The implication here is that this doesn't have a convincing case behind it?
Then when would you act? There are already plenty of monopolies and "lobbies" in America on the basis of the same efficiency (not acting until it's a "problem") - maybe proactive caution around big business should be the norm given all the historical abuses, from beef to chemicals to medicine to tobacco?
> The implication here is that this doesn't have a convincing case behind it?
The explication, I guess, yeah. I was and am explicitly saying that, yes.
> Then when would you act?
When the prediction that this may become a issue becomes more convincing, somewhere between where it's at now, and climate change, which already has a convincing case that it WILL become a issue (nay, IS one!)
> maybe proactive caution around big business should be the norm given all the historical abuses
Agreed, proactive caution towards things for which there is a convincing case that it is or may become an issue
As you mentioned, some of them have a convincing case behind them, though, like climate change. Those are worth entertaining, IMO