How Post-Watergate Liberals Killed Their Populist Soul

Fantastic piece tracing the history of monopoly control since the Depression and its political and economic effects.

Patman’s career reads as downright passionate, often marked by a vitality you might see today in an Elizabeth Warren—as when, for example, he asked Fed Chairman Arthur Burns, “Can you give me any reason why you should not be in the penitentiary?” Despite his lack of education, Patman had a savvy political and legal mind. In the late 1930s, the Federal Reserve Board refused to admit it was a government institution. So Patman convinced the District of Columbia’s government to threaten foreclosure of all Federal Reserve Board property; the Board quickly produced evidence that it was indeed part of the federal government.

Source: How Post-Watergate Liberals Killed Their Populist Soul – The Atlantic