• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
wisdomvision

wisdomvision

Ideal Fix

  • Home
  • Ideal Fix
  • About Us
  • Theater
  • Look
  • Keys
  • Privacy
  • Adverts
    • Add
  • Community BP
    • Members
    • Log In
    • Register
  • More
    • Podcast Feed
    • Manage

Evils Of Monopolies & Unfair Trade Practices

July 21, 2020 by jobs Leave a Comment

Spread the love
0
(0)

(FOR RELEASE AT TIME OF DELIVERY,  AT 2 P.M. THURSDAY,  MAY 27, 1937.)

It is indeed a great pleasure to have this opportunity to discuss with your important industry certain competitive problems and the facilities of the Federal Trade Commission in relation thereto. Yours is a truly national industry with an almost unanimous appeal, touching the lives and habits of nearly every man, woman and child throughout the country. Nearly all of our people have had some share in bringing about the consumption of nearly one billion five hundred million pounds of candy, which, statistics indicate, was the nation’s candy consumption in 1935* The manufacture and distribution of candy and confectionery products give employment to thousands of persons and add substantially to the country’s volume of trade and commerce. The welfare of your industry necessarily affects the country’s economic welfare, and we of the Federal Trade Commission have a very real interest in promoting this particular and general prosperity on a sound and lasting basis. It is both the purpose and the function of the Commission to retain the benefits of the advances made to date and to continue to improve business, individually as well as collectively. To achieve this improvement, we must frankly and courageously notice and take corrective action as to those trade practices which are harmful, or which block or stifle improvement, or which are unfair to industry as a whole, or to the consuming public whose patronage and good will are vital for the existence and growth of all industry. Perhaps there never was a time when the need for holding fast to old-fashioned truths, ideals and ethics was so emphasized and so necessary as at present. The public’s growing consciousness of its right to, and its apparently determined insistence on, truth in advertising, decent and honest trade standards, money’s worth for money paid out, and a fair deal, certainly never before were so strong. A fair and reasonable profit is vital to healthy business but the picking of the public’s pockets, by means of monopoly and its attendant exorbitant prices, by the sale of inferior goods, by false advertising, and by use of numerous other methods of that ilk, is little less than criminal larceny, on whatever scale it may be practiced. American growth and prosperity have been founded upon competition, which in our economic system, is relied upon to insure the availability of goods at prices representing efficient cost of production and of distribution, plus a fair profit. No economic system employed in any other part of the world has been as productive of blessings to the people as has ours. This reward of prosperity and progress has been accomplished by initiative, by intelligence, by honesty, and by everlasting industry and effort, and always with a wholesome regard for the rights of others. A competitive economy tends towards freedom and expansion of business activity. Monopoly stifles and restrains it. Under a fair competitive system, the allocation of income adjusts itself among the various classes of our economic body. When competition ceases, prices tend to rise above honest values. Purchasers have only so much money with which to buy. They cannot, and will not, long pay the enhanced prices which result from over capitalization of industry and trade, inefficiency of production and distribution, or the marketing of undesirable merchandise, when their purses have been emptied, trading, must cease until they can again return to the markets as purchasers. Thus a failure on the part of producers to maintain a healthy state of competition dries up the very wells of their prosperity and results, in the end, to their own detriment as well as to the distress and injury of the public. “The public” is not merely a figure of speech, but is a very real, composite whole of you, and of me, and of our families, friends, neighbors, and of all our people throughout the land. Inflicting damage upon one part of the public body necessarily damages the whole. Much sentiment seems to exist, particularly today in various branches of industry, for the theory that the principal self-help of competitors is an effective agreement to eliminate competition. Let me assure you that such a policy is fallacious, unsound in principle and doubtless contrary to law. Controlled and stifled competition breeds monopoly with its attendant evils of arbitrarily fixed prices unrelated to costs. It leads to gouging of the public. Ultimately it brings about the collapse of business. The inevitable effect of stifling competition is to prevent the maintenance of the public’s purchasing power which is the key to business prosperity. Any general monopolization of the means of production and distribution restricts the market, The inability of millions to purchase, to consume, or to produce, is likely to be the reflection of such monopolization. You producers and distributors have as much at stake in this matter as the average citizen. If monopoly is allowed to grow, you and thousands of other businessmen must eventually go down as victims. The exact cause of the depression, which too many businessmen seem prone to forget, in the first flush of better times, has been the subject of much analysis and discussion. In my own mind there is no doubt but that one of the very serious contributing causes was interference with the normal operation of competition and its subsequent effect upon prices, supply and demand. Business became too much characterized by excessive prices, based upon unsound and over capitalized company set-ups. Monopolistic enterprises charged more than the traffic could bear. By eliminating competition, by levying highest possible prices, or by means of frenzied finance, too many companies were attempting to chart their way to easy profits. As an inevitable effect, fewer people were able to buy so as to keep the products of industry moving through the channels of distribution. The result, which was so often called over-production, might more properly have been termed under-consumption. The streams of commerce must be kept open and free to insure national well-being. Questionable or unfair trade practices are among the main obstructions to this steady flow of commerce which too frequently interfere with the forces of supply and demand and disturb the competitive balance. I refer principally to those acts of unfair competition which the Commission and the courts have held to be unlawful, such as Misrepresentation and misbranding of product; Defamation of competitor and false disparagement of his products; Illegal price discrimination; Illegal selling below cost; Commercial bribery; Illegal use of loss leaders; Illegal rebating; Inducing breach of contract willfully to injure competitor; Circulating threats of infringement suits in bad faith; Full-line forcing to suppress competition; Passing off, and Imitation of trade-marks.

Each and every one of these practices, together with others of the same class too numerous to mention here, is as harmful to the perpetrator in the long-run as it is to the industry as a whole.

Each unfair act, whether it been isolated instance or but one of a successive number, exacts its toll, and the price is usually too demoralizing to ethical trade and commerce, too costly in its economic consequences, and too hurtful in its general effect, to be tolerated.

Each member should take his part in effective housecleaning within an industry. He should give his cooperation and full share of fair dealing to his fellow members and in return merit fair treatment and a proper respect for his rights. I have said elsewhere that life is a mirror; we see what were reflected; we receive what we contribute – no more and no less. The work of maintaining a wholesome competitive condition in your industry and preventing the inception and existence of unfair trade practices rests largely upon yourselves. The Federal Trade Commission is your law enforcement officer, prepared to give friendly counsel and to support your efforts to conduct your business within the law of good conscience and fairness. The Commission frequently has been characterized as the “policeman of business”. If one’s purposes are lawful, he will find the Commission to be a helpful friend. If one’s purposes be objectionable, he will find the Commission determined to perform its duty, which is to give effect to the purposes and objectives of Congress as expressed in the various statutes whereby it clothed the Commission with its mandate on the question of fair conduct in business. The Commission will help you to the limit of its power to attain all proper and lawful objectives. That is our message of cooperation and good wishes for the successful outcome of your endeavors.

 The Federal Trade Commission is an administrative and quasi-judicial tribunal. It is one of the oldest independent governmental agencies. Having been functioning for the last 22 years, it has accumulated a fund of valuable experience and information. Its work is both legal and economic and falls naturally into several divisions. While it has powers of general investigation and certain other duties, a principal function of the Commission is to prevent “unfair methods of competition in commerce”. In this work the purpose of the Commission is to protect honest competition and the consuming public from harmful or unfair practices in commerce. As to “unfair methods of competition in commerce , the Commission functions under a positive mandate from Congress to prevent those subject to its jurisdiction from using such methods. Wisely, Congress did not attempt to define the exact meaning of the phrase “unfair methods of competition in commerce”. The Supreme Court, in construing the intent and purpose of Congress in enacting the provisions of the Trade Commission Act, has said:”in the nature of things, it was impossible to describe and define in advance just what constituted unfair com-petition and in the final analysis it became a question of law after the facts were ascertained.”Therefore, every case must be considered on its own facts. Whatever the guise or character of an alleged unfair practice, it is the intent or substance or effect of such practice that counts, and we must concern ourselves with all the facts in the case. Generally, it has been our experience that unfair trade practices fall within two broad classiest (l) those which involve an element of fraud or dishonesty; (2) those not inherently dishonest, but which are restrictive of fair competition within the meaning of the anti-trust laws. No honest businessman ever feared fair competition or asked for undue favor. Thu Commission subscribes to that tenet of good business and backs it to the limit of its powers. It has for its purpose the aiding of legitimate business in the establishment of standards of sound and honest business ethics and principles. It insists that the rules of business conduct must come within the law. In the eyes of the Commission, all members of a given industry are on the same basis of competitive rights, with equal opportunity for all. The role of the Commission is that of a disinterested and impartial umpire who insists that the game of competition played fairly and within the boundaries of law. The Commission’s procedure is both informal and effective. Any interested party may write a letter to the Commission setting forth facts which he believes indicate a violation of law. Without disclosing at any time the identity of the complaining party, the Commission proceeds to obtain the facts and thereupon to form an opinion as to whether there is reason to believe that the party complained of is violating or has violated any of the provisions of the law and whether corrective proceedings would be to the interest of the public. The alleged offender in a proper case is afforded the opportunity to stipulate to cease and desist. If such fails of correcting the evil, the Commission issues a complaint stating its charges. If upon the evidence the Commission finds that the facts bear out the allegations of the complaint; it may issue an order requiring the offending party to cease and desist from the practice in question. Right of appeal to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for review or for enforcement of the order is provided by statute. Such cease and desist order proceeding is what might conveniently be termed the compulsory procedure for the prevention of unfair methods of competition. The Commission, however, has made available to industries still another plan that of a voluntary cooperative procedure where under members of an industry, with the aid of the Commission, may set up machinery for cooperation among themselves in establishing rules for the elimination of unfair methods of competition and trade abuses. This is known as the trade practice conference procedure of the Commission. It is this procedure as to which the United States Chamber of Commerce in its recent deliberations adopted the following resolution:”The principle of the trade practice conference procedure of the Federal Trade Commission is endorsed as a useful and proper means of promoting better standards of business and the elimination of unfair competitive practices. There should be a full examination of the possibilities of the trade practice conference procedure by each industry desirous of raising the level of its competitive standards, in order that it may properly evaluate the benefits which this method offers under the conditions confronting the industry involved.

Businessmen who are interested in taking voluntary group action to improve standards of ethical and fair practices in their industry will find the necessary governmental aid and assistance in the Commission to make such honest efforts workable and effective. Problems of general concern to an industry maybe effectively dealt with. The unfair competitive practices of entire industries, many of which may be the unwitting results of over-zealousness rather than intentional wrongdoing, are corrected by such conference proceedings held under the auspices of the Commission. The adoption and observance of fair trade rules make unnecessary the institution of a multiplicity of compulsory proceedings against offending members. Any group substantially reflecting the sentiment of the majority interests in an industry may file with the Commission an application for trade practice conference proceedings. There is no strict formality required in the application. The problems to be treated are studied by our staff, and informal discussions between the representatives of the industry and us are usually arranged in the interest of a clear understanding of the questions and the assistance which may be rendered by the Commission in their solution. If upon such application it appears that conference proceedings are feasible, in the light of all the circumstances, the Commission will authorize the holding of an industry conference. Official invitation is then extended to all members of the industry, inviting them to attend the conference and take part in the deliberations. At the conference the members propose trade practice rules and submit them to the Commission for its consideration and approval. In the Commission the provisions are studied in their relationship to the law and to determine whether they will accomplish constructive purposes and at the same time not work undue hardship or inequities. Before filial action is taken, the proposed rules are made available to all interested or affected parties upon public notice, affording them opportunity to express their views and suggestions, if any, and to have the same given due consideration. Thereafter the rules, if satisfactory, are approved by the Commission and officially promulgated as fair trade practice rules for the industry. Each member of the industry is supplied with a copy and afforded opportunity to signify his intention or willingness to observe the rules in the conduct of his business. In this procedure the members of the industry have a voice in formulating their own regulations within the scope of the law and the public interest; and the rights of affected parties are amply safeguarded. A question frequently asked is — How can trade practice rules been forced? Most of us know from past experience that unless rules in any worthwhile undertaking are enforceable, where necessary to bring about substantial compliance, they may become more honored in the breach than in the observance. Therefore means of effectuating compliance are quite important. In approved rules under the Federal Trade Commission procedure, the means available for bringing about compliance have proved adequate in the test of experience. An explanation of enforce ability brings up the matter of classification. Trade practice rules in their legal aspects naturally fall into two groups; and this classification is followed by the Commission.

In Group I the Commission places all rules which prohibit practices that are contrary to existing law. Therefore, those practices which are described as unfair and classified in Group I are illegal practices and engaging there in subjects the offender to prosecution or corrective action under statute. Group I rules include all types of unfair methods of competition which are known to the law and which have been crystallized and determined by decisions of the courts and the Commission over the last twenty years. The number of these practices is large. You could easily count a score of important illegal business practices and by no means cover them all. Group I rules also embrace those prohibiting all other types of illegal trade practices, Because Group I rules express law, it may be said that they are binding upon all as matters of law quite irrespective of the fact that the alleged offender may have refused to take part in the establishment of the rules or refused or failed to sign or pledge obedience thereto. We are all bound by the law whether we like it or not. And obedience to its requirements is not a matter of choice. The enforceable “Group I” class of rules usually embraces all the more important rules for an industry. An average of 90 per cent of approved rules is of this class, and these have, in effect, the power and enforcement of the law behind them. Adequate means therefore are available to bring about compliance by compulsory proceedings against the recalcitrant few in cases where voluntary adherence is not forthcoming. In Group II are placed rules as to which compliance ordinarily is voluntary. They are usually rules which recommend practices which the industry desires to foster and to promote as desirable in the interest of good business. The opportunity to adhere to such rules on a voluntary basis has proved to be adequate assurance of compliance. This may be accounted for by the fact that usually Group II rules are such that members of the industry generally are only too glad to follow, once they are assured, through Commission acceptance, that it is proper to follow, and to cooperate with others in observing them. If, however, Group II rules are violated in such a way as to bring about an infraction of the law, the offender may be subjected to compulsory corrective proceedings by the Commission. Experience has shown that observance of approved rules, whether of Group I or Group II is readily forthcoming and presents no great difficulty. Trade practice conferences have proven to be of inestimable value to business. Roundly, two hundred industries have to date availed themselves of this voluntary cooperative procedure. It affords a means whereby the honest businessmen may join forces and cooperate among themselves, with governmental aid, to eliminate bad practices and keep competition on the high plane of justice and fairness. A combined effort to uphold the right is a powerful and effective weapon. This procedure was the logical development of the Commission’s efforts, in cooperation with business and industry, to protect honest competitors and the public from unlawful practices by an unscrupulous minority who are willing to resort to any scheme or method that gives promise of quick and ruthless profits.  

The plan is not new or untried. It has been in use for many years and has long since passed beyond the experimental stage. In it, full protection of one’s legal and Constitutional rights is adequately provided for and safe-guarded. We proceed on the principle that an unnecessary multiplicity of regulations is to be avoided; that American business has the right to grow and develop with as much freedom as possible subject only to the minimum of restriction necessary to insure protection of the public, and fair and honor-able conduct in the exercise of every man’s right to engage in legitimate activity. In this work of correcting unfair trade practices, the applicable principle of law was well stated by the Supreme Court in a recent case when it said: “The careless and the unscrupulous must rise to the standards of the scrupulous and diligent.” (F.T.C. v. Algoma Lumber Co., et al, 291 U.S. 67,79)Under our procedure the honest are afforded the opportunity of practicing their ethics without being put to the disadvantage of contending with the unethical practices of the unscrupulous. We receive many letters, from all sections of our business life, indicative of good fruits flowing from trade practice rules. Recently two such expressions came to my attention, one from an industrial counsel of wide experience and a deep student of business problems, who said:”It (the Commission) has made a real contribution to the guidance of industry in the trade practice conference rules approved under its present procedure — which have been welcomed and approved by business men throughout the country.”In the other instance, the president of a large business concern wrote:”We feel that these conferences on trade practices are the most vital and worthwhile work any department in Washington can render the commercial interests. They are most timely and we are deeply interested in the results to be obtained.”The voluntary correction of bad practices is always preferable. Our Commission is only too glad to assist in bringing about such voluntary action. It avoids the necessity of calling into play compulsory legal processes against offenders, a procedure which is costly alike to business and the government. We all know how expensive litigation is and how disruptive it may be to business good-will. Friendly voluntary correction in the proper way serves the public interest and one’s own interest. In the Sugar Institute case last year, Chief Justice Hughes, speaking for the Supreme Court, recognized the value of voluntary cooperation in eliminating bad practices, when he said:”Voluntary action to end abuses and to foster fair competitive opportunities in the public interest may be more effective than legal processes. And cooperative endeavor may appropriately have wider objectives than merely the removal of evils which are infractions of positive law self-correction of bad competitive practices through proper cooperative endeavor is a most wholesome thing. Its value in the avoidance of more expensive methods is tremendous. As a stimulant to sound and prosperous business its benevolent influence may be felt in every detail of operation. In it industry has much to gain and nothing to lose. I commend it to your consideration. Robinson-Patman Act Another major function of the Federal Trade Commission is the enforcement of the Robinson-Patman Act, This is one of our important anti-monopoly laws, and the most recently enacted. It prohibits certain forms of price discrimination and related practices. The Act is essentially an amendment to or revision of Section 2 of the Clayton Act, which was passed in 19li+» Under the Clayton Act it has long been recognized that discrimination in price is one of the strongest weapons of monopoly. The dissolution suits against the Standard Oil and American Tobacco combinations strongly revealed this fact. There the Supreme Court specifically found that price discrimination had been an important factor in building up monopoly. Section 2 of the Clayton Act was intended to outlaw that method, and it was to strengthen such provisions of our antitrust laws that the Robinson-Patman Act was passed as the amending statute. Under this new law price discrimination is now declared unlawful where the effect may be “to injure, destroy or prevent competition with any person who either grants or knowingly receives the benefit of such discrimination or with customers of either of them”. There is also retained in the Robinson-Patman Act the provision of original Section 2 of the Clayton Act prohibiting discrimination in price where the effect thereof “may be to substantially lessen competition or tend to create a monopoly in any line of commerce. On the whole, this new law in substance applies the philosophy which the Supreme Court held to underlie the Clayton Act, namely, to prevent practices, which if not stopped, tend toward monopoly. Its general effect is to enlarge enormously the ability of a competitor to protect himself when he is unlawfully discriminated against .Proof of violation of the old law involved difficulties because of approves that discrimination in price was not unlawful when made “on account of” differences in the quantity sold, or which made “only due allowance” for differences in cost of selling or of transportation, or when made in good faith to meet competition. In this respect the new law; provides that upon proof that there has been a discrimination in price or in services or facilities furnished, the burden of rebutting the prima facie case thus made by showing justification shall be upon the person charged with the violation; and unless justification shall be affirmatively shown, the Commission is authorized to issue an order terminating the discrimination. It is also provided that the terms of the act shall not prevent the seller from rebutting the prima facie case proved against him by showing that his lower price was made or the services or facilities were furnished in good faith to meet an equally low price of a competitor or the services or facilities furnished by the competitor.  

Also, the new law extends the principle of non-discrimination into other areas than price as such. Whether they might be regarded as forms of indirect price discrimination under Section 2(a), or not, the Act specifically declares it unlawful: (a) To grant or receive, “except for services rendered”, anything in the way of commission, brokerage, or other compensation to an intermediary who is acting for or is subject to the control of any party to the transaction other than the one paying such compensation; (b) to pay or agree to pay compensation to, or for the benefit of, a customer for his services or facilities, unless the same compensation “is available on proportionally equal terms” to competing customers; (c) to furnish or agree to furnish any services or facilities to one purchaser that are not “accorded to all purchasers on proportionally equal terms.”The act concerns itself with transactions in commerce, as defined in the Clayton Act, which, in general, means interstate or foreign commerce and commerce in the various territories of the United States. It also is declared unlawful for any person “knowingly to induce or receive” a prohibited discrimination in price. This provision is very important to buyers, and the word “knowingly” appears to have been inserted for their protection. In the application of the law;, the Commission to date has issued twenty-one formal complaints. These cover all the more important phases of the law. Many of the cases have advanced to trial and to other stages along the path of legal procedure which they must follow to final decision. In one case, the brokerage concern complained of was dissolved by its organizers, and, upon proper showing of discontinuance, the proceeding was closed without prejudice to reopening it if the circumstances should warrant. The proceedings in the several other cases are being expedited with the view of having decisions by the Commission rendered at as early a date as possible. These proceedings may be considered in the nature of test cases on many disputed points. One group of cases presents alleged direct discrimination in price. This practice, it will be recalled, becomes unlawful in commerce when it injurious affects competition and exceeds savings in cost of manufacture, sale or delivery resulting from differing methods or quantities in which the commodities are sold or delivered. Alleged discrimination in the selling price of raw materials with the alleged effect of injuring competition between competing purchasers engaged in selling finished products is involved in some of the cases. The question of the legality of certain functional discounts also is raised. Likewise, violation of the brokerage section of the act is alleged. Two cases involve the question of the buyer’s responsibility under Section 2 (f). Under Sections 2 (d) and (e) falls the question of the legality of discrimination in advertising or promotional allowances. Certain of the pending cases raise these issues, and decision thereon will be entered in due course. Also, in relation to Section 2 (d), several of the complaints attack the practice of paying “push money” in the cosmetic trade.

How useful was this post?

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this post.

We are sorry that this post was not useful for you!

Let us improve this post!

Tell us how we can improve this post?

FavoriteLoadingAdd to favorites

Filed Under: Economy, Rights

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Translate

Categories

Top 20 favorite posts

  • Ten Herbs Lower High Blood Pressure (193)
  • If you think education is expensive, try ignorance. (188)
  • 5G Harms (183)
  • Words are the only things that last forever. (176)
  • Countries With Free College (173)
  • The ultimate test of management is performance. (166)
  • Take a second look, it costs you nothing. (161)
  • Water Survival (159)
  • Coronavirus Creates Wealth (158)
  • The secret of education is respecting the pupil. (155)
  • Man is as he believes. (155)
  • There is no worse torture than the torture of laws. (154)
  • Walk on a rainbow trail; walk on a trail of song and all about you be beauty. There is a way out of every dark mist, over a rainbow trail? (153)
  • It is a funny thing about life if you refuse to accept anything but the best you very often get it. (151)
  • Artificial Intelligence if Flawed (151)
  • A man's wisdom is his best friend folly, his worst enemy. (149)
  • Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty. (147)
  • The secret of change is to focus all of your energy not on fighting the old, but on building the new. (147)
  • Work joyfully and peacefully, knowing that right thoughts and right efforts inevitably bring about right results. (144)
  • 9/11 & 10/7 War Games (142)

Top Rated Posts

5 (2)

5G Harms

5 (2)

World Bridge

5 (1)

Are We Ruled by Wealthy Families?

5 (1)

Imagine Heavy Lifting Blimps Ending Wildfires & Droughts

5 (1)

Coronavirus Creates Wealth

5 (1)

Endangered US Species

5 (1)

Extinction Rebellion

RSS The Podcasts From Corbett Report

  • Episode 475 - Meet Mark Carney, Globalist Insider April 24, 2025 The Corbett Report
  • Episode 474 - What I Learned From The JFK Files April 16, 2025 The Corbett Report
  • Episode 473 - Algocracy: Government for the New World Order March 24, 2025 The Corbett Report
  • Episode 472 - Announcing REPORTAGE: Essays on the New World Order February 19, 2025 The Corbett Report
  • Episode 471 - The 8th Annual Fake News Awards January 29, 2025 The Corbett Report
  • Episode 470 - Pokemon Go(v) ... Another Conspiracy Confirmed! December 17, 2024 The Corbett Report
  • Episode 469 - A Brief History of the War on Syria December 11, 2024 The Corbett Report

Podcast Series

FDR - Second Bill of Rights

  • World Bridge
  • Noam Chomsky, “Requiem for the American Dream”
  • 9/11 & 10/7 War Games
  • Rockefeller Medicine – Corbett Report
  • Population Growth

Wise Quotes

In the moment you carry this conviction, is that moment your dreams will become reality.

June 21, 2020 By Sharin Leave a Comment

... [Read More]

Our liberty depends on freedom of the press and that cannot be limited without being lost.

June 21, 2020 By Sharin Leave a Comment

Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826) ... [Read More]

Most people ask for happiness on condition. happiness can only be felt if you don’t set any condition.

June 21, 2020 By Sharin Leave a Comment

- Arthur Rubinstein ... [Read More]

All science is concerned with the relationship of cause and effect. Each scientific discovery increase man’s ability to predict the consequences of his actions and thus his ability to control future events

June 21, 2020 By Sharin Leave a Comment

. Laurence J. Peter (born 1919) ... [Read More]

Your legacy should be that you made it better than it was when you got it.

June 21, 2020 By Sharin Leave a Comment

- Lee Iacocca ... [Read More]

Anger is never without reason, but seldom without a good one.

June 21, 2020 By jobs Leave a Comment

- Benjamin Franklin ... [Read More]

The death of democracy is not likely to be an assassination from ambush. It will be a slow extinction from apathy, indifference and undernourishment.

June 21, 2020 By Sharin Leave a Comment

Robert Maynard Hutchins (1899-1977) ... [Read More]

The chief factor in any man’s success or failure must be his. own character

June 21, 2020 By Frank Leave a Comment

- Theodore Roosevelt. ... [Read More]

I’ve always been in the right place at the right time. Of course, I steered myself there.

June 21, 2020 By Zardoz Leave a Comment

- Bob Hope ... [Read More]

In youth we learn, in old age we understand.

June 21, 2020 By Sharin Leave a Comment

Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach ... [Read More]

For the resolute and determined there is time and opportunity.

June 21, 2020 By Sharin Leave a Comment

- Ralph Waldo Emerson ... [Read More]

Democracy arose from men thinking that if they are equal in any respect, they are equal absolutely.

June 21, 2020 By Zardoz Leave a Comment

Aristotle ( B.C. 384-322) ... [Read More]

The only limits to our realization of tomorrow will be our doubts of today.

June 21, 2020 By jobs Leave a Comment

Franklin D. Roosevelt ... [Read More]

Success has always been easy to measure it is the distance between one’s origins and one’s final achievement.

June 21, 2020 By Sharin Leave a Comment

- Michael Korda ... [Read More]

By three methods we may learn wisdom First, by reflection which is noblest; second, by imitation which is the easiest and third by experience which is the bitterest.

June 21, 2020 By Zardoz Leave a Comment

Confucius ( B.C. 551-479) ... [Read More]

The end of science is not to prove a theory, but to improve mankind.

June 21, 2020 By Frank Leave a Comment

Manly P. Hall (born 1901) ... [Read More]

Science is the refusal to believe on the basis of hope.

June 21, 2020 By Sharin Leave a Comment

C. P. Snow (1905-1980) ... [Read More]

Sound health is the greatest gift contentedness the greatest of riches;  trust, the greatest of qualities; enlightenment, the greatest happiness.

June 21, 2020 By Sharin Leave a Comment

Buddha (B.C.568-488) ... [Read More]

There’s a hope for every woe, and a balm for ever pain, But the first joys of our heart, come never back again.

June 21, 2020 By Zardoz Leave a Comment

Robert Gilfillan (1798-1850) ... [Read More]

This is virgin territory for whorehouses.

June 21, 2020 By Frank Leave a Comment

Al Capone ... [Read More]

Turbulence is life force. It is opportunity. Let’s love turbulence and use it for change.

June 20, 2020 By Frank Leave a Comment

Ramsey Clark ... [Read More]

There is only one way to happiness and that is to cease worrying about things which are beyond the power of our will.

June 20, 2020 By Zardoz Leave a Comment

Epictetus (50-138A.D.) ... [Read More]

Equality is what does not exist among equals.

June 20, 2020 By Sharin Leave a Comment

Edward Estlin Cummings ... [Read More]

The process of scientific discovery is, in effect, a continual flight from wonder.

June 20, 2020 By Zardoz Leave a Comment

Albert Einstein (1879-1955) ... [Read More]

We take greater pains to persuade others that we are happy than in endeavoring to think so ourselves.

June 20, 2020 By Frank Leave a Comment

Confucius (B.C.551-479) ... [Read More]

I am the captain of my soul I rule it with stern joy and, yet I think I had more fun, when I was a cabin boy.

June 20, 2020 By Frank Leave a Comment

Keith Preston ... [Read More]

Science is the tool of the Western mind, and with it more doors can be opened than with bare hands. It is part and parcel of our knowledge and obscures our insight only when it holds that the understanding given by it is the only kind there is.

June 20, 2020 By Frank Leave a Comment

C. G. Jung (1875-1961) ... [Read More]

What is there given by the gods more desirable than a happy hour.

June 20, 2020 By Frank Leave a Comment

Catullus (B.C.84?-54?) ... [Read More]

Life is a perpetual instruction in cause and effect.

June 20, 2020 By Zardoz Leave a Comment

Emerson (1803-1882) ... [Read More]

It is not how much we have but how much we enjoy, that makes happiness.

June 20, 2020 By Frank Leave a Comment

Charles Surgeon (1834-1892) ... [Read More]

More Wise Quotes

  • Equal rights for all, special privileges for none.
  • God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference. 
  • Sing like no one’s listening, love like you’ve never been hurt, dance like nobody’s watching, and live like its heaven on earth.
  • Laugh when you can, apologize when you should and let go of what you can’t change. Kiss slowly, play hard, love deeply, forgive quickly, take chances, give everything and have no regrets. Life is too short to be anything but happy.
  • Thousands of candles can be lit from a single candle, and the life of the candle will not be shortened. Happiness never decreases by being shared.
  • Be who you are and say what you feel because those who mind don’t matter and those who matter don’t mind.
  • Our prime purpose in this life is to help others. And if you can’t help them, at least don’t hurt them.
  • Men love to wonder, and that is the seeds of science.
  • Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.
  • The secret of change is to focus all of your energy not on fighting the old, but on building the new.
  • Darkness cannot drive out darkness, only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate, only love can do that.
  • Your vision will become clear only when you can look into your own heart. Who looks outside dreams, who looks inside awakens.
  • A man is but the product of his thoughts. What he thinks, he becomes.
  • Define your life aims
  • Conserve and Concentrate Chi
  • Learn how to convert your knowledge into wisdom.
  • Stop dreaming; be here now.
  • Breathe consciously.
  • Control the Horse (emotions), care for the Carriage (body), awaken the Driver (intellect) and discover the Master (higher self).
  • Substitute intentional doing for accidental happening
  • Do only what is necessary, avoid needless karma.
  • Maintain a watchman at the gate of impressions.
  • In activities learn to see the play of the three forces. affirming, denying and reconciling.
  • Believe nothing; test everything.
  • Distinguish between the higher will and the lower wills.
  • Strength exerted gives more strength weakness indulged gives greater weakness.
  • Separate from all the manifestations of your machine.
  • Distinguish the quality of essence from that of the persona.
  • Stand on the bank of time’s river and watch the flow.
  • Twelve Riches of Life
  • Soon as you’ve got it, you’ve had it.
  • To talk goodness is not good, only to do is.
  • Justice is my being allowed to do whatever I like. Injustice is whatever prevents my doing so.
  • True wisdom consists not in seeing what is immediately before your eyes, but in foreseeing what is to come.
  • The discovery of what is true and the practice of what is good, are the two most important objects of philosophy.
  • Freedom of religion, freedom of the press, freedom of person under protection of habeas corpus and trial by juries impartially selected, these principles form the bright constellation which has gone before us and guided our steps through an age of revolution and reformation.
  • The art of being wise is the art of knowing what to overlook.
  • Well done is better than well said.
  • Be great in act, as you have been in thought.
  • Words are the only things that last forever.
  • Life is divided into three terms that which was, which is and which will be. Let us learn from the past to profit by the present and from the present to live better in the future
  • Perfect wisdom has four parts Wisdom the principle of doing things aright. Justice, the principle of doing things equally in public and private. Fortitude, the principle of not fleeing danger, but meeting it. Temperance, the principle of subduing desires and living moderately.
  • Words are one of our chief means of adjusting to all of the situations of  life. The better control we have over words, the more successful our adjustment is likely to be.
  • The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy.
  • Volatility of words is carelessness in action words are the wings of actions.
  • Obstacles are those frightful things you see when you take your eyes off the goal.
  • This is a world of action, and not for moping and droning in.
  • Happiness is not a reward it is a consequence. Suffering is not a punishment, it is a result.
  • Water and words, easy to pour impossible to recover.
  • Have patience and endure this unhappiness will one day be beneficial.
  • It is best to bear what can’t be altered.
  • The world is full of poetry, the air is living with it’s spirit, the waves dance to the music of its melodies and sparkle in its brightness.
  • Most men know what they hate, few know what they love.
  • The weak have remedies, the wise have joys superior wisdom is superior bliss
  • An unjust peace is better than a just war.
  • Work is work if you’re paid to do it, and it’s pleasure if you pay to be allowed to do it.
  • Anyone can be angry, that’s easy, but to be angry with the right person, to the right degree, at the right time, for the right purpose, and in the right way, that is not easy.
  • Peace can be reached through meditation on the knowledge which dreams give. Peace can also be reached through concentration upon that which is dearest to the heart.
  • Luck is tenacity of purpose.
  • An angry man is angry with himself when he returns to reason.
  • What light is to the eyes, what air is to the lungs, what love is to the heart, liberty is to the soul of man.
  • Tranquil pleasures last the longest, we are not fitted to bear long the burden of great joys.
  • Walk on a rainbow trail; walk on a trail of song and all about you be beauty. There is a way out of every dark mist, over a rainbow trail?
  • His high endeavors are an inward light that makes the path before him always bright.
  • Nature has perfections, in order to show that she is the image of God and defects, to show that she is only his image.
  • By the streets of “by and by”, one arrives at the house of “never”.
  • Those who know do not talk, those who talk do not know, keep your mouth closed, guard your senses, temper your sharpness, simplify your problems, mask your brightness, be at one with the dust of the earth, this is a primal union, he who has achieved this state is unconcerned with friends and enemies, with good and harm, with honor and disgrace. This therefore is the highest state of man.
  • Society is now one polished horde, formed of two mighty tribes, the bores and the bored.
  • Heaven, the treasury of everlasting joy.
  • An enterprise, when fairly once begun, should not be left till all that ought is won.
  • Knowledge is a treasure, but practice is the key to it.
  • We must all obey the great law of change. It is the most powerful law of nature.
  • By heaven we understand a state of happiness infinite in degree and endless in duration.
  • I know by my own pot how the others boil.
  • If you think education is expensive, try ignorance.
  • Men’s judgements are a parcel of their fortunes and things outward do draw the inward quality after them.
  • After learning the tricks of the trade, many of us think we know the trade.
  • Do not tell me how hard you work, tell me how much you get done.
  • Success is identified goals, maintained direction, determined effort and necessary sacrifice.
  • When someone gets something for nothing, someone else gets nothing for something.
  • Realize the dominating thoughts of your mind will eventually reproduce themselves in outward, physical action and gradually transform themselves into physical reality.
  • Nine-tenths of wisdom consists in being wise in time.
  • How much more grievous are the consequences of anger than the causes of it.
  • That man is richest whose pleasures are the cheapest.
  • The way of the superior man is threefold. Virtuous, he is free from anxieties; Wise, is free of perplexities, Bold, he is free of fear.
  • A mountain is composed of tiny grains of earth. The oceans is made up of ting drops of water. Even so life is but and endless series of little details, actions, speeches, and thoughts and the consequences whether good or bad of the least of them are far-reaching.
  • What is justice? To give every man his own.
  • The secret of education is respecting the pupil.
  • Opportunities are disguised by hard work, so most people don’t recognize them.
  • The journey of a thousand miles starts with a single step.
  • I don’t think much of a man who is not wiser today than he was yesterday.
  • The sweetest pleasure is in imparting it.
  • The quality of a person’s life is in direct proportion to their commitment to excellence, regardless of their chosen field of endeavor.
  • Everybody dies but, not everybody lives.
  • The ancient oracle said I was the wisest of all the Greeks, because I alone, of all the Greeks, know that I know nothing.
  • Only the educated are free.
  • Learning is weightless, treasure you always carry easily.
  • All things I really like to do are immoral, illegal or fattening.
  • What leads to unhappiness, is making pleasure the chief aim.
  • What we have to learn to do, we learn by doing.
  • Pleasure is frail like a dewdrop, while it laughs it dies.
  • Life is a dream walking, death is a going home.
  • Teachers open the door, you enter by yourself.
  • Strange, is it not? That the myriads who before us passed the door of darkness through, not one returns to tell us of the road which to discover we must travel to.
  • Man is as he believes.
  • Man has the possibility of existence after death. But possibility is one thing and the realization of the possibility is quite a different thing.
  • What Countries Rate Best?
  • Our life is what our thoughts make it.
  • For want of a nail the shoe was lost; for want of a shoe the horse was lost; and for want of horse the rider was lost; being overtaken and slain by the enemy, all for want of care about a horseshoe nail.
  • Take a second look, it costs you nothing.
  • Men were born with two eyes, but one tongue, in order that they should see twice as much as they say.
  • There can be economy only where there is efficiency.
  • Behind every fortune is a  great crime.
  • Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty.
  • If you understand everything, you must be misinformed.
  • Far more crucial than what we know or do not know is what we do not want to know.
  • It’s all in the question; no question about it. 
  • If you wish in this world to advance your merits you’re bound to enhance; you must stir it and stump it and blow your own trumpet or trust me you haven’t a chance.
  • It’s what you learn after you know it all that counts.
  • Power undirected by high purpose spells calamity; and high purpose by itself is utterly useless if the power to put it into effect is lacking.
  • Success has always been easy to measure. It’s the distance between one’s origins and one’s final achievement.
  • The philosopher is Nature’s pilot. And, there you have our difference: to be in hell is to drift; to be in heaven is to steer.
  • Who let the greedy in? Who let the needy out? Joni Mitchell song title “Banquet”.
  • A little ray of light shinning through,
  • All the gang of those who rule us, hope our quarrels never stop, helping them to split and fool us, just so they can remain on top.
  • Wise Quotes

More Posts from this Category

Champions of Truth

John Angelos
Talia Rothstein
Brooksley Born
Vandana Shiva
Joan Goodall
Noam Chomsky
Howard Zen
Robert Fisk
Jeremy Scahill
Richard D Wolff
Thom Hartman
Chris Hedges
Michael Moore
Rai Patel
Richard Scheer
Amy Goodman
Elizabeth Warren
Bernie Sanders
Edward Snowden
Chelsey Manning
Charles Ferguson
Michael Polland
Nelson Mandela
Desmond Tutu
Glenn Greenwald
Bob Fass
Yves Smith
Sarah Anderson
Arianna Huffington
Daniel Ellsberg
David Crow
Thom Hartman
Bonnie Raines
Jon Rains
Keith Forsyth
Betty Medsger
Patrick Cockburn
Seymour Hersh

wonder

Business Ecology Economy Farmers rights to a fair income FDR - Second Bill of Rights Freedom from unfair competition and monopolies. Government Health Housing Lyrics Photos Podcasts Rights Wise Quotes

change

Alfred North Whitehead answer Benjamin Franklin Bergen Evans Buckminster Fuller Charles Surgeon clothing and leisure with enough income to support them consumers Daniel Webster Edward Rickenbacker Elbert Hubbard Free Education George Massey governments Health James Percival Joaquin Miller John Bunyan John Foster John Stuart Mill La Rochefoucauld laws Malcolm Cowley Margaret Sangster men Nikolai Lenin NV Oliver Wendell Holmes Omar Khayyam opportunity Oscar Wilde Patrick Henry Richard Sheridan Richard Whately Rights Samuel Coleridge Sivananda Born success Theodore Roosevelt Thomas Jefferson William Garrison William James William Temple wisdom world

search

Blogroll

  • Documentation
  • Plugins
  • Suggest Ideas
  • Support Forum
  • Themes
  • WordPress Blog
  • WordPress Planet

Recent Posts

  • World Bridge
  • Coronavirus Creates Wealth
  • 5G Harms
  • Rockefeller Medicine – Corbett Report
  • Noam Chomsky, “Requiem for the American Dream”
  • The love of liberty is the love of others the love of power is the love of ourselves.
  • 9/11 & 10/7 War Games
  • Few things are impossible through diligence and skill. Great works are performed not by strength, but perseverance.
  • Population Growth
  • The only limits to our realization of tomorrow will be our doubts of today.
  • Extinction Rebellion
  • For the resolute and determined there is time and opportunity.
  • Second Bill of Rights FDR Speech Footage
  • In youth we learn, in old age we understand.
  • Largest Cleanup
  • Government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil; in its worst state, an intolerable one.
  • Republicrats are a Duopoly
  • Personal wealth has never been important to me. What is important is the team of people I work with.
  • Rat Duopoly, Demonic Rats vs Republic Rats
  • Work joyfully and peacefully knowing that right thoughts and right efforts inevitably bring about right results.

Categories

Business Ecology Economy Farmers rights to a fair income FDR - Second Bill of Rights Freedom from unfair competition and monopolies. Government Health Housing Lyrics Photos Podcasts Rights Wise Quotes

clouds

Alfred North Whitehead answer Benjamin Franklin Bergen Evans Buckminster Fuller Charles Surgeon clothing and leisure with enough income to support them consumers Daniel Webster Edward Rickenbacker Elbert Hubbard Free Education George Massey governments Health James Percival Joaquin Miller John Bunyan John Foster John Stuart Mill La Rochefoucauld laws Malcolm Cowley Margaret Sangster men Nikolai Lenin NV Oliver Wendell Holmes Omar Khayyam opportunity Oscar Wilde Patrick Henry Richard Sheridan Richard Whately Rights Samuel Coleridge Sivananda Born success Theodore Roosevelt Thomas Jefferson William Garrison William James William Temple wisdom world

it’s all in your head

Business Ecology Economy Farmers rights to a fair income FDR - Second Bill of Rights Freedom from unfair competition and monopolies. Government Health Housing Lyrics Photos Podcasts Rights Wise Quotes

peace

Alfred North Whitehead answer Benjamin Franklin Bergen Evans Buckminster Fuller Charles Surgeon clothing and leisure with enough income to support them consumers Daniel Webster Edward Rickenbacker Elbert Hubbard Free Education George Massey governments Health James Percival Joaquin Miller John Bunyan John Foster John Stuart Mill La Rochefoucauld laws Malcolm Cowley Margaret Sangster men Nikolai Lenin NV Oliver Wendell Holmes Omar Khayyam opportunity Oscar Wilde Patrick Henry Richard Sheridan Richard Whately Rights Samuel Coleridge Sivananda Born success Theodore Roosevelt Thomas Jefferson William Garrison William James William Temple wisdom world

live for life

Alfred North Whitehead answer Benjamin Franklin Bergen Evans Buckminster Fuller Charles Surgeon clothing and leisure with enough income to support them consumers Daniel Webster Edward Rickenbacker Elbert Hubbard Free Education George Massey governments Health James Percival Joaquin Miller John Bunyan John Foster John Stuart Mill La Rochefoucauld laws Malcolm Cowley Margaret Sangster men Nikolai Lenin NV Oliver Wendell Holmes Omar Khayyam opportunity Oscar Wilde Patrick Henry Richard Sheridan Richard Whately Rights Samuel Coleridge Sivananda Born success Theodore Roosevelt Thomas Jefferson William Garrison William James William Temple wisdom world

year of the dragon

May 2025
MTWTFSS
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 
« Aug    

rise above

Alfred North Whitehead answer Benjamin Franklin Bergen Evans Buckminster Fuller Charles Surgeon clothing and leisure with enough income to support them consumers Daniel Webster Edward Rickenbacker Elbert Hubbard Free Education George Massey governments Health James Percival Joaquin Miller John Bunyan John Foster John Stuart Mill La Rochefoucauld laws Malcolm Cowley Margaret Sangster men Nikolai Lenin NV Oliver Wendell Holmes Omar Khayyam opportunity Oscar Wilde Patrick Henry Richard Sheridan Richard Whately Rights Samuel Coleridge Sivananda Born success Theodore Roosevelt Thomas Jefferson William Garrison William James William Temple wisdom world

higher reason

Alfred North Whitehead answer Benjamin Franklin Bergen Evans Buckminster Fuller Charles Surgeon clothing and leisure with enough income to support them consumers Daniel Webster Edward Rickenbacker Elbert Hubbard Free Education George Massey governments Health James Percival Joaquin Miller John Bunyan John Foster John Stuart Mill La Rochefoucauld laws Malcolm Cowley Margaret Sangster men Nikolai Lenin NV Oliver Wendell Holmes Omar Khayyam opportunity Oscar Wilde Patrick Henry Richard Sheridan Richard Whately Rights Samuel Coleridge Sivananda Born success Theodore Roosevelt Thomas Jefferson William Garrison William James William Temple wisdom world

reasons why

Business Ecology Economy Farmers rights to a fair income FDR - Second Bill of Rights Freedom from unfair competition and monopolies. Government Health Housing Lyrics Photos Podcasts Rights Wise Quotes

purposes collide

Alfred North Whitehead answer Benjamin Franklin Bergen Evans Buckminster Fuller Charles Surgeon clothing and leisure with enough income to support them consumers Daniel Webster Edward Rickenbacker Elbert Hubbard Free Education George Massey governments Health James Percival Joaquin Miller John Bunyan John Foster John Stuart Mill La Rochefoucauld laws Malcolm Cowley Margaret Sangster men Nikolai Lenin NV Oliver Wendell Holmes Omar Khayyam opportunity Oscar Wilde Patrick Henry Richard Sheridan Richard Whately Rights Samuel Coleridge Sivananda Born success Theodore Roosevelt Thomas Jefferson William Garrison William James William Temple wisdom world

time has come

Alfred North Whitehead answer Benjamin Franklin Bergen Evans Buckminster Fuller Charles Surgeon clothing and leisure with enough income to support them consumers Daniel Webster Edward Rickenbacker Elbert Hubbard Free Education George Massey governments Health James Percival Joaquin Miller John Bunyan John Foster John Stuart Mill La Rochefoucauld laws Malcolm Cowley Margaret Sangster men Nikolai Lenin NV Oliver Wendell Holmes Omar Khayyam opportunity Oscar Wilde Patrick Henry Richard Sheridan Richard Whately Rights Samuel Coleridge Sivananda Born success Theodore Roosevelt Thomas Jefferson William Garrison William James William Temple wisdom world

life’s for living

Alfred North Whitehead answer Benjamin Franklin Bergen Evans Buckminster Fuller Charles Surgeon clothing and leisure with enough income to support them consumers Daniel Webster Edward Rickenbacker Elbert Hubbard Free Education George Massey governments Health James Percival Joaquin Miller John Bunyan John Foster John Stuart Mill La Rochefoucauld laws Malcolm Cowley Margaret Sangster men Nikolai Lenin NV Oliver Wendell Holmes Omar Khayyam opportunity Oscar Wilde Patrick Henry Richard Sheridan Richard Whately Rights Samuel Coleridge Sivananda Born success Theodore Roosevelt Thomas Jefferson William Garrison William James William Temple wisdom world

treasury of everlasting joy

Alfred North Whitehead answer Benjamin Franklin Bergen Evans Buckminster Fuller Charles Surgeon clothing and leisure with enough income to support them consumers Daniel Webster Edward Rickenbacker Elbert Hubbard Free Education George Massey governments Health James Percival Joaquin Miller John Bunyan John Foster John Stuart Mill La Rochefoucauld laws Malcolm Cowley Margaret Sangster men Nikolai Lenin NV Oliver Wendell Holmes Omar Khayyam opportunity Oscar Wilde Patrick Henry Richard Sheridan Richard Whately Rights Samuel Coleridge Sivananda Born success Theodore Roosevelt Thomas Jefferson William Garrison William James William Temple wisdom world

© 2010–2025 Wisdomvision LLC || Developed By Shakil

All original content on these pages is fingerprinted and certified by Digiprove