redsam, just curious, are you trying to impress with any of the following:
a. a reference to excel pivot tables
b. a reference to access
c. a reference to a book that you've written and had published
probably not, just thought i'd ask. is c really true? i'm curious, and maybe even impressed. details, please, if you don't mind.
regarding nationalization, as always, you should define your terms. i know shit about this subject, but i do know that it makes little sense to argue about a thing, until you've agreed upon
what that thing is. if you can't agree on that, best to focus on something else, or get back to swedish trannie pr0n.
in the obscure and muddled reaches of my memory, i find an association between nationalization and fascism. figures like mussolini come to mind.
in doing a quick search, i found an interesting quote which may or may not be worthless, but serves as a starting point for another question:
More broadly, fascism may be defined as any totalitarian regime which does not aim at the nationalization of industry but preserves at least nominal private property.
my question: what are the prominent examples of nationalization in action, over the last century, let's say? what's the basis for the common understanding (if there is any consensus at all) of what this word means today? in these examples, what happened? what didn't happen?
if you can establish an agreed-upon definition for that term, at least for the sake of the present discussion, then it becomes far easier to compare history to the current situation. then, maybe, you can say that obama, et al. are attempting to nationalize something.
unfortunately, the question of utility or greater good is another one entirely. related to be sure, but distinct.