Chapter 960 - 327, Raise funds, company goes public_3
For instance, organizing people to protest, expressing that the strength of the Apollo Chain has already established a monopolistic position in the United States’ retail industry.
They hope the U.S. Government will investigate this!
However, such voices evidently have little effect in the current U.S. political environment.
Presidents Harding, Coolidge, and Edgar Hoover have all pursued strategies for big business development, and their terms were the era with the most Trust organizations formed in the United States.
Of course, these three Presidents also received considerable benefits from these big corporations.
This can be said to be a mutually beneficial situation.
The one who truly attacked the U.S. Trust organizations was Franklin Roosevelt, the assertive President who likened big American corporations to hors d’oeuvres.
But to say that Franklin Roosevelt truly felt this way inside is not entirely accurate, because when Franklin Roosevelt ascended to the U.S. Presidency, the United States moved from the Roaring Twenties to the Great Depression!
To stabilize domestic stability in the United States, there needed to be a way for the populace to vent, so many large consortia that had previously opposed Franklin Roosevelt suffered under his administration.
This also involved another reason: the outbreak of World War II.
Franklin Roosevelt also used this opportunity to become one of the few Presidents of the United States in history who could control both the White House and the military simultaneously.
Having control of the military is the reason Franklin Roosevelt could be so assertive!
