Alpha trial lawyer pwns four "law & economics" dweebs at a symposium (vid)
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Poast new message in this thread
Date: April 14th, 2026 7:53 PM Author: snowy dingle berry
I cannot get over how much this trial lawyer sounds like that tattooed divorce lawyer guy who is ALL THE RAGE on social media.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o5z8-9Op2nM
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5857060&forum_id=2...id#49817863) |
Date: April 14th, 2026 7:59 PM Author: Floppy mother
Is this law wildly underenforced? My understanding is that nearly every supplier discriminates on price between different purchasers.
How does it work with manufacturers that make very slightly different products for different purchasers? Like, we sell model 123XYZ for $10 each to most retailers, but we sell the 123XYZ-A to Amazon for $8 each with some superficial distinguishing characteristic.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5857060&forum_id=2...id#49817881) |
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Date: April 14th, 2026 8:10 PM Author: Wine galvanic depressive university
Are you good at being a lawyer and do you want to join are firm or be co-counsel?
Yeah, it's completely rampant. But the statute and caselaw are very confusing, and the damages aren't as easy to calculate as Section 1 cases, so the big antitrust firms don't bother.
In your second paragraph you're really thinking like an RPA evader. That's what many of them try to do (and why Costco and Sam's Club have all these weird sizes that you don't see at grocery stores). But it's not really a defense, since the question is just whether the two products are of "like grade and quality." So they really have to be entirely different products, or it's a jury question (which makes it a cinch for people like me).
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5857060&forum_id=2...id#49817909) |
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Date: April 16th, 2026 12:18 PM Author: Wine galvanic depressive university
Not really. The RPA allows lower prices to a big buyer to the extent they are "cost-justified" -- meaning "economies of scale."
The funny thing about that phrase is that almost no one thinks critically about what it actually means. We've been trained to reason, "Walmart gets a 25% lower price? Must be b/c of economies of scale."
I'll give you one guess as to who trained us to think that way.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5857060&forum_id=2...id#49821358) |
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Date: April 16th, 2026 12:27 PM Author: disrespectful charcoal boistinker
Ok that makes sense then and the "lower margin for higher volume" argument doesnt work since that's not cost justified.
So your argument is that critics of this regime, who say rpa causes higher prices, are wrong because if you allowed "lower margin for higher volume" arrangements youre incentivizing market concentration?
That seems right and in line with the law. Therefore posner is wrong.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5857060&forum_id=2...id#49821380) |
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Date: April 16th, 2026 1:00 PM Author: Wine galvanic depressive university
We don't really look at it from the perspective of the supplier's profit margin, but I suppose that's one way to determine whether it's cost-justified. We just ask them for their COGS in selling to the favored versus the disfavored.
But wait a sec, this is useful -- they'll often say, "we don't keep track of individualized COGS." But asking them about their relative profit margin would seem to be essentially the same thing.
In practical terms though, "cost-justification" is a defense for them, rather than an element of our cause of action. And in reality, none of our defensemos has actually tried to prove the defense, because none of this shit is cost-justified in the first place; they just give Costco and Walmart a deep discount because they demand it.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5857060&forum_id=2...id#49821432) |
Date: April 15th, 2026 11:02 PM Author: Lake razzle-dazzle point
I asked you this once and don't remember what you said. I said isn't RPA just creating liability for sellers giving purchasers volume discounts? And I think you said the seller didn't give the same price sheet to walmart vs little guy (so that even if little guy somehow hit walmart volume, he still wouldn't get the best price). Put differently, is the point of RPA that volume discounts should be illegal, because they make it harder for small resellers to compete?
p.s. handsome guy. and respect for going in to an environment that i expect was hostile to him and his plaintiff rent seeking (george mason)
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5857060&forum_id=2...id#49820875) |
Date: April 16th, 2026 11:43 AM Author: appetizing nursing home antidepressant drug
Got to the "Posner just kind of pronounced it" part and had to stop. Don't have time right now
As a generalist from a transactional background, I couldn't litigate myself out of a paper bag. But I do strongly support any effort to do any or all of the following:
1. Eliminate personhood for legal entities
2. Eliminate the legal impetus for legal entities to chase ever-expanding profits/financial positions for their shareholders (this impossibility on lengthy time horizons enables many facially destructive problems facing society)
3. Break the predatory control that large legal entities use to destroy competition before devouring the consumer
It sounds like you're finding an angle to pursue #3. If I understand that right, you're doing something meaningful and important
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5857060&forum_id=2...id#49821308) |
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Date: April 16th, 2026 12:00 PM Author: Wine galvanic depressive university
Yeah, #3 is the goal of the RPA. Of course that ship has largely sailed because they stopped enforcing it in the late 70s, but we can still tilt at windmill$ and make a good life in Hawaii.
This is how Rep. Patman (D-Tex) described it:
"This bill has the opposition of all cheaters, chiselers, bribe takers, bribe givers, and the greedy who seek monopolistic powers which would destroy opportunity for all young people and which would eventually cause Government ownership, as the people of this country will not tolerate private monopoly.
This bill has the support of those who believe that competition is the life of trade; that the policy of live and let live is a good one; that it is one of the first duties of Government to protect the weak against the strong and prevent men from injuring one another; that greed should be restrained and the Golden Rule practiced."
We always include that quote when defensemos move for SJ, and I think it works pretty well.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5857060&forum_id=2...id#49821330) |
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Date: April 16th, 2026 1:02 PM Author: appetizing nursing home antidepressant drug
I guess it's true that, when government fails, we need cunts to take over
I'll revise, then. Be as cunty as possible in a way that involves relitigating the same winning case over and over for as many plaintiffs as possible, until you either force these entities to change or somehow manage to suicidally shoot yourself 10 times in the back of your head
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5857060&forum_id=2...id#49821434)
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Date: April 16th, 2026 12:58 PM Author: cracking carmine dilemma genital piercing
🏆 Speaker Ranking (by Persuasiveness)
(Since this is a panel, I’ll group them by role/position rather than exact names.)
🥇 1. Best Overall: Anti-revival (practical economist-type)
Position: Don’t revive the Robinson-Patman Act
Why they ranked #1:
Built a clean cause-and-effect argument
Focused on real-world mechanics (bulk discounts, logistics, pricing)
Stayed grounded in what regulators can actually enforce
👉 They win because they answered the hardest question:
“What happens if we actually do this?”
🥈 2. Strong but Incomplete: Pro-revival (fairness advocate)
Position: Bring the law back
Strengths:
Clear moral framing: big vs small = unfair
Highlighted power imbalances and market concentration
Easy for a general audience to emotionally connect with
Weakness:
Didn’t fully explain implementation
Vulnerable to: “This sounds good, but does it work?”
👉 Very persuasive emotionally, slightly weaker analytically.
🥉 3. Middle-ground / moderator-type voices
Position: Unsure / nuanced / conditional
Strengths:
Acknowledged complexity
Tried to balance both sides
Weakness:
Less memorable
Didn’t push a strong, decisive argument
👉 In debates, nuance without a clear stance usually loses impact.
🧠 What This Tells You About Winning Debates
The “winner” wasn’t the most passionate—it was the one who:
Explained mechanisms
Addressed tradeoffs
Stayed practically grounded
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5857060&forum_id=2...id#49821425) |
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