Mamdani Teaming Up With Lina Khan Paints a Grim Picture of What's To Come
She's baaaaack...
Fresh off of trouncing competitors like former Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Curtis Sliwa in this week's election, future New York City mayor Zohran Mamdani has announced his transition team. One name stands out as an especially bad harbinger of how Mamdani's mayoral tenure might play out: Lina Khan.
Khan, who served as Federal Trade Commission (FTC) chair under Joe Biden, will be one of four cochairs of Mamdani's transition team.
"The poetry of campaigning may have come to a close last night at 9, but the beautiful prose of governing has only begun," said Mamdani yesterday. "The hard work of improving New Yorkers' lives starts now."
Of course, one transition team member isn't going to make or break whatever agenda Mamdani has planned. And there are reasons enough to worry about that agenda with or without Khan involved. For instance, during his victory speech, Mamdani—a democratic socialist—opined that there's "no problem too large for government to solve, and no concern too small for it to care about."
That's a disturbingly totalitarian view of the role of the state.
But when it comes to helping improve ordinary people's lives, Khan is hardly up for the job—not if history is any indication.
Before and during her tenure as FTC chair, Khan was known for her insistence that the role of antitrust law should not be upholding a consumer welfare standard—that is, a focus on how business activities and consolidation will affect prices and outcomes for consumers. Khan argued for abandoning the consumer welfare standard in favor of a more nebulous framework, one in which competition was good for its own sake and the government should intervene against big businesses to protect the position of their smaller competitors, whether or not it resulted in consumers getting a better deal.
She was known to oppose mergers and acquisitions based on the size of the company involved, notwithstanding whatever positive effects might accrue from that size. Like Tim Wu and other "neo-Brandeisian" antitrust theorists, Khan seemed to believe that bigger was always bad.
In practice, this resulted in her launching or continuing a number of ill-conceived or ill-fated actions against big tech companies, including a failed bid to block Microsoft from acquiring Activision Blizzard and a failed attempt to ban Meta from buying a virtual reality fitness app. Even when successful, the Khan FTC's antitrust suits seemed sort of silly, aimed at stopping minor inconveniences, like it taking six clicks to cancel Amazon Prime (which was fewer clicks than it took to submit a comment to the FTC about the lawsuit).
It would be one thing if Khan had big ideas about big changes meant to meaningfully improve people's lives, and libertarians simply disagreed with the wisdom of those ideas. But she had big ideas—involving lots of government mandates, meddling, and overreach—about achieving small changes that no one really wanted, or that failed to significantly impact or improve things for anyone.
She railed against the kind of tech integrations and innovations that surveys routinely show that consumers appreciate. She helped funnel big Biden administration talk about bringing fairness and competition back to the U.S. economy into rules covering the minutia of how hotel bills are displayed. She presided over anti-tech antitrust investigations, of which the only benefit seems to be securing government settlements.
Khan's time as FTC chair amounted to a lot of government time and activity attempting to micromanage markets with very little practical effect on people's lives.
Meanwhile, Khan tried to expand the FTC's regulatory authority beyond what was allowed and further erode the separation of powers. Despite Congress considering a bill to ban noncompete clauses, Khan's FTC enacted a ban itself. It was later struck down, with a judge declaring that the FTC lacked the authority to do this.
It's unclear whether Khan will eventually have a permanent role in Mamdani's mayoral administration or is simply a transitory advisor. But either way, her involvement doesn't bode well for anyone hoping that Mamdani will somehow be less overreaching than he seems or for anyone hoping that he'll succeed at anything majorly transformative. Khan's forte seems to be in turning radical-sounding ideas into absolutely mundane executions that still, somehow, flop.
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NYC deserves the lubeless ass pounding it is about to receive.
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Reluctantly and strategically.
It'll be good for sex!
Rectally and repeatedly.
Does ENB live in NYC?
Iirc, she used to but moved to the midwest to be closer to an aging family member. Ohio I thought.
She lives in Mike's heart.
Cincinnati.
And they'll get it good and hard!
All female transition team? I think he forgot to submit himself to a transition.
Four co-chairs?
Yep, definitely communist.
Ministry of Transitioning.
He only has one wife. He's allowed three more.
As an elite Party member in good standing, he is allowed whatever he decides he’s allowed.
A 9 year old bride is his cultural heritage.
There are plenty of twelve year olds in N.Y. still single.
With barely 50% of the vote Mamdani won't be seizing much of anything.
We need to start simply calling Marxists - Marks. They want to get taken.
I prefer to call them ‘traitors’.
Mamdani cannot be a democratic socialist no matter what he chooses to call himself, because democracy and socialism are mutually exclusive concepts. In a democracy "the people rule" only has meaning in the nevative sense that no one rules over the people. In a socialist society, by definition, the people are subjects and the government may require each citizen to cooperate for the good of the group, being subservient to that goal. This is essentially European in origin where the sovereign rules and the people are her subjects. The founders of the American experiment broke from this tradition and explicitly stated that the people constitute the government to serve them and protect each individual's sovereignty.
My friend is married to a Romanian. Her parents remember socialism. People who didn't work went to prison because they weren't serving the state.
Îmi amintesc.
Illie Nastase
The scumbag wackos screaming in the streets don’t realize that most of them will be the first ones to go should their overlords ever manage a full Marxist revolution. The troublemakers will have to go.
Filth like Arty, KAR, etc. will all be executed by The State. And they’re too stupid to understand that.
So the lunatics are taking over the asylum. The last sane person out of NYC can turn out the lights (if they haven't already gone out).
No worries, mate.
New York has been under water since the eighties, according to the global warming crowd in the sixties.
Monopolies lead to increased cost to consumers, inferior products, and lack of innovation. History has shown this over and over again.
But only if it's not the government that holds the monopoly? I think you need to work on your principles and your consistency a bit more - they seem to be lost in your total self-contradictions!
Governments can be changed by the people every four years. Private companies have zero accountability to the public.
Except for all the countless laws and regulations, p,us the ability to sue for damages in civil court. So sure Tony, zero accountability.
Goddamn, you democrats are retarded.
Tony never heard about shareholders.
Or customers. Monopolies are only a short term illusion.
Your relationship with a "monopoly" is voluntary and can be unilaterally terminated at any time. This is not true of your relationship with the government. The exception is when an industry or business captures the government. Examples include the requirement to purchase a product like insurance or to deal only with government-approved entities like utility companies that tend to have a regional monopoly protected by insurmountable barriers to entry created by the government.
If the private companies are represented on Wall St. they are accountable to their investors.
Ha ha.
Zohran Mamdani has announced his transition team.
"transition team" indeed.
Transitioning from "standing on the brink of total collapse" to "falling over the edge"
"When I took office, we stood at the edge of a precipice. Now, we have taken a bold step forward."—Old Russian joke.
How do they transition from something that's already failing?
They transition to having failed.
Then transition to mistakes of the past.
BTW, I love that old Russian joke, it sounds like the democrats.
"Downsize it to compete on fair terms." Yeah, we wouldn't want smart people to cause a price-lowering revolution nor figure out how to compete with sale of better quality merchandise, because socialism doesn't have to care how big nor how high prices get if government can pay for all products that can take New Yorkers off of their slab to improve their quantity of life.
Yeah, well, she has JD Vance's seal of approval:
“There are all these sort of articles like the strange bed-fellows or the strange alliance between Elizabeth Warren and JD Vance and I think this issue is actually sort of where it fundamentally comes out of. A lot of my Republican colleagues look at Lina Khan (FTC Chair)…uh, and they say, ‘well Lina Khan is sort of engaged in some sort of fundamentally evil thing’. Uh, and I guess I look at Lina Khan as one of the few people in the Biden administration that actually I think is doing a pretty good job and that sort of sets me apart from most of my Republican colleagues…”
And from the same talk, JD Vance tells us he has zero desire to ever get rid of the FTC:
“Um we have to be honest with ourselves about how much we can do through regulation and how much we can do through anti-trust. I mean, look, uh if we’re being honest with ourselves, as much as I think we should be more assertive in breaking up some existing technology incumbents uh that isn’t gonna happen…because there are a lot of barriers to that, right?…and not to have an FCC (sic, topic FTC), I think that is very very harmful towards that effort...”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DuykIQ15Lag
like it taking six clicks to cancel Amazon Prime (which was fewer clicks than it took to submit a comment to the FTC about the lawsuit).
And those 6 clicks are infinitely fewer than the clicks it takes to cancel “enrollment” in the Ponzi scheme of Social Security into which the government overlords forced me more than 35 years ago, as I have yet to find the right clicks on either the website of HHS or the Social Security Administration websites to get out of that “membership”
Reason magazine: JD Vance is wrong. About everything.
"The poetry of campaigning may have come to a close last night at 9, but the beautiful prose of governing has only begun," said Mamdani yesterday.
Possibly the most evil thing I’ve ever heard.
100% safe and effective.
The words of Lenin and Trotsky ringing in his ears.
Last Republican in NYC: "Khan, you bloodsucker! You're going to have to do your own dirty work now! Do you hear me? Do you? Still, "old friend"! You've managed to kill just about everyone else, but like a poor marksman, you keep missing the target."
Khan: "Perhaps I no longer need to try. I've done far worse than kill you. I've hurt you. And I wish to go on hurting you. I shall leave you as you left me, marooned for all eternity (on) a dead planet."
LRINYC: [enraged] KHAAANNNN!
[echo]
LRINYC: KHAAANNNN!
The calendar was run by a mechanism locked in a room behind the screen, unrolling the same film year after year, projecting the dates in steady rotation, in changeless rhythm, never moving but on the stroke of midnight. The speed of Dagny's turn gave her time to see a phenomenon as unexpected as if a planet had reversed its orbit in the sky; she saw the words "September 2" moving upward and vanishing past the edge of the screen.
Then, written across the enormous page, stopping time, as a last message to the world and to the world's motor which was New York, she saw the lines of a sharp, intransigent handwriting:
Brother, you asked for it!
-Francisco Domingo Carlos Andres Sebastian d'Anconia
She did not know which shock was greater: the sight of the message or the sound of Rearden's laughter - Rearden, standing on his feet, in full sight and hearing of the room behind him, laughing above their moans of panic, laughing in greeting, in salute, in acceptance of the gift he had tried to reject, in release, in triumph, in surrender.
Double think means the power of holding two contradictory beliefs in one's mind simultaneously and accepting both of them.
We know that no one seizes power with the intention of relinquishing it.
It was a bright cold day in April and the clocks were striking thirteen.
It's obvious, by watching the Miami Dolphins this year, that all their players have noncompete clauses.