Patrick R. McElhiney believes that Presidents shouldn't be calling out large companies and suggesting that they should be broken up, because anti-trust cases should be left up to the courts. Anti-trust cases can be very complicated, and it doesn't serve the Justice Department to politicize the cases in favor of one side.

 

Breakup of Tech Companies

The breakup of Facebook and other large tech companies should be left up to the courts, if there is even an anti-trust case in the first place. If they are violating anti-trust laws, like Apple has recently with the App Store, then changes need to be made to allow for competition and award damages to the companies that have been disadvantaged, but not in a way that breaks apart the entire company in a way that it can't operate any longer. We need strong tech companies that are able to develop new products and services, like 5G, and it takes a lot of investment activity and research done by lots of employees to be able to develop those technologies, and they need to do it before their foreign counterparts invent those technologies, to ensure that America is in control of the tech sphere.

 

Sarbanes-Oxley Act Misuse by Big Tech Partners

The Sarbanes-Oxly Act shall not be misused by big tech or its partners, such as for the purpose of breaking up large corporate partnership structures to attempt to build a larger monopoly for any entity, including, however not limited to Microsoft Corporation or Google or Sun Microsystems. Examples of this misuse would be the use of the Sarbanes-Oxly Act to break up smaller but large organizational patterns to damage the competition, to have the ability to acquire all of the assets, such as by provoking unnecessary Intellectual Property lawsuits, to have all of the eggs in one basket, by damaging all of the partner organizations, to attempt to acquire everything through one central company.