"Unable to maintain their government-granted monopoly, the powerful railroad interests turned to government to do the regulating and price-fixing which they were unable to do themselves. In fact, the pressure that induced Congress to enact the Interstate Commerce Act of 1887 did not come from reformers bemoaning abuses by the powerful railroad interests; it came from the railroad interests themselves, asking Congress to shield them against the harsh winds of competition."
--Dan Smoot [Howard Drummond Smoot] (1913-2003)
former supervising member of the FBI headquarters staff
in the Washington Office and one of the first to research
and publish on the activities of the Council on Foreign Relations
Source: The Business End Of Government (1973)
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