“The larger the unit of capital present, the easier the transaction called emission of credit. Centralized lending of this kind (which is today universal) actively promotes the absorption of the small man by the great, the reduction of small property owners to a proletarian condition.” MenKindWisdomTodayPoliticsEconomyConditionsEasierUniversalPropertyCreditLiberalismOwnersUnitsReductionEmissionsTransactionsLendingAbsorptionSmall Man Book:The Crisis Of Civilization Source: The Crisis Of Civilization
“The very large units of production and exchange have access to credit on a large scale, sometimes without any cover at all, merely upon the prospect of their success, and always upon terms far easier than are open to their smaller rivals. It is perhaps on this line of easier credit that large capital today does most harm to small capital, drives it out and ruins it.” DoeSometimesTodayPoliticsTermLinesEconomyEasierProductionsCreditHarmAccessScalesRuinsLiberalismUnitsRivalsLarge Scale Book:The Crisis Of Civilization Source: The Crisis Of Civilization
“New information technologies-including email, the web, and computerized blast-faxes and phone calls-have fundamentally changed the landscape of political competition in modern democracies. They've done so in three ways: by dramatically boosting the access of individuals and special interests to politically potent information, by making it easier for such people to coordinate their activities and exert political power, and by greatly increasing the pace of events within our political systems.” PeopleWayDonePoliticalThreePoliticsIndividualInterestTechnologyDemocracyModernSpecialEventsInformationChangedInternetEasierActivityCompetitionIncludingPhonesAccessLandscapePaceEmailBlastPolitical SystemsPhone CallsInformation TechnologyPolitical PowerSpecial InterestsCoordinatesNew InformationThree WaysFax Author:Thomas Homer-Dixon