Hold 'em Accountable
You can vote for President. You can vote for Governor. You can vote for Congress. You can even vote for the person deciding whether your county installs another stop sign nobody asked for. But the company deciding whether your electric bill jumps another $40 this summer? That decision was largely made long before you moved in. In this episode of Hold ’em Accountable, we take a deep dive into one of the most powerful systems most Americans rarely think about until the bill arrives: utility monopolies. Most Hoosiers believe electricity works like a market. Choice. Competition. Capitalism. The best company wins. The reality is very different. For most people, electricity is a regulated monopoly. Your provider is determined by where you live. You don't shop for electricity. You inherit it. And that changes everything. Electricity is no longer a luxury. It's not even a convenience. It is survival infrastructure. Heat in the winter. Air conditioning in the summer. Medical devices. Refrigeration. Internet access. Remote work. Modern life itself. That is why utility monopolies were allowed to exist in the first place. The original bargain was simple: utility companies would receive exclusive service territories, and in exchange, government regulators would ensure public accountability, reliable service, and reasonable rates. But what happens when the monopoly remains and accountability becomes harder to see? In this episode, we explore: ⚡ The history of utility monopolies in America ⚡ Why electricity became essential infrastructure ⚡ How monopoly utility territories actually work ⚡ The role of the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission (IURC) ⚡ Why electric bills seem more confusing every year ⚡ Utility lobbying and political influence ⚡ Rate increases, riders, fees, and cost recovery mechanisms ⚡ Data centers, artificial intelligence, and growing energy demand ⚡ Why consumers often feel powerless inside the system ⚡ What reforms could restore accountability and public trust We also examine one of the most important questions facing Indiana and the country: When consumers cannot realistically leave, who protects the public from the monopoly? Because unlike most industries, utility companies don't compete for customers the traditional way. Most already have them. That means accountability depends on regulators, lawmakers, public oversight, and transparency. And when those systems become too complicated for ordinary people to follow, trust starts to erode. This isn't an anti-utility episode. Electric workers matter. Linemen matter. Engineers matter. Reliable infrastructure matters. The question isn't whether utilities should exist. The question is whether the public still has a meaningful voice in the systems they depend on every day. Because this story isn't really about electricity. It's about power. Who has it. Who profits from it. And who gets left out of the conversation. 🎥 Watch now and decide for yourself: Has the original bargain between utilities and the public been broken? ---------------------------------------- 🎙️ About Hold 'em Accountable Hosted by retired Marine Derrick Holder, Hold 'em Accountable takes a deep dive into politics, public policy, history, and the issues affecting everyday Americans. No spin. No talking points. Just receipts. You can also ask Alexa to play Hold 'em Accountable with Derrick Holder. #UtilityMonopoly #ElectricBills #IndianaPolitics #EnergyPolicy #HoldEmAccountable
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