Now you're going to throw out random fallacy claims and hope I chase after them?

no
If fewer businesses means better products then unless there's a crossover point where that's no longer true (that you haven't defined) then you're wrong. Pricing business out of business doesn't raise the value of the good or service that remains. It only lowers the supply side of the supply/demand equation thus causing room for a price increase or quality decrease.
Are you saying that, as of right now, less valuable products are in higher demand than their more valuable counterparts?
I never mentioned states rights or minimum wage.

Don't try to troll me, son.
I think minimum wages should be raised. I don't think it had anything to do with M&S closure. Then the comment was made that a business that could afford X should be able to afford X. That's obviously a tautology (by using two different words for "afford" which means you have enough money, the other being "sufficient". Sufficient is akin to "enough". Reduced to LCD it's saying "if you had enough demand would you make enough money?" So there's either a nonsensical statement (if demand can never generate money sp no amount is enough, which rules out the first part of the question "enough demand" since "enough to generate the right amount of money" is obviously inferred) or the question was already answered by the time it was asked "enough demand to..."
So what are you arguing? You said that fewer businesses would mean more valuable products. You didn't define how you gauge value. If you mean a monopoly holds the most valuable products because they can charge whatever they want for it (like water during a drought), then you must mean quality vs price. How does having fewer businesses equate to better quality vs price and how does having more businesses equate to having less quality vs price, as options? Fewer options is fewer options. More options is always better.