imhomerjay said:
Can people in the town, generally speaking, get their MTV and their ESPN from another source? Then it's not a monopoly. Suggesting it is is a bit like suggesting McDonald's holds a monopoly in town because the Burger King across the street uses a different method of cooking burgers.
Think about the late 1800s. The "Trusts" as they were called back then owned the railroads and owned the production and distribution of petroleum. It is that era that we root most of our thinking about the meaning of monopoly.
A farmer living out in a place like Scott City, Kansas who needed kerosene to heat his home and cook his meals thought he was living under monopoly. Whatever price the combined power of big oil and big railroad decided would be the price of oil he had to pay. Under your view
imhomerjay, the fact that he could put a gallon jug on his saddle and ridden 600 or 700 miles to the nearest store selling kerosene that was not priced per monopoly is proof he was not under monopoly. Never mind that his crop didn't get planted or harvested while he road horseback a thousand miles... never mind that his wife and children froze to death because he was not there to scavange firewood of some kind to keep the house warm.... those are minor details in your mindset.
And of course, if his crop did get planted and harvested, he was not under the thumb of the rail monopoly to ship his wheat at whatever price they chose to set. He could always throw a couple of burlap bags of wheat across his horse and make that 1,200 mile trip again and sell his wheat on a more open, thriving market. I'd say in 1,300 trips he could deliver his crop and say to the railroad: screw you!
And I can get a 3G cellphone and download my desired video from Hulu and at a monthly cost of several hundred dollars get some fuzzy video on my TV and I can turn to the cable company and say: screw you!
So. I guess you are right. The cable is not a monopoly. The water company is not a monopoly. The power company is not a monopoly.