to a grand extortion scheme.
No one expects corporations to "love" people, but they need business because that equals money. Letting the free market operate unhindered will further both the freedom and expansion of a business, as well as your own freedom and opportunity.
No regulation would give corps a license to screw us with no recourse. don't say, 'vote with your wallet' - try that with your cable co, or ISP - only 1 option for the vast majority of people here in the US.
You mention the ISPs as a good example of a monopoly. Well, I do have a choice, if one internet company isn't giving me a good rate, I can either drop my internet usage and just use the library's access, I could go over to another provider like AT&T or Comcast, or if I wanted to keep using the internet, I could cut out other things from budget.
I myself for example do not have cable television, nor do I even watch network television. I save lots of energy bills, while still paying for services I actually want/"need."
The commonly cited "monopolies" of the "Robber Barons" of the developing West were government created monsters--the U.S. government legally owned all the land the developers wanted to build rail road tracks on, and so instead of leasing the land out to whoever wanted it, the government sold parcels of land (which technically is constitutionally questionable but they did it anyway) to railroad companies.
Because each rail road company 'OWNED' the tracks because they had bought the "rights" they were free to create monopolies.
Now, 100 years later, same story different resource. The government is selling out different segments of its land--whether that be a city or whatever to different Telecom companies.
In other words, the free market theory of competition isn't working in the instances you cite because the government is
not letting it.
Rather than piling on more government regulations, the simple answer is to de-regulate as much as possible.
