Independent Institute

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The Independent Institute (TII)[1] was founded in 1986 by David J. Theroux[2], who is also the president of this scholarly public policy research institute.

Independent

In twenty years of operations, and despite addressing some of the most hotly debated issues and being attacked for doing so from left and right, TII has never had a single study refuted and is acclaimed by scholars and policy experts across the political spectrum[3]. TII has critiqued policies of both liberals and conservatives which it believes to be anti-social and inhibiting free choice. In this regard, it has been a vocal opponent of the "war on drugs", immigration restrictions, corporate welfare, censorship, the neoconservative ("Bush Doctrine") of pre-emptive war, reproductive rights, the death penalty, etc.

Antitrust Protectionism, Microsoft, annd Oracle

As with its unwavering opposition through its Center on Peace & Liberty[4] to the Bush administration's pre-emptive wars, national security statism and the trampling on civil liberties, another example of how TII has taken on tough issues and not backed down is the following:

The New York Times had on September 18, 1999 an article by Joel Brinkley called "‘Unbiased’ Ads for Microsoft Came at a Price". The ads had printed TII's Open Letter on Antitrust Protectionism, which was signed by 240 academic economists and claimed that the economics ("network externality" theory) was erroneous that formed the basis for the government's antitrust cases against such high-tech firms as Intel, Microsoft, Cisco Systems, VISA, and MasterCard. The signatories claimed that such policies were a form of mercantilism (corporatism or corporate statism) which would reduce competition and harm consumers, and were being pursued at the behest of rival firms who supported such measures as protectionism[5].

In his article, Brinkley alleged that TII's position on this issue was the direct result of support it received from Microsoft, which he claimed had been a "secret" donor. In reply, Theroux noted that TII's research and publications on this matter began many years before (with numerous studies by TII research fellows and the first TII book on the subject, Antitrust and Monopoly[6], published ten years earlier), prior to the "browser wars", the Microsoft case, the Internet itself, and any support from Microsoft for TII. He further noted that when the ads were released, 3 1/2 months prior to the Times article, he publicly anounced for transparency purposes at a June 2nd Washington press conference, that was covered by the national media, that Microsoft was then providing 7-8% of TII's total donations, far less than the 20% claimed by the Times article. Theroux further noted that Microsoft was never TII's largest supporter, a fact proven to be the case[7].

As Jacob Sullum, an opponent of all victimless crime laws, noted in a syndicated column, it was no coincidence that the Times story was published the exact Sunday before the day of the closing arguments[8]. Sullum stated that, "The story, which appeared just as closing arguments were being made in the Microsoft case, was based on purloined documents provided by 'a Microsoft adversary associated with the computer industry.'" Moreover, even David Callahan admitted in an attack article in the Washington Monthly that, "Given their world view, Theroux and his colleagues at the Independent Institute would probably be bashing the government prosecutors after Microsoft regardless of who gave them money." In response, Sullum then noted that, "This is no small concession, since Callahan’s argument hinges on the idea that corporate funding influences the conclusions that think tanks reach." Inded, as Theroux noted, "Our restriction on all funding is that it is non-contractual, meaning that the funding sources have no say in the research and how the funding is spent. All of the Institute’s work is based on one and only one criterion, peer-reviewed science." He further stated that, "There is absolutely no evidence that any aspect of the Institute’s research has ever been affected one way or the other by whether Microsoft or anyone was or was not a supporter of The Independent Institute. Furthermore, there is no evidence that any of the Institute’s findings are incorrect."

Theroux pursued the matter further, insisting that the Times piece's admission that another computer firm was behind the story was indeed the case. Nine months later, front-page articles appeared in the Wall Street Journal and New York Times confirming Theroux's claim, reporting that when finally cornered, Oracle Corporation CEO Larry Ellison had admitted to launching a clandestine campaign to discredit TII’s work[9]. Oracle had hired Terry Lenzner's CIA-connected Investigative Group International (IGI), fronting as "Upstream Technologies", to as Theroux noted, "employ back-alley tactics, subterfuge, and disinformation in order to achieve its aims. For an organization that uses IGI, 'Upstream Technologies', and others to front its operations, we fail to see how Oracle has a leg to stand on. And, since Oracle grew out of a contract with the CIA and is proudly named after that CIA project, what does this say about the corporate culture at Oracle? We challenge Oracle’s executives--and renew our invitation to Assistant Attorney General Joel Klein--to publicly debate the central economic, legal, and social issues of antitrust, competition, and high technology." Theroux further noted that six months prior to the Times article and threee months prior to the ads, he had sent Ellison a copy of the manuscript for the then forthcoming TII book, Winners, Losers & Microsoft[10], asking for comments. When published in that late spring, the book, which was based on TII's research from years earlier, critiqued "network externality" theory and received universal, glowing reviews in The Economist, Wall Street Journal, Wired, Upside, Financial Times, and elsewhere. Theroux added that clearly Ellison's response was that since he could not refute TII's analysis and well knew that TII could not be bought by anyone, his choice was to try to kick up enough dust to cloud the issue and prevent any real public discussion when the case was reaching its climax. (Theroux also noted that at no time during the antitrust case did Microsoft use any of TII's analysis.) However, despite the confusion that resulted from Oracle's campaign, TII's work remains unrefuted today and is viewed as the authoritative analysis of these issue.

Funding

The Independent Institute is supported by hundreds of foundations, businesses, civic organizations, and individuals through its membership program and through the sale of publications. As such, the Institute accepts no government nor any form of contract funding.

Grants according to 'Media Transparency'

What adds up to the total amount of $296,095.

Board of Advisors

In Memoriam Board of Advisors

Staff

  • Ken Barnes, Controller
  • Nichelle Beardsley, Customer Service Director
  • Bruce L. Benson, Senior Fellow
  • Elizabeth Brierly, Media Coordinator
  • Martin Buerger, Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
  • John Campbell, Development Director
  • Carl P. Close, Academic Affairs Director
  • Roland de Becque, Production Coordinator
  • Ivan Eland, Senior Fellow
  • Gabriel Gasave, Research Analyst
  • Anthony Gregory, Research Analyst
  • William J. Griffith, Fulfillment Coordinator
  • Fred Hamden, Sales and Marketing Director
  • Robert Higgs, Senior Fellow in Political Economy
  • Kenny Kasarda, Executive Assistant to the President
  • Christopher Layne, Research Fellow
  • Pat Rose, Public Affairs Director
  • Wendy McElroy, Research Fellow
  • Callie Rucker Oettinger, Public Affairs Counsel
  • Pat Rose, Public Affairs Director
  • Sanjeev K. Saini, Librarian
  • Alexander Tabarrok, Research Director
  • David J. Theroux, Founder, President and Chief Executive Officer
  • Mary L. G. Theroux, Vice President
  • Paul J. Theroux, Website Administrator
  • Alvaro Vargas Llosa, Research Fellow
  • Richard K. Vedder, Senior Fellow

Contact info

The Independent Institute

100 Swan Way, Oakland, CA 94621-1428
Orders: 1-800-927-8733
Phone (510) 632-1366

Fax (510) 568-6040

web site: http://www.independent.org

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