I normally don't like Intel's business practices, but he makes a good point (read the CNET article for more elaboration). He's not talking about the pressure from the FTC or anything like that. He's talking about the ridiculous taxes and laws that various governments (federal, state, local, etc..) setup that hinder business rather than promote it.
Remember that Simpson's episode where they were going to film the Radioactive Man movie? The town drove away the movie producers because they started taxing EVERYTHING. Well, that might have been fiction, but lots of communities behave that way. Microsoft would be located in Albuquerque today if it weren't for stupid tax laws in place when Bill Gates used to live there.
Some small county sees a big corporation and doesn't think "wow, thanks for all those jobs you provide, pumping in money to people's pockets which then gets spent at other shops, benefitting all of us". No, they think "how can we get more of those millions to fund important projects like gold-plated toilets in City Hall and putting up new fancy lights on Main Street to replace those old, drab, yet fully functional lights we already have?"
My uncle incorporated his business a few years ago. His single largest expense (more that wages, resources, anything) was hiring a business lawyer to make sure he complied with all the ridiculous laws (and he incorporated in Delaware, which was supposed to make it easier).
The days of forming a company in your mother's garage are done for. Heck, if you try to sell anything out of her garage, the local police would probably bust your ass for zoning violations. That's the main reason you hardly see lemonade stands anymore, them kids ain't got the right permits.