Slashdot Mirror


The Right's War On Net Neutrality

jamie writes "To understand the debate being waged in the United States over Net Neutrality, it's important to understand just how drastically one side has been misled. The leaders of the American Right are spreading the lie that Net Neutrality is a government takeover of the internet, with the intention of silencing conservative voices. (Limbaugh: "All you really have to know about Net Neutrality is that its biggest promoters are George Soros and Google.") This may be hard to believe to those of us who actually know what it's about — reinstating pre-2005 law that ensured internet providers could discriminate on the basis of volume but not content. Since the opposing side is so badly misinformed, those of us who want the internet to remain open to innovation and freedom of expression have to help educate them before the debate can really be held."

945 comments

  1. Of course by Daverd · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Whenever someone disagrees with you, it must be because they are badly misinformed.

    1. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not familiar with the arguments, but it seems to me that the poster has given good reason to bolster his claim that people could be misled by the opposing view.

    2. Re:Of course by the_fat_kid · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      No, in the case of a tool like Limbaugh, I can accept that he might just be telling a lie.

      --
      -- Sig under construction...
    3. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Not "whenever." But in this particular case, yes, people who oppose net neutrality because they believe it's about censoring conservative voices on the Internet are misinformed.

      The only way their argument makes any sense is if they believes that ANY gov't regulation will inevitably lead to oppression, which is, frankly, a pretty childish belief. Put down the Ayn Rand, folks, and come back to the real world. Gov't regulating lead-free drinking water is not an attack on liberty.

    4. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, in your opinion it is informative to call net neutrality a "trojan horse for further meddling by the government" as the minority leader said? Or are you saying that the everyone can tell that Limbaugh is full of shit when he says this is about "total government control of the Internet"?

      I'm not an American and nor do I take part in the unintelligent america-bashing that is all the rage nowadays, but I will say that your public debate is often useless. Somewhat entertaining, but totally void of any real debate or intent to convey information... Misinformation is an apt word in that case, I guess.

    5. Re:Of course by dkleinsc · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In this case, though, the pattern (seen here on /. as well as from Rush et al) is that the right wing set up a straw man of what net neutrality it is in order to knock it down. Specifically, they claimed that the proposal was about something similar to the Fairness Doctrine, when it is fact completely different.

      It was rather clever of them, really: They took the fact that "Neutrality" and "Fairness" were similar ideas, and used just that to make a large segment of the population think that what "Net Neutrality" meant was "Barack Obama ensuring that nobody can say anything bad about him on the Internet".

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    6. Re:Of course by commodore64_love · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I used to listen to Limbaugh (2002) until I heard him comparing the then-new Prius and Honda Insight hybrids to yugos, and claiming they can't run faster than 55. Well I owned an insight and knew that was a flat lie (its top speed was 120).

      More recently he's been saying the Chevy Volt hybrid only goes 40 miles. Limbaugh ought to take a page from Glenn Beck and actually RESEARCH a topic before speaking because while the Volt Electric Mode only goes 40 miles, it also has a gasoline engine that turns-on when the battery is empty. Stupid shithead Rush... I refuse to listen to him anymore because if he can't get that basic tiny fact straight, it makes me wonder what else he's getting wrong.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    7. Re:Of course by Scrameustache · · Score: 2

      Whenever someone disagrees with you, it must be because they are badly misinformed.

      Nah, sometime they're just flat out stupid.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    8. Re:Of course by Teancum · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Whenever someone disagrees with you, it must be because they are badly misinformed.

      Often it can be the case, and in this case I think it is a bit of a problem. The issue is one that is being politically charged and turned into a partisan issue because those who are promoting this current concept of "net neutrality" is also doing the concept a disservice as well. From the Daily Kos article itself:

      No one, other than the big telcos, seems to be particularly happy with the FCC's Net Neutrality rules, as Chris documented earlier.

      Unfortunately in American politics, a clean and clear "left vs. right" paradigm doesn't work either and there are also many aspects to somebody's political beliefs that by turning this into a "liberal vs. conservative" issue is doing themselves and this issue in particular a major disservice.

      The core of the problem is the FCC getting into the mix here where they clearly lack the authority to act at all, and where this really ought to be a congressional issue or better yet something where the government simply stays out of the whole issue altogether. It is also a problem where just a few gatekeepers have somehow been able to get themselves to a position where they can in theory "control" the internet, and I contend it is because of too much regulation of the internet that this situation has happened. If private individuals were allowed to connect to whomever and however they wanted for a network connection, most of these problems would go away. It is the legal restrictions which enact barriers to competition and the encouragement of government-backed monopolies which has forced this situation to a head.

      While I'll be the first to admit that Rush Limbaugh is speaking out through ignorance of the issue, this politically charged reply is showing equal signs of ignorance for what is unfortunately a very complex issue with multiple "solutions" if the goal is to permit more freedom for individuals to express themselves as they so choose.

    9. Re:Of course by Pojut · · Score: 1, Insightful

      People are misled on all sides by anything that's been given a political bent. Net Neutrality has been especially susceptible to this; when non-geeks can barely understand what it's about, you can't expect highly-partisan tools to understand it, either.

    10. Re:Of course by commodore64_love · · Score: 2

      It's not a Strawman when people sitting in the white house are saying, "When we pass net neutrality we should also include the fairness doctrine as part of the regulations." (Cass Sunstein and Jones). Or the new Diversity Chair in the FCC saying it's time to revive the fairness doctrine for both broadcast television AND cable news AND internet websites. I've seen the videos/heard the audios myself. Or the Congressman saying MSNBC and FOXnews should be yanked off the air and the internet. Or the White House calling TRUtv and demanding Governor Ventura's Internment Camps episode be pulled from the TV and the web. Or Youtube pulling the 'obama deception' video because they said it's wrong to criticize a sitting president.

      As it turns out the NN rules passed are actually harmless, but the FCC was immediately criticized for it, because many say they didn't go far enough to censor websites they don't like (like Alex Jones).

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    11. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's paid to get it wrong. The more misinformed his audience the further fractured from the other news sources their internalization of the issues, the less likely they are to continue to watch real reporting (e.g. the Beeb)

    12. Re:Of course by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 1

      On this one you can't even attribute to stupidity what might actually be malice.

      --
      My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
    13. Re:Of course by Batmunk2000 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It isn't an issue of the concept being sound - it is the practical enforcement of the concept. Good ideas implemented poorly by a government that can't keep the post office viable or get aid to hurricane victims isn't going to help anyway. For me the debate over NN is moot. The real debate is can the FCC implement it without corruption or government creep? Sadly, there is little evidence to show they can.

    14. Re:Of course by Pharmboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You are misunderstanding Rush. Believe me, he has one hell of a research staff, and often he isn't saying what you think he is saying. If he is masterful at anything, it is at parsing words. If he says something like "The Chevy volt is only gonna let you drive 40 miles on batteries" and other think that means it will only go 40 miles, well, thats ok for him. He even plays back his "quotes", and again, he parses his words carefully so that in a single quote, the meaning might be obvious but in the full context, it may be misleading. Lots of "what if....[statement]" or " maybe...[statement]...who knows" type of noncommittal comments.

      In other words, he talks out of both sides of his mouth. He is entertaining, and I see the attraction. I used to listen. But remember, he is an entertainer, not a journalist. Even he admits that, then acts like a journalist.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    15. Re:Of course by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 3, Interesting

      While the idea that net neutrality is about turning the internet into a liberal nanny state is, naturally, unmitigated hogwash, there is a certain twisted "logic" to its appeal...

      First, of course, is the "zOMG, only governments are capable of regulation and/or oppression, free markets are free as in freedom, all historical evidence to the contrary!" brigade. There are people who think that "free market" is some sort of god-given default state, not something created by the interesection of specific culture and rule of law. This tends to lead to a view where "free market" is what happens with no regulations, and every subsequent regulation is a brick in the road toward socialist fascism.

      Second, where do conservative commentators have their greatest strength, in terms of market penetration, viewership numbers, etc? Radio and Cable. On the radio, there is pretty much Right win talk, apolitical top-40 pop drivel, and NPR coming in a distant third. On cable, you have the rabid ideologues on Fox, and the slightly more respectable-looking "centrist" corporatistists elsewhere. The left pretty much has comedy central.

      Now, given that, there is an obvious ideological and economic alliance of interests between team Cable, RF broadcasters, and the major entertainment and "news" figures whose fortunes are alligned with theirs.

      The ideological alignment helps; but even if Limbaugh were host of the "Glorious People's Revolutionary Communism Hour", he would probably be dismissing net neutrality as a plot of the capitalist running-dogs and their international banking masters of deceit. Cable and Radio are two media where right wing figures have played particularly well. The fact that they are standing in defense of their bread-and-butter medium against the unfettered internet access that would(through a mixture of streaming video and pressure to re-allocate spectrum toward wireless IP networks rather than AM/FM/UHF/VHF broadcasts) cut into that medium's viability seems entirely logical, even without the ideological component.

    16. Re:Of course by jedidiah · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's still a strawman to conflate the two even if both are mentioned at the same time.

      They are different things and should be treated as such. Certainly the inclination of Radio and TV trolls to muddle the two doesn't help keep these concepts isolated from one another. It doesn't add to the discussion or help governance.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    17. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, he's a liar who gets buckets of money by misleading a bunch of racist, uneducated, slackjawed hicks. Also by running ads for crummy products such as anything made by Bose.

    18. Re:Of course by JackieBrown · · Score: 3, Informative

      But in this particular case, yes, people who oppose net neutrality because they believe it's about censoring conservative voices on the Internet are misinformed

      They think this because the people pushing net neutrality are usually the same ones pushing to bring back the Fairness Doctrine

      Before people think about how stupid people are for making this assumption, look at all the reactions whenever Rush says anything. People are quick to assume what he meant rather than to listen to what was actually said (like the poster above stating Rush said the Chevy Volt hybrid only goes 40 miles and leaving out that he actually said Chevy Volt hybrid only goes 40 miles on battery power before switching over to gas power.)

    19. Re:Of course by Batmunk2000 · · Score: 0

      This is what the Left doesn't seem to "get" though. NN CAN be abused because of the stupid FCC. Once upon a time it would have been unheard of to have fines for swearing on TV yet they are common place today. The FCC effectively censors all forms of media all the time. Somehow you think the Internet will be different? Dream on. Both "sides" are in an alarmist dream land on NN.

    20. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If you actually had really and truly been listening, then you would have heard him say it goes 300 miles on gas "backup."

    21. Re:Of course by commodore64_love · · Score: 0

      >>>They are different things and should be treated as such

      Not in the mind of politicians who see Passage of Net Neutrality as a chance to include "fairness" too. Look what they did with the Health Reform bill which somehow ended-up including provisions to monitor credit card purchases in real time (and other non-related crap). Or the Financial Reform Bill which allows the government to install "sniffers" at the ISP's central node and monitor everyone's web activity. What's that have to do with finance reform of banks??? We're just lucky that the politicians did not get their way when NN was passed.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    22. Re:Of course by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 5, Insightful

      To me the fight between big Government and Big Corps is almost the same as those debating who takes away more rights the (D) or the (R) in power.

      In the Case of NN, I'm all for NN, provided that it doesn't harm business, and government doesn't get more power. Those on the left don't see government having power as being a problem, as long as it is their kind of power.And this is why the people on the right have concerns, because it isn't beyond the left to limit speech that "offends" them in some way, or if the threat of "fairness doctrine".

      Just recently the far left Senator Rockefeller mentioned taking FOX news and MSNBC off the air. And it doesn't matter if he was "joking" or not, simply saying it shows how these people think; that if you don't agree with them, you should be silenced.

      THAT is the concern for many people who don't want government control of the internet, because once you start defining that the government CAN control it, it is just a matter of time before it controls the whole of it in one way or another.

      On the other hand you have douchebags like Comcast who won't update their peer links to realistic expectations and are artificially putting choke points into their internet models so that they can extract more cash from content providers, and protect their monopoly.

      The answer isn't a simple "let the government regulate it" as many people think.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    23. Re:Of course by StillNeedMoreCoffee · · Score: 2

      No I don't think we misunderstand Rush. He may have a hell of a research staff but he also has talking points and a spin staff and an agenda. The agenda is clear to many of us but to the sheep that really think that he is an honest broker of the truth and has their best interests in mind, he is a dangerous person, because he convinces them to vote against their own best interests. He is a clever agenda ridden snake oil salesman.

    24. Re:Of course by The+Moof · · Score: 1

      It's still a strawman to conflate the two even if both are mentioned at the same time.

      Just last week, didn't we all get up in arms about the FCC's "Net Neutrality" proposition because it was net neutrality in name only? That's the problem, their definition exists only to suit whatever policy they're currently trying to push.

    25. Re:Of course by commodore64_love · · Score: 2

      >>>often he isn't saying what you think he is saying.

      BULLSHIT. "The new Honda and Toyota hybrids only go 55 miles an hour." (back in 2002). "The Chevy Volt has a limited range of just 40 miles. I can only drive it 20 miles away from my house, and then have to turn-around to recharge it! No wonder they didn't sell any." (just last month)

      Please explain how these sentences can possibly mean anything other than what they say. You can't.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    26. Re:Of course by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      You really think that once the government starts to regulate the internet, that it won't stick its hand into what is "fair" or not on the internet. The fact that there was such a concept as "Fairness doctrine" is proof that certain people just can't stand competition, be it certain politicians or Comcast.. And do you REALLY think that once government sets up NN that it will be free from meddling and payoffs to legislators to get it amended to the will of Big Business at the expense of the citizen/consumer?

      All one has to do is look at the Cluster F*$# of Patents, Copyrights and so on to realize that government cannot regulate anything effectively on behalf of EVERYONE.

      And all you have to do is listen to the likes of Rockefeller (Senator) who recently said that FOX and MSNBC should be pulled off the air to realize that there is at least one person in DC that wants to control media in abusive ways. That is one too many to risk even thinking about letting ALL the assholes there having any control.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    27. Re:Of course by Gonoff · · Score: 1

      Are you saying that he speaks the truth in such a way as to make people believe he is saying something that is not true?
      And how is this different from saying the lie in the first place?

      --
      I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
    28. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not always, but yes sometimes. In this particluar instance I would say that it is spot-on. The number of people who understand the internet on a level required to understand net neutrality is pretty small. It's hard to even simplify for people. If you do understand it, you are labeled a nerd and people think when you talk about anything it's boring. So they've already stopped listening.

      Most people only use the internet for two websites anyway. "Faster access to Facebook and Google and slower access to everything else? Sounds kickass, bro. Fuck net neutrality!" And that is about the extent of it. If you try to explain that the telcos are pissed that the don't get extra money from facebook or youtube, people get confused and they get angry. You've lost them.

      I think your post is a red herring anyway. You've already fucked up most of the possible discussion on this topic. congrats.

    29. Re:Of course by nschubach · · Score: 3, Interesting

      First, of course, is the "zOMG, only governments are capable of regulation and/or oppression, free markets are free as in freedom, all historical evidence to the contrary!" brigade.

      I'm not quite sure I'm reading this right, but you do know that our government has had a history of selective oppression, right? Japanese Americans during the last World War, the Native Americans... to name the two big ones I can think of. That's not even getting into the whole new "Terrorism" and Gitmo side of things. If they can tie something to National Security, they can/have get away with far too much.

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    30. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actual quote: "The charging station is your house, so that 40-mile range has gotta include you getting home and then staying home for three to four hours to charge the thing. It's 20-mile range. So I'm saying to myself, I can't in good conscience recommend that."

    31. Re:Of course by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      No they're not, retard. I'm sure that's what Fox and talk radio tell you, but it's not so.

      What a well thought out response.

      You left out actual examples such as whom is pushing net neutrality that is not also pushing the Fairness Doctrine.

      I am not stating that pushing one agenda should taint all of your agendas just that both sides are quick to paint everything the other said with the same brush.

    32. Re:Of course by StillNeedMoreCoffee · · Score: 1

      The fairness doctrine has a place. The airwaves are common property of all of us and radio stations are granted use of that common resource by the government. Originally in return they needed to provide some public service. That was the birth of news departments in tv and radio. The fairness doctrine was in place to insure that the public trust was maintained for the use of their resource. We all know what snake oil salesman can do, sell you something that will posion you and run. The fairness doctrine was in place to at least moderate that behavior and also to bring that great American doctrine into play, competition. The thing that the Fox new'es of the world don't want is competition of ideas in close proximity to their brand of the "truth". They claim to be fair and balanced but that too is a lie. The fairness doctrine is not a bad thing, it is a way of allowing both sides of a story to be heard so people can make informed judgements. So look who is fighting the fairness doctrine, look who is viewing the internet and cable as a gold mine. Those are the people to watch closely.

    33. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You give him too much credit. He's a douche bag that lies through his teeth daily. Even if he did possess the intelligence to try to mask it with word games, that doesn't make him any less of a lying pile of crap.

    34. Re:Of course by Chibinium · · Score: 1

      Net Neutrality's 'points' are as numerous as the stars in the sky, yet any elevator speech on it will only name three of them. This setup guarantees that you can never fully deliver, and that people will scrutinize your choice of stars (the brightest? The closest? The most suitable for Earth life?) The only guarantee of one's veracity is either 1. When they're dying or 2. When they actively take positions that seem contrary to their interests.

      But what if their professed interests are actually decoys too, and that by actively taking positions against the decoys they actually serve their true interests? (Second-order strategy). I get the feeling that Rush Limbaugh is not as stupid as he looks, but that his listeners ARE as stupid as they look.

    35. Re:Of course by monkyyy · · Score: 1

      no its "ANY gov`t regulation will inevitably lead to" a huge team of lawyers abuse the law

      --
      warning pointless sig
    36. Re:Of course by alta · · Score: 1

      sorry for switching topics temporarily, but it you actually take it up to 120, or was that the number on the spedo.

      I've been in an insight before. At 80 I began to fear for my life. Those low friction tires don't exactly grip the road, even in a straight line.

      --
      Do not meddle in the affairs of sysadmins, for they are subtle, and quick to anger.
    37. Re:Of course by Abcd1234 · · Score: 2

      Once upon a time it would have been unheard of to have fines for swearing on TV yet they are common place today.

      What the fuck fantasy world are you living in? The Radio Act of 1927 specifically stated that programming aired by licensed broadcasters could not include "obscene, indecent, or profane language". Broadcast of such material could result in the broadcaster's license not being renewed. The Communications Act of 1934, which created the FCC, continued this tradition, stating:

      SEC. 303. Except as otherwise provided in this Act, the Commission from time to time, as public convenience, interest, or necessity requires, shall- ...

      (m) Have authority to suspend the license of any operator for a period not exceeding two years upon proof sufficient to satisfy the Commission that the licensee ... (4) has transmitted superfluous radio communications or signals or radio communications containing profane or obscene words or language

      Thus further empowering the FCC to actively revoke the license of those violating decency standards.

      In 1978, Federal Communications Commission v. Pacifica Foundation explicitly empowered the FCC to prohibit the broadcast of material deemed obscene during hours when children might be among the audience.

      Finally, in 2005, that fine Republican Mr. George Bush signed into law the Broadcast Decency Enforcement Act of 2005 which further stiffened the penalties levied by the FCC who violate decency standards.

      In short, the FCC has *always* been empowered to punish those who broadcast "obscene" material over public airwaves. This tradition is nearly 80 years old, and the current powers wielded by the FCC are hardly anything new, nor were they granted by any one party or political affiliation.

    38. Re:Of course by Haedrian · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "Gov't regulating lead-free drinking water is not an attack on liberty."

      But government fluoridation of drinking water is a communist plan to weaken our essence.

    39. Re:Of course by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      You really think that once the government starts to regulate the internet, that it won't stick its hand into what is "fair" or not on the internet.

      That makes about as much sense as "Keep your government hands off my Medicare!" because the Internet was created by the government and has been regulated by the government since before Al Gore got the funding to thoroughly expand ARPANet and open it up to the general public.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    40. Re:Of course by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      To me the fight between big Government and Big Corps

      What fight?

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    41. Re:Of course by Rockoon · · Score: 1, Interesting

      it is a way of allowing both sides of a story to be heard so people can make informed judgements.

      Your opinion on the matter is idiotic and here is why:

      There are more than two sides to a story. You obviously mean when YOUR pet-favorite side of the story isnt represented, then 'the other side' should be represented (Should segregationists get equal air time by mandate? How about Anarchists? Do they get equal air time by mandate? What about Furry Fetishists? Pedophiles?)

      Meanwhile Fox is delivering what its viewers desire to continue watching (profit motive.. their product is the viewers who they sell to the advertisers), rather than what some special interest wants them to see (control of information motive... they dont have a product, just an agenda)

      You and the rest of the supporters of the fairness doctrine are far more evil than Fox will ever be.

      The government should stay out of content control. Period and End Of Story.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    42. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So we should take Rockefeller seriously when he said that? Fair enough. (I feel he was wrong in saying that anyway.)

      We should therefore take Ann Coulter and Rush seriously when they say all lefties should be executed for treason.

      So, what's the proper response to them?

    43. Re:Of course by Jay+L · · Score: 1

      just a few gatekeepers have somehow been able to get themselves to a position where they can in theory "control" the internet, and I contend it is because of too much regulation of the internet that this situation has happened.

      What Internet regulations do you think have led to this? I'm not aware of any.

      If private individuals were allowed to connect to whomever and however they wanted for a network connection

      They are.

      most of these problems would go away

      They didn't.

    44. Re:Of course by Doc+Hopper · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I still own and drive my 2001 Honda Insight daily. Its top speed is 113MPH -- that's when the governor kicks in -- and it is truly scary. Particularly WHEN the governor kicks in, suddenly the IMA is whining as it goes into recharge mode at a speed way past what it expects, then since your foot is still to the floor it accelerates the car as hard as it can (which isn't much) until the governor cuts off gas to the motor again.

      In truth, about 90MPH is when the Insight gets pretty scary to drive. Ultimately, it's an all-aluminum, incredibly-efficient econo-box that can get out-accelerated by my wife's minivan.

      I have never had a problem with freeway speeds (75MPH) in the Insight. The only time it gets scary at that kind of speed is when the road is grooved, like for construction, or uneven. Then the offset between the front and rear tires comes into play, and the car will kind of shimmy around a little in the lane.

      So to sum up:
      * Max speed of 55MPH? B.S. I've owned my 2001 Insight for nine years now, and drive faster than this all the time.
      * Max sped of 120MPH? B.S., by about 7MPH. My sole experiment showed the governor kicking in reliably at 113MPH (which, by the way, is the max rated speed of the tires)
      * Anemic performance? Damn right! My hybrid automatic transmission still averages better than 50MPG... and that's running larger, grippier tires than stock. I don't mind getting out-accelerated by trucks at stoplights; I'm playing the high-mileage game, not "who gets their first?".

    45. Re:Of course by Doc+Hopper · · Score: 2

      Before the their/there/they're your/you're cops arrive, allow me to state that I intended to state "who gets there first?" as my final rhetorical question, not "who gets their first?". I've no excuse save that I'm distracted by my full-time job :)

    46. Re:Of course by rickb928 · · Score: 2

      On the one hand, you now know why I don't listen for Rush much any more. He has a few interesting insights amongst a lot of noise and half-baked ideas. The Volt controversy, for instance, is his attempt to point out that GM calls it an 'electric' car, when it is more like the Prius dual-mode hybrid than not. And that's too fine a point, and his real point is that GM is living off the taxpayer's largesse and only exists because we bailed them out, so their competition properly complain that this is an eneven playing field, and, well, he goes on about our current economic situation, and you get lost in the weeds pretty quick.

      On the other hand, if Rush would turn the clock back a bit and take on the fundamental (not religious, but basic) issues, he would be doing more of a service than he does now.

      But Rush is an entertainer now. I want more than that. So I'm gone. No longer a dittohead. I didn't change, he did. And a LOT of his 'old' audience hasn't either. His current audience is mostly harmless, and you should pay less attention to he and they than you are.

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    47. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I actually *listened* to that show when he spoke about the Volt. Yes he said it goes 40 miles...on battery power then the gas kicks on. He said exactly what you are claiming he did not say. ...Stupid shithead Commodore64_love... I refuse to read your drivel because you can't get that basic tiny fact straight...it makes me wonder what else your getting wrong.

    48. Re:Of course by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      GP is not claiming that government never oppresses anyone. What he's saying is that it's incorrect to think that only government ever does that. Economic power can oppress just as well as political one.

    49. Re:Of course by wygit · · Score: 1

      You wouldn't happen to have actual LINKS for any of that, would you?

      You know not everything Glenn and Rush tell you is true, don't you?

      What exactly does "people sitting in the white house" mean? Visitors who went to the loo? Third-level clerks? The President"

      "Or the Congressman saying MSNBC and FOXnews should be yanked off the air" can we compare that to the Congressman yelling "YOU LIE" to the President's face, or insisting that he's a foreign-born Muslim, or that 9/11 was an inside job?
      Congressmen (and women) do whacky thing, alright.

      I'm so glad that you've "seen the videos/heard the audios" yourself, but in order to convince people, you're going to have to tell them where THEY can "seen the videos/heard the audios"

    50. Re:Of course by mrjimorg · · Score: 1

      This "airwaves are common property" lie needs to stop. The roads are common property, but that doesn't give the government full control of newspapers which are delivered via those roads- and those roads are even paid for by the government. The "common property" argument was made when it was feared that we would quickly run out of available frequencies for radio and television stations, but if you just turn on your radio and move down the dial you'll find that there is plenty of room between stations. The "common property" argument is just being held in place to give the government censorship powers that they should not have.

    51. Re:Of course by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

      My contention is with the only part of that statement. "Governments are capable of regulation and/or oppression" is a simple statement of fact, with which I have not the slightest disagreement.

      "Only governments are capable of regulation and/or oppression", by contrast, is dangerously delusional twaddle that utterly ignores both what the private sector is capable of(everything from petty fraud and contracts of adhesion, the kangaroo courts of "mandatory binding arbitration", up to and including private sector paramilitary death squads, depending on historical circumstance). It also tends to ignore(or whitewash as purely a problem of government), the use by the private sector of the apparatus of state coercion over which they have obtained regulatory capture(privatized prison corporations writing punitive criminal codes in order to ensure a supply of new 'customers', certain uses of eminent domain, the CIA doing regime changes for United Fruit, etc.)

      States are, obviously, capable of deeply dangerous and unsavory behavior, and constant vigilance is necessary. That much is true. What is dangerous is forgetting that the private sector is not without tools in this area and, in essentially every repressive state, there are willing private sector actors right behind them(those phones aren't going to tap themselves, now are they?).

    52. Re:Of course by Nimey · · Score: 1

      Well, then, how about some cites? You must have several examples of people who want NN who also want FD, yet those are curiously absent in your posts.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    53. Re:Of course by LingNoi · · Score: 1

      Well how about the fact that you need to buy IP addresses and AS numbers from ARIN to simply be a peer on the internet. Those cost upward of $1000.

      So no, you can't connect to whomever and however you want because your ISP (the gatekeeper) won't let you route properly through their networks.

    54. Re:Of course by hrvatska · · Score: 1

      When was this golden age of swearing in broadcast? It's not like people were cussing up a storm on radio and television in the 60s,70s, and 80s. The FCC's reaction in 1973 to the broadcasting of a George Carlin album scared all broadcasters away from content to which the FCC objects. It's only of late that people have been uttering banned words on television and radio in ways that the FCC deems obscene. Whenever I hear people talk how bad censorship is these days, I have to wonder if they're aware of how bad it was before the 1970s. When performers could be arrested for obscenity for words and phrases they uttered on stage, that are today routinely tossed around in the media.

    55. Re:Of course by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      I have to say, while I might not agree completely with Sen Rockefeller, I see where he's coming from. If you are going to call yourself a News network, you should be held to a higher standard, doing everything you can to make sure that what you broadcast is factually sound, and not just opinion. Ideally, this would be simple, but in practice, it would be almost prohibitively difficult.

    56. Re:Of course by s73v3r · · Score: 1, Insightful

      No, just no. The only ones mentioning the Fairness Doctrine are those that claim that the left is trying to bring it back.

    57. Re:Of course by cdrguru · · Score: 2

      The problem is in the US the government has had a really bad record of regulating stuff that might need regulating but doing it in the worst way possible and combining it with things that make no sense at all.

      One of the best ones was the assault weapon ban. There may have been an attempt to figure out what an "assault weapon" was, but evidently they couldn't do that. There was already a ban (since around 1934) on full auto weapons, so that wasn't needed. They decided somehow that what they wanted to ban was large clips for semiautomatic rifles. Only they didn't actually do that. Instead they picked out a list of "assault weapons" some of which would take large clips and some that would not. Other semiautomatic rifles which would take large clips were not included, possibly because they are made in the USA. Or were obsure foreign brands.

      The end result was that buying of large-capacity semiautomatic rifles shifted over to other unlisted models. And manufacturers discontinued the banned models and introduced nearly identical rifles that were not listed.

      If the objective was to ban large clips, they didn't do that. If the objective was to ban the importation of semiautomatic rifles, they didn't do that. Nobody really understands what the point of the regulation was because it had virtually no effect on the number of bullets being sprayed from semiautomatic rifles on the streets of the US. However, it was a really nice piece of legislation that everyone could point to as a being an "Assault Weapons Ban".

      Any Net Neutrality legislation is likely to be structured just like this and have similar effects. Some behavior will be prohibited, some other things will be required. End result will be confusion and lots of lawyer time figuring out how something must be done and still conform to the new regulations. End result for the consumer will be no real change but there will certainly be some regulation. Meaningless, pointless regulation.

      That is certainly what I am concerned about.

    58. Re:Of course by s73v3r · · Score: 2

      Given that you made the allegation that those fighting for NN are those pushing for the Fairness Doctrine, the onus is on you to present examples. And while you might be able to find some fringe person claiming that, you'd be hard pressed to find someone as mainstream on the left pushing it, as those on the right claiming they're trying to bring it back.

    59. Re:Of course by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Corollary: how many people to the left of center would have accepted as a positive thing a regulation put forth by the Bush administration's FCC (but opposed by both of the Democratic commissioners) that claimed to be "ensuring net neutrality"?

      The Obama administration has done a terrible job explaining itself here. We all know that we want the rules to say "Comcast can't charge Google for carrying YouTube videos, or charge its customers for access to Facebook". But that's a very difficult regulation to craft properly. It is not insane to be suspicious when your political opponents, using a government commission that has a questionable authority to regulate the thing to begin with rather than Congress, start throwing out rules.

    60. Re:Of course by AdamThor · · Score: 1

      So the government should let the internet get all fucked up because by trying to fix things they could get all fucked up? Certainly anything can be done wrongly, but don't you think we should try to keep things functioning? With a policy that has actually already been in existence to good effect?

      "...government cannot regulate anything effectively on behalf of EVERYONE."

      Really? The government can't regulate ANYTHING? Highways, building codes, the electrical grid... all horrible failures that we'd be better off without?

      NN could get screwed up, never underestimate human stupidity, but if we don't do anything you really think it'll be better? Shouldn't one oppose the bad thing, rather than the good thing that might go bad? Because any good action could go off the rails.

      --
      -- "Oh. This guy again."
    61. Re:Of course by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      The article is titled "The Right's War On Net Neutrality."

      This is a troll article that bashes one side only - according to your post, both sides on the mainstream are against it.

      This is becoming typical of slashdot and its members.

      Just like modding the person who called me a retard +1 and then modding all my posts -1.

      I guess that shouldn't bother me and posting that it does just invites more of the same but this site is becoming the next huffington post and it really frustrates me. I really used to enjoy coming here.

      Sorry to sound off at you, s73v3r, since you actually are just continuing the discussion.

    62. Re:Of course by finarfinjge · · Score: 1

      Gov't regulating lead-free drinking water is not an attack on liberty.

      This is a common conclusion based on the misconception that regulation of pollution is intended to reduce pollution.

      The original purpose of discharge limit regulations was to provide permission to pollute. This was a substitute for property rights which were making it impossible for big government to pollute (via municipal sewage) and big business to pollute. So government reduced our liberty by reducing our property rights in order to facilitate pollution and commerce. So yes, regulating lead-free drinking water is an attack on liberty AND a means of increasing the amount of lead that can be discharged (there has never, in the history of the earth, been an untreated source of water that was or is 100% lead free, you just need a good enough analysis method to find it). The loss of liberty in western society has been a death by a thousand cuts. The efficacy of which are improved by propagandists who tell us that regulation is for our good, not theirs.

    63. Re:Of course by hey! · · Score: 1

      I wrote him off during the Clinton administration when he went on a rant about the looks of Chelsea Clinton. Now, Bill and Hillary were fair game, but at the time Chelsea who was something like twelve at the time, didn't ask for any of that. When he was called on that, he said he was an entertainer, not a journalist. That tells you everything you need to know about the man. He's a bully and coward isn't man enough to apologize for a cheap shot at a little girl.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    64. Re:Of course by tbannist · · Score: 1

      Rush Limbaugh, Glen Beck, and others of the ilk are a new types of charlatan, however, instead of flogging miracle drinks, they now flog miracle policies which will fix everything that's wrong with the country, guaranteed!*.

      * Not an actual guarantee.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    65. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right on Obese Child. Oh and btw leave it to a liberal to launch an ad hominem attack.

    66. Re:Of course by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      You aren't quoting, you are paraphrasing. That is my point. Go google that exact phrase in quotes and the name Rush Limbaugh. Zero hits. It isn't an exact quote. I'm agreeing he is full of shit often enough, but you proving my point: You are trying to call him out by paraphrasing him, not using his exact words, in context.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    67. Re:Of course by sageres · · Score: 1

      Since when did the Slashdot became Digg where insightful comments that majority of the public disagrees with are marked as "Troll" and the namecalling with trash-talk is marked as "Insightful"?
      Ah, CmdrTaco, what have you done?

    68. Re:Of course by jdcope · · Score: 1

      If you actually had really and truly been listening, then you would have heard him say it goes 300 miles on gas "backup."

      Oh, they were listening. See, they leave out the stuff that doesnt fit their agenda. Both left and right do that crap.

    69. Re:Of course by commodore64_love · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      HERE'S THE LINK:
      http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26315908/ns/msnbc_tv-rachel_maddow_show/#40347342 Now explain how he could mean anything other than EXACTLY what he said (Chevy volt only lets you go 40 miles and no further).

      Oh forget it. Talking to you is about as much a waste of time as trying to convince Christians that the earth is older than 6000 years old. YOU. WON'T. LISTEN. I hate people who don't use their brains and you are their chief damned fool.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    70. Re:Of course by tbannist · · Score: 1

      The Fairness Doctrine was a policy of the United States Federal Communications Commission (FCC), introduced in 1949, that required the holders of broadcast licenses to both present controversial issues of public importance and to do so in a manner that was, in the Commission's view, honest, equitable and balanced.

      - Wikipedia

      Of course when you say "honest, equitable and balanced" the first thing that leaps to mind is evil.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    71. Re:Of course by jdcope · · Score: 2

      Second, where do conservative commentators have their greatest strength, in terms of market penetration, viewership numbers, etc? Radio and Cable. On the radio, there is pretty much Right win talk, apolitical top-40 pop drivel, and NPR coming in a distant third. On cable, you have the rabid ideologues on Fox, and the slightly more respectable-looking "centrist" corporatistists elsewhere. The left pretty much has comedy central.

      The left has a pretty good hold on cable too. CNN & MSNBC are pretty far left. Unfortunately, I dont think we even have a "centrist" news station any more. The only reason the left doesnt hold onto talk radio is because nobody wants to listen. They tried with Air America, which was FAR more "left" than FOX is "right". But Air America pushed themselves over the edge with batshit nutty people like Randy Rhoads.

    72. Re:Of course by afidel · · Score: 1

      You do realize that way back in the dark ages the FCC would have pulled a stations license for swearing on tv or radio, not fine them, right?

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    73. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      YOU. WON'T. LISTEN. I hate people who don't use their brains

      You must hate your self a hell of a lot then.

      Citations provided

    74. Re:Of course by icebike · · Score: 2

      Partisan or not, the concept has been so badly hijacked that the term Net Neutrality often means exactly the opposite of what many people THINK it means.

      Both sides have grabbed the term and twisted it to their own liking. Even Geeks end up misusing the term.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    75. Re:Of course by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      Its not honest, equitable, or balanced to only quote the first sentence.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    76. Re:Of course by blahplusplus · · Score: 1

      "If private individuals were allowed to connect to whomever and however they wanted for a network connection, most of these problems would go away"

      Incorrect...

      "Dictatorship naturally arises out of democracy, and the most aggravated form of tyranny and slavery out of the most extreme liberty"--Plato

      The whole emphasis on "freedom is always good" in every way is a lie, the world does not work according to moral principles it works according to physical processes and human beings are just another one of those processes.

    77. Re:Of course by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      - If I wasn't at work I'd try to oblige you by giving links, but videos are blocked here.
        - And if this was an ordinary forum I would expect the low IQ participants need to be spoon-fed information.
      But since this is /. I figure the readers are tech-saavy enough to google "fairness doctrine white house czar" and find the relevant links/audios/videos for themselves. Similar to how the professors in college expect you to do your OWN research.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    78. Re:Of course by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>The airwaves are common property of all of us and radio stations are granted use of that common resource by the government.

      Even if I agreed with your proposition, the Cable lines and Internet lines are not airwaves (DUH). It's as obvious as 1+1 =/= 4. Furthermore these cables are PRIVATE and do not belong to the people. The government could reasonably "police" the public airwaves like they police the public roads or public lands, but they have NO authority to police private channels. They can no more control what the private MSNBC or private infowars.com says, than they can impose a Fairness Doctrine on newspapers or books.
      .

      >>> The thing that the Fox new'es of the world don't want is competition of ideas in close proximity to their brand of the "truth".

      You're probably right. And there's nothing wrong with that.
      Just as "LP News" is slanted toward the libertarian perspective.
      And the "Communist Manifesto" book is slanted towards eliminating private property.
      It's called freedom of speech/press/expression.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    79. Re:Of course by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      >They think this because the people pushing net neutrality are usually the same ones pushing to bring back the Fairness Doctrine

      A question aside, can you cite any specific points of view that were suppressed by the Fairness Doctrine?

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    80. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not "whenever." But in this particular case, yes, people who oppose net neutrality because they believe it's about censoring conservative voices on the Internet are misinformed.

      The only way their argument makes any sense is if they believes that ANY gov't regulation will inevitably lead to oppression, which is, frankly, a pretty childish belief. Put down the Ayn Rand, folks, and come back to the real world. Gov't regulating lead-free drinking water is not an attack on liberty.

      Here are are two big examples:

      Our Judicial system over the years has slowly twisted Separation of church and state to mean: "religion must be defined, censored and removed from government." (It was suppose to guarantee! "freedom of religion" by not establishing a specific denomination of Christianity, like what had happened in Europe. but now it limits free speech and ideas.) Government has wedged itself into more areas of our lives over the years. Schools have become government run so now the government(politics) gets to trump the scientific method. "For instance you can't consider the merits of the theory of creation, because that sounds like religion," but on the other hand teachers can indoctrinate our children by teaching them the theory! of Evolution (which some teachers religiously believe)." So these days growth-of-government means you are giving someone the power to censor religion and the scientific mind.

      NET NEUTROLITY
      I work for a small wireless ISP, we don't have the wireless bandwidth to supply reliable VOIP unless we prioritize it over general internet traffic by setting aside specific channels for this purpose. Our customers are happy to have internet that is 100x faster than dialup and have cheaper phone service. We bearly break even so we could not afford to make say..vonage reliable over our service just to be fair. Essentially regulation like this could close our small business and pull the plug on our customers. It is critically important that we exist because we are Comcast and Verizon's only competitors out here. I believe we should let internet providers do what they want and let the people buy the service that they think is best for them. The government is taxing us and using that money to tell us how to run our business... into the ground. We believe that wireless will be a huge competitor to cable and dsl services since most people today would be happy with a cheaper mobile wireless service, while others might pay big bucks for extra-high-speed. Don't you see? we are talking about limiting the types of business models that can exist at the local level. Sure this would encouraging competition for internet based services but hurt our access and pricing to the internet service itself. pros - cons - govermentOverhead 0 Where is the positive gain? Wait... since when did we set up a government for this purpose. Where is this written in our constitution?

    81. Re:Of course by T.E.D. · · Score: 1

      It took you 8 years to figure out that Rush lies? Inspiring and sad at the same time. I have to wonder how many years it will take you to figure out the same thing about Mr. Beck. I'll check back with you sometime around 2016 to see if you are on pace.

    82. Re:Of course by Mashiki · · Score: 2

      The reality that daily kos is being used as a credible news source should be making everyone stop and go wtf are these idiots going on about. If you're using a source that's considered the lunatic fringe of the left, you have nothing to stand on.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    83. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But since this is /. I figure the readers are tech-saavy enough to google "fairness doctrine white house czar" and find the relevant links/audios/videos for themselves. Similar to how the professors in college expect you to do your OWN research.

      You really shouldn't have invited that comparison, because a college professor who makes claims and says "just look it up, it totally happened I swear!" when questioned is a thoroughly incompetent professor.

    84. Re:Of course by locallyunscene · · Score: 1

      The core of the problem is the FCC getting into the mix here where they clearly lack the authority to act at all, and where this really ought to be a congressional issue or better yet something where the government simply stays out of the whole issue altogether.

      The problem is that if the gov't stays out of the issue there's no market incentive to maintain net neutrality and lots of incentives to break it. And I simply don't understand how the FCC "clearly lack[s] the authority" when they regulate literally every other form of communication. I agree with the EFF's position that the network neutrality regulations should be based on common carrier status rather than the current FCC proposal, but that would only server to make the FCC's authority more clear.

      It is also a problem where just a few gatekeepers have somehow been able to get themselves to a position where they can in theory "control" the internet, and I contend it is because of too much regulation of the internet that this situation has happened. If private individuals were allowed to connect to whomever and however they wanted for a network connection, most of these problems would go away. It is the legal restrictions which enact barriers to competition and the encouragement of government-backed monopolies which has forced this situation to a head.

      I agree regulatory capture at the state and town level has been a problem, but this, maybe counter intuitively, is actually a perfect example of how lack of regulation has increased the barriers you're rightfully concerned with. Telephone companies are required by the FCC to lease their lines at a fair rate to any taker(another reason why I think ISPs should just be put under Common Carrier laws), but ISP's have no such requirement. This has allowed ISPs to essentially lock down an area, sometimes through local regulation, and sometimes through the simple cost of putting in that last mile of cable. The reason ISPs were subsidized in the first place is because of how tremendously expensive laying those wires can be.

      Unfortunately, this isn't what the current proposal of network neutrality is about. It's strictly concerned with not allowing ISPs to use anti-trust like practices with their traffic(like degrading the performance of NetFlix in order to promote your own On-Demand offerings). It's an extremely conservative take on network neutrality that is sadly and successfully being painted as The Fairness Doctrine reborn.

    85. Re:Of course by Jay+L · · Score: 1

      how about the fact that you need to buy IP addresses

      That's not by government regulation, is it? That's simply the architecture of IPv4 as implemented by the rest of the 'net. GP said that the oligarchy of these gatekeepers was caused by over-regulation. I think the free market led us right here, through entirely unregulated M&A and good old-fashioned competition.

    86. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Truly your stupidity knows no bounds. Or maybe you just think you're somehow "above" everyone else.

      On Monday November 22, @11:53AM, commodore64_love said:

      Where is YOUR link for scientists telling the USC scientists to shut up?

      (waits)

      Doesn't exist does it?

      Your claim is false.

      On Wednesday November 24, @02:35PM, commodore64_love said:

      Citation please else we'll simply choose not to believe you.

      Turnabout's fair play, bitch.

    87. Re:Of course by deapbluesea · · Score: 1
      --
      Government is not reason; it is not eloquent; it is force. Like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master.
    88. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, there were no complaints that I know of about "creep" of the FCC between the creation of the internet and 2005. Why do you think that it will happen now? Why can't we just go back to how things were?

    89. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for reminding me of the time Troll64 got lmgtfy thrown back into their smug face.

      Also, the time they provided their own lmgtfy link to try and "support" their claims, and the results ended up doing nothing of the sort.

    90. Re:Of course by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 1

      Go google that exact phrase in quotes and the name Rush Limbaugh. Zero hits.

      And? What exactly is this supposed to prove? You can Google lots of Rush quotes that he says in shows that will get zero hits on Google.

    91. Re:Of course by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      At least FOX and MSNBC don't try to hide their bias to much. With other MSM news outlets they cry objectivity when it is clear that they aren't any more objective than either FOX news or MSNBC. Dan Rather? Helen Thomas?

      People knew who these people were, well before they were exposed by their own actions and words. But you'd never hear of it anywhere.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    92. Re:Of course by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      I see where Sen Rockefeller is coming from, and it scares the crap out of me. Someone might actually try it. And they might just keep trying it until they succeed.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    93. Re:Of course by Cruxus · · Score: 1

      Fox News = far right CNN = center MSNBC = center-left The nature of the for-profit corporation is antithetical to anything "pretty far left" since the far left is opposed to capitalism.

      --
      On vit, on code et puis on meurt.
    94. Re:Of course by cforciea · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure how anybody gets left out of CNN. It is largely sensationalist drivel with very little real value, but also therefore very little in the way of political leanings. I think most people that claim that are just following along with the conservative radio show narrative of the big, bad liberal media that's been put out for the last couple of decades.

      I could at least see the argument for MSNBC (although I still think it is silly to claim that it is anywhere near as far left as Fox is to the right), but calling CNN "pretty far left" doesn't jive with anything I've ever seen on the network.

    95. Re:Of course by jafiwam · · Score: 1

      Ossification is what Rush does. Which is a form of lie.

      Sort of like what you are doing.

      Lying.

      Take your communist bullshit elsewhere, we don't need your kind on Slashdot.

    96. Re:Of course by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      Yes, it is obamas fault that Limbaugh, Preagor, Hedgecock, and well, the entire right wing, are worthless liars

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    97. Re:Of course by jrade · · Score: 0

      Limbaugh is an entertainer, not a journalist. Basically most "journalists" that have their own shows are just entertainers. That includes liberal media as well.

      --

      Exception in thread "main" java.lang.NullPointerException at Sig.setCleverSig(Sig.java:42)
    98. Re:Of course by jafiwam · · Score: 1

      In other words, you are lying.

      Got it.

    99. Re:Of course by jrade · · Score: 0

      What fight?

      The fight as to who gets the most of the tax payer dollars

      --

      Exception in thread "main" java.lang.NullPointerException at Sig.setCleverSig(Sig.java:42)
    100. Re:Of course by jafiwam · · Score: 1

      I think he's remembering that one episode of WPRK in Cincinnati when Dr. Johnny Fever says "booger" on live radio and gets fired for it.

      But then after hijinks ensue, he is returned to his job and says it again.

    101. Re:Of course by cforciea · · Score: 1

      Apples and oranges. We're upset that net neutrality regulation has no teeth and completely excludes the mobile market. That is a completely different animal from it being used as a stepping stone towards a completely separate and unrelated policy regarding content policing.

    102. Re:Of course by Nyder · · Score: 1

      I used to listen to Limbaugh (2002) until I heard him comparing the then-new Prius and Honda Insight hybrids to yugos, and claiming they can't run faster than 55. Well I owned an insight and knew that was a flat lie (its top speed was 120).

      More recently he's been saying the Chevy Volt hybrid only goes 40 miles. Limbaugh ought to take a page from Glenn Beck and actually RESEARCH a topic before speaking because while the Volt Electric Mode only goes 40 miles, it also has a gasoline engine that turns-on when the battery is empty. Stupid shithead Rush... I refuse to listen to him anymore because if he can't get that basic tiny fact straight, it makes me wonder what else he's getting wrong.

      I never listened to Limbaugh because it was very obvious from the start he's just a loud mouth puppet that doesn't know shit, yet speaks very loud.

      Sort of like religious freaks and well, politicians.

      --
      Be seeing you...
    103. Re:Of course by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      Are you fucking retarded? Did you even read wtf I wrote? He is twisting the truth but he is smart enough to do it in a vague enough way that his quotes might could be taken either way. I give him credit for being smart enough to twist a phrase (and once in a while, funny) but you are like commodore_bunghole above: too dumb to comprehend and quick to think you know someone based on two comments. Communist? As a Libertarian, I find that accusation quite laughable. Don't need my kind on Slashdot? Fucking hilarious!

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    104. Re:Of course by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      Limbaugh ought to take a page from Glenn Beck and actually RESEARCH a topic before speaking...

      WTF?

      Glenn Beck is to research as a claymore mine is to curing cancer. The only difference between Limbaugh and Beck is that Beck is more mentally unstable (Christ complex anyone?). Or rather, he gets paid to act that way.

      Actually, I don't think either one of them believes half of they say. They just make so much money making shit up that they can't stop.

      --
      ~X~
    105. Re:Of course by hairyfeet · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What amazes me is how many in this country now believe "free speech" means "only those things I agree with are allowed" and it is fine and dandy to get rid of anything else. It reminded me of watching TV with my grandfather when the Nazis were gonna march on Chicago. Now this was a man that spent four years fighting Nazis, that helped to liberate one of the Polish camps so he knew first hand what Nazism was really about, and who got to end the war by spending nearly two years in a full body cast thanks to a Werewulf unit dropping a wall on him along with his unit, two of whom died.

      So if there was ANYBODY on this earth who had a legit reason to want to see them gone it was him, yet he made sure I knew he supported those Nazis 100% in their right to march. He said "THAT is what we were fighting for, and what made us different from them. Here we allow everyone to speak, to debate, to print their ideas, even if we don't agree with them". It is just a damned shame that so many have forgotten that, and day by day they take away that right by saying this or that is "offensive" and they just keep moving the line on what is offensive. I support Rush and Maddow, Beck and Stewart, hell I even support the "pro pedo" book guy who is currently rotting in jail for writing his thoughts on paper. We must ALWAYS support the right to speech we don't agree with, because tomorrow some politician or activist may decide YOU are the offensive element and shouldn't be allowed to speak. Which is why we have to stop the censors like Rockefeller at every turn. I may not agree with your words but like my grandfather before me I will damned well fight for your right to say them!

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    106. Re:Of course by Phantom+of+the+Opera · · Score: 0

      Intelligence without conscience is not admirable.
      Brains and internal organs are interesting in general, but I wouldn't find them so interesting smeared around at an accident site.
      Having someone who believes that pi is exactly equal to 3 is amusing, except when they force that nonsense into law.
      Rush is pure troll. He gets his jollies off of pissing people off.

    107. Re:Of course by IgnitusBoyone · · Score: 1

      While this isn't your main point I thought I would ask. I thought the volt only had an gasoline fueled electric generator that charged the electric battery with enough surplus to run the totally electric card. To my knowledge the volt was not a hybrid, but a fully electric car capable of generating its own electricity. I'll go look that up in case you don't reply.

      --
      Momento Mori
    108. Re:Of course by cinderellamanson · · Score: 0

      msnbc, fox news etc. are fraudulant, it's not a matter of difference of opinion. For example a murderer does not get off on murder charges just because his opinion is that he should. In other words, fuck you.

      --
      Hey buddy, can i bum a karma? ~}CinderellaManson{~
    109. Re:Of course by cinderellamanson · · Score: 0

      When content is monopolized democracy dies outright, when a democratic party practices deception in order to sway votes, it is not democracy. A democracy where your vote is cast between two lies is not a democracy at all. Try some critical thinking, I swear, it's not as difficult as the television makes it sound. Accepting your opinions as spoon fed to you by the party approved media monster is bullshit, you should demand more.

      --
      Hey buddy, can i bum a karma? ~}CinderellaManson{~
    110. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But remember, he is an entertainer, not a journalist.

      These days, is there a difference between the two?

    111. Re:Of course by km_2_go · · Score: 1

      CNN & MSNBC are pretty far left.

      I assume by 'pretty far left' you mean ' somewhat left of FOX News'

      Check out Free Speech Radio News and Pacifica Radio if you want left.

    112. Re:Of course by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      FYI, although the US Postal Service does receive some federal money, it is not a government agency. It is not the job of the Congress to "keep the post office viable."

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    113. Re:Of course by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      CNN?! Far left? Are you on fucking crack?

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    114. Re:Of course by Count+Fenring · · Score: 1

      Or, even better - he could take a page from someone who researches well, and who doesn't lie anyway when the facts are inconvenient.

    115. Re:Of course by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile Fox is delivering what its viewers desire to continue watching (profit motive.. their product is the viewers who they sell to the advertisers), rather than what some special interest wants them to see (control of information motive... they dont have a product, just an agenda)

      You are teh dum and here's why.

      Fox is a special interest. Fox has an agenda. Their control of information makes them more money. You are painting these ideas as opposites when they are anything but.

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    116. Re:Of course by Arterion · · Score: 1

      I'm with you on this in the sense that commercials can't make false claims about a product. If you're peddling what you have as the truth, without disclaimer, then you ought to be held accountable for it. The media is extremely powerful. The real problem is that to get on the TV -- which is perhaps the only way an uniformed person learns anything -- you have to have massive amounts of cash. So automatically, broadcasters' interests are wildly different from the average American.

      Which brings us back to the internet. Media is afraid of the internet, and media is very well represented by Washington. Washington always puts its interests first. Is it any wonder the conservatives are afraid of a totally free and neutral internet in the hands of the masses? They're afraid of your average american being informed by other average Americans and not mega-corp media. It really comes down to money. Media is more apt to keep the status quo, which right now, is the rich getting richer. So the conservatives are in love with it, because they really only put the thinnest veneer of religious, social, and moral conservativism on top of their main platform, which is getting the rich richer. Of course FOX news is never going to give you enough honest information to figure that out.

      --
      "That which does not kill us makes us stranger." -Trevor Goodchild
    117. Re:Of course by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      The left has a pretty good hold on cable too. CNN & MSNBC are pretty far left. Unfortunately, I dont think we even have a "centrist" news station any more.

      Ladies and gentlemen of the world, I give you the problem with American Politics.

      Not fond of insulting. But you sir are an idiot if you think CNN is "Left". Hell MSNBC has Keith Olbermann and what's her name and they're only a little Left.

      You need to seriously take some history lessons or actually read about liberalism and leftism around the world if you think someone saying "Hey you know, maybe we should have a slightly more progressive Tax policy" is "Left". I don't think you can even accuse CNN of having a bias one way or the other. You have to actually say something to have bias, they just repost their twitter feed now.

      The problem with American Politics is that Right is now "Center" and Center is now "Left" and even remotely Left is considered "Batshit Nutty".

      I challenge the parent to actually go read and listen to some Liberal media or commentary to recalibrate their understanding of the political spectrum. I'm so tired of this bullshit. Other countries have real left wing parties. I don't agree with them, but I am at least able to see them for what they are. The "conservatives" in most countries are more liberal than your average Democrat.

      On the left we have people who say things like "Hey maybe government should provide healthcare." and they're an extreme minority. Just suggesting the Government should provide healthcare in America is "Extreme Left". Meanwhile you have anarcho-libertarians on the right who are the mainstream. "The government should be small enough that we can drown it in a bathtub". That's not fringe conservativism. You know what the left's equivalent of that would be "Nobody should own property." That's extreme leftism. Nobody in the Democratic party is saying that. Why? Because they aren't extremely liberal. They're *slightly* left of center.

    118. Re:Of course by LingNoi · · Score: 1

      The GPP was making a separate point about regulation of the internet. He didn't mention government regulation. You yourself didn't mention it either until I provided you with the answer you were looking for.

      It's irrelevant to the GPP's point. The problem is too much regulation and centralisation of the internet infrastructure with no way for average joe to become a peer without being an ISP.

    119. Re:Of course by Jay+L · · Score: 1

      The GPP was making a separate point about regulation of the internet. He didn't mention government regulation.

      That's what regulation is.

    120. Re:Of course by rhalstead · · Score: 1

      To me, after listening to the head of the FCC being interviewed, I'm more inclined to believe the right in this case. What he was saying was not at all what we have envisioned as Net Neutrality. In addition they are leaving loopholes for the "big guns" to still regulate what they pass and don't, the prevention of which was what Net Neutrality was supposed to be all about. So Comcast, AT&T, and any of the other large companies can just thumb their noses at users. There is a dangerous precedent here in that those who are supposed to have the power have told the FCC in specific terms, NO. With lobbyists and time we might have gotten congress to pass a real Net Neutrality bill as it was originally envisioned. But the FCC has taken it upon themselves to arbitrarily rule after being specifically told not to by those who are supposed to have the power. Now we have to deal with what amounts to a rogue agency arbitrarily setting standards and regulations. Rules and regs that are likely to be challenged and overturned because they either did not follow procedures or exceeded their authority.

    121. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A sitting US Senator vs. entertainers/pundits. See the difference?

    122. Re:Of course by ZFox · · Score: 1

      there's no market incentive

      Would you not drop your current internet provider, today, and even pay a little more to one that advertises as Net Neutral (and actually practice it, too, considering they all basically advertise as Net Neutral when giving their connection speeds (and in my view illegally advertising, at that))? From all the bellyaching I've seen here, I can guarantee you would not be the only one to switch.

    123. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The left has a pretty good hold on cable too. CNN & MSNBC are pretty far left.

      CNN and MSNBC are not far left. They're not even center-left. They're pro-business channels that are uninterested in social issues which don't affect corporate [i.e., advertisers'] profits. A kind of center-right social libertarianism if you like.

      There are no left-wing media in this country because the customers don't want a left-leaning media. Those customers, by the way, would be the corporate advertisers. You viewers are the product; programming is just the bait to get you to watch the ads.

    124. Re:Of course by owski · · Score: 1

      It may not be their job, but they do it by making it illegal to compete with the post office for first class mail.

    125. Re:Of course by owski · · Score: 1

      The nature of the for-profit corporation is antithetical to anything "pretty far left" since the far left is opposed to capitalism.

      The far left is opposed to "their capitalism" but is just fine with "our capitalism." In the same way that the far right is opposed to "their regulation" but is just fine with "our regulation."

    126. Re:Of course by Phoghat · · Score: 1
      Not always, but in this case we're talking about various groups like the Tea Baggers, those who voted for Sarah Palin as one of the most admired women of the year. The people who listen to FOX News, Rush Limbaugh and others, the talking heads that only seem to inflame without any real knowledge or understanding of the subject.

      "When it comes to Fox News Channel, conservatives don't feel the need to "work the ref." The ref is already on their side. Since its 1996 launch, Fox has become a central hub of the conservative movement's well-oiled media machine. Together with the GOP organization and its satellite think tanks and advocacy groups, this network of fiercely partisan outlets--such as the Washington Times, the Wall Street Journal editorial page and conservative talk-radio shows like Rush Limbaugh's--forms a highly effective right-wing echo chamber where GOP-friendly news stories can be promoted, repeated and amplified. Fox knows how to play this game better than anyone."

      --
      Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that.
    127. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... unless, of course, what you say is, "those other guys should shut up." Then, screw you; you've lost your right to speak.

      Either support Rockefeller's right to say godawfully stupid shit or get off your "I support ALL free expression" high horse.

    128. Re:Of course by Random+BedHead+Ed · · Score: 1

      Given that you made the allegation that those fighting for NN are those pushing for the Fairness Doctrine, the onus is on you to present examples.

      This is becoming typical of slashdot and its members.

      Nice aimless slur, but your comment still didn't include a citation for your imaginary claim about the Fairness Doctrine. No one I've read about who backs Net Neutrality (whether FCC-mandated or otherwise) has advocated bringing back the broadcasting Fairness Doctrine. I'm not even clear on how the two policies are related. Post a citation, not a whiny complaint, or you're just a blowhard.

    129. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      THAT is the concern for many people who don't want government control of the internet, because once you start defining that the government CAN control it, it is just a matter of time before it controls the whole of it in one way or another.

      On the other hand you have douchebags like Comcast who won't update their peer links to realistic expectations and are artificially putting choke points into their internet models so that they can extract more cash from content providers, and protect their monopoly.

      The answer isn't a simple "let the government regulate it" as many people think.

      Bollocks. Companies like Comcast exist because the government gave them an effective monopoly. The government, on behalf of the people they represent, gave Comcast et al. concessions, such as land grants, right-of-way and exclusivity in order to build their infrastructure, under the argument that the cost of building such an infrastructure would otherwise be too exorbitant. This implies a contract of reciprocity between Comcast and the public. The public granted Comcast concessions to build their network with the understanding that Comcast would provide service with a reasonable expectation for profit. Comcast could not exist without that public grant, and the public could not benefit from the availability of a cable infrastructure without Comcast having the ability to profit from it.

      This is where the government regulatory arguments break down. Comcast relies on government regulation for their existence, they couldn't have created their empire without it. If the government is going to use force of law to allow companies to exist absent of regular free-market economics, then the government has an obligation to ensure those companies are operating in a balanced manner that serves the public good. Otherwise, let's see a company like Comcast try to build an infrastructure privately by having to negotiate land rights with individual property owners etc.

      Comcast likely wouldn't exist as they are without government intervention, so the government has an obligation to ensure that a balance exists between Comcast and the public. Every argument against net neutrality seems to ignore the fact that they are government protected monopolies and should not have the same expectation of free-market operations that a privately owned company would.

    130. Re:Of course by sounds · · Score: 1

      ... but government regulating fluorinated water is a serious issue. It is an abuse of democracy for 51% of the voters to force certain choices upon the remainder, at least when they are innocent of any crime. Fluoride has a scientifically proven benefit, but ingestion is not necessary for that benefit. In fact, ingestion is questionably harmful. In other words, not everyone agrees when it comes to costs versus benefits analysis.

      The question here is whether we need government to protect us from something that isn't actually happening, and that could just as easily be handled by informed consumers fleeing any ISP who alters content negatively.

      Personally, I wouldn't mind BitTorrent traffic being discriminated based on protocol content rather than volume, at least not for lost-cost, shared internet services where BitTorrent (and similar) traffic takes away from the available bandwidth. It should be consumer choice, not one-size-fits-all regulation, that decides which ISP uses particular rules.

      Tim Berners-Lee talks about the internet as if everyone gets to enjoy 100% of the bandwidth "volume" that they purchase. That was true when T1 lines and phone modems were the only choices. Now that we have more options, including shared bandwidth technologies such as DSL and Cable, it makes sense that some providers will shape traffic to favor one type of protocol versus another - i.e. based on content instead of volume - because you have to pay a lot more to get exclusive access to bandwidth.

      This seems like a tragedy of the commons, because as internet becomes cheaper, people start to believe that it is a right or that the internet can be taken over by a central authority. Legislation could end up raising costs for everyone, or lowering performance - and the ISPs may never censor anyway.

    131. Re:Of course by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      Yes, the post office is one of several government-sanctioned monopolies. It is in the national interest to have a unified postal system. That doesn't make it a government agency, nor does it make it the responsibility of Congress to "keep it viable."

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    132. Re:Of course by StillNeedMoreCoffee · · Score: 1

      While I agree that the cable lines are not "Public" they do carry stations that do broadcast on the public air waves. They do like a resturant which is privatly owned but considered a public area, open to the public, and laws like the ones that pertain to smoking or serving alcohol have juristiction. I argue that cable is a public space in the same way and I am sure that will be challenged in court at some point.

      You're probably right. And there's nothing wrong with that.
      Just as "LP News" is slanted toward the libertarian perspective.
      And the "Communist Manifesto" book is slanted towards eliminating private property.
      It's called freedom of speech/press/expression.

      If Fox did not call itself "fair and balanced" and if they did not claim to be a News organization rather than an organ of the Republican Party I would say fine. They misrepresent the news, the truth and lie about themselves, what they represent and what their agenda is, wrapped up in the trappings of News rather than partisan commentary.

    133. Re:Of course by StillNeedMoreCoffee · · Score: 1

      See it is already starting.

      http://news.slashdot.org/story/10/12/31/2127230/YouTube-Legally-Considered-a-TV-Station-In-Italy

    134. Re:Of course by StillNeedMoreCoffee · · Score: 1

      No the common property argument was key to the founding of this country. In that everything not privately owned was owned by the government. That is why unclaimed estates go to the government, why there are public lands and airwaves. Its not a lie, it the foundation.

      The government does not want to have censorship powers, there is not government other than us the people. There has been some movement of "censorship" for the common good, like it is illegal to yell fire in a crowded theater. Censorship would be if everyone had tape over their mouth so they could not utter those words. But that is not the case. Things like child pornography I can see should not be available, or snuff video's. I disagree about the swear words thingy. But that is not the reason that the airwaves and the offshore areas are common, or the roads. Its that it is a country of the people by the people and for the people. If we were a monarchy, those would be owned by the King (or Queen).

      Thinking that that is common property just to have censorship rights is wrong. But it is true that the the government (our government) might want to not allow a White Supremacist TV station to broadcast, lies, and incitements. That would not be in the interests of the people.

    135. Re:Of course by StillNeedMoreCoffee · · Score: 1

      it is a way of allowing both sides of a story to be heard so people can make informed judgements.

      Your opinion on the matter is idiotic and here is why:

      There are more than two sides to a story. You obviously mean when YOUR pet-favorite side of the story isnt represented, then 'the other side' should be represented (Should segregationists get equal air time by mandate? How about Anarchists? Do they get equal air time by mandate? What about Furry Fetishists? Pedophiles?)

      You had me at idiotic. Ok I'll try to be clearer. Not the other side but opposing views, you know fair and balanced. In our two party system of goverment (and I was refering mostly to political issues) then the other side is pretty well defined in most cases. That would put some breaks on some of the coordinated self consistant delusional frameworks that exist in the current broadcasting realm.

      Meanwhile Fox is delivering what its viewers desire to continue watching (profit motive.. their product is the viewers who they sell to the advertisers), rather than what some special interest wants them to see (control of information motive... they dont have a product, just an agenda)

      Well the argument would be good if it there wasnt the aspect of cult worship. Where you have the preacher up there selling his church as much as his idea's.

      You and the rest of the supporters of the fairness doctrine are far more evil than Fox will ever be.

      I dont that that is exactly true. Look at the incitements that the anti abortion groups and muslim extremest and there was that recent fellow that cited G Beck for his terroism. No there are boundries to a society, to behavior and speach that incites behavior. You would think that a Southern TV station should be allowed to show lynchings and tell people that is good and that they should do that?

      I dont argue for control, I argue for more speach, balanced presentations or battling arguments, not censorship. Not having a competition of ideas is censorship. So Fox practices censorship all the time, and I find that evil and harmful.

      The government should stay out of content control. Period and End Of Story.

    136. Re:Of course by Gizzmonic · · Score: 1

      This "airwaves are common property" lie needs to stop.

      You mean the laws governing the use of EM spectrum need to change? Laws are not lies, sorry. If you think they should change, say that. Otherwise you just sound ignorant.

      The roads are common property, but that doesn't give the government full control of newspapers which are delivered via those roads- and those roads are even paid for by the government.

      What kind of absurd comparison is that? The reason the spectrum is regulated by the government is because if it wasn't, it would be a free-for-all. Anyone with a transmitter could jam anyone else. I agree that the FCC does not have the right to control cable TV or the Internet, but let's not get carried away here.

      --
      (-1, Raw and Uncut is the only way to read)
  2. As the son of a politician by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This has nothing to do with right or left, but the green of the money being bribed^H^H^H^H^H^H given for campaigning. This is not something the hill knows a damn thing about, and if we're lucky 10% of them understand the issue at a high level.

    1. Re:As the son of a politician by DCFusor · · Score: 2
      Yep, that's precisely the case. In this case it seems the "right" is completely in the thrall of the telecoms who see non neutrality as a way to increase their profits. As if they didn't already charge both ends of the 'net for the same bits -- they charge one guy to put them on there, and the other guy for getting them already.

      Which I understand is partly why we get to pay about 4x for cel phone service than our brothers in europe do.

      I see it as their own fault if they didn't charge enough in the first place, and personally, they should be very fearful of being hit with common carrier status -- bits is bits, after all, whether it's voice, slashdot, video, or email.

      This could be a deliberate distraction from the idea of that fate, which is even more scary to them than mere neutrality.

      IMO, people who carry bits shouldn't be allowed to also own content. Imagine what the music world would be like if the RIAA owned the airwaves. Oh, wait...

      --
      Why guess when you can know? Measure!
    2. Re:As the son of a politician by Dachannien · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It could have been nonpartisan, right up until the point where MoveOn.org (i.e., George Soros) got involved. And, predictably, the issue became toxic for any Republican who might otherwise have seen that while the telecoms don't benefit from net neutrality, the content providers/distributors (Google and Netflix, rather than "Big Hollywood") and further online innovation benefit tremendously.

      Rush Limbaugh may be blind to the truth about net neutrality, but he at least knows why he's on this particular battlefield: single combat with George Soros.

    3. Re:As the son of a politician by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1, Informative

      where MoveOn.org (i.e., George Soros)

      Citation needed. Moveon.org has millions of members (according to the wik, it claims over 5 million) who are not George Soros, and the majority of its funding has come form non-George Soros members. It was founded by Joan Blades and Wes Boyd, neither of whom are George Soros. George Soros is, AFAIKT, not a member of MoveOn.org's board of directors or anything.

      One may like or dislike MoveOn.org and/or Soros, but to state them as equivalent is inaccurate, even dishonest.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    4. Re:As the son of a politician by DavidTC · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Being 'against everything the left like' is a pretty goddamn shitty political position.

      OTOH, it actually is the Republican position. Just the other day, they were against a bill to attempt to reduce 'child marriage' around the world. ('Child marriage' actually means 40 year old men purchasing 13 year old girls from their parents, 'marrying' them, and then, when their female children are old enough, selling them off to other men.)

      A simple bill that uses already existing US development programs to help break the cycle of abuse by simply attempting to educate women, and requires countries that get our aid to explain the status of this practice in them, and was only $108 million dollars. (To compare, we just passed a $858 billion tax cut extension, which is, oh, 800,000x more. The damn 'bridge to nowhere' was $223 million.)

      The joke used to be that the Democrats should come out against raping children, and see what the Republicans do. Horrifically, twp weeks ago, they did, and the Republicans, indeed, came in favor of it. Or at least not against it.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    5. Re:As the son of a politician by JWW · · Score: 2

      I see it as their own fault if they didn't charge enough in the first place, and personally, they should be very fearful of being hit with common carrier status -- bits is bits, after all, whether it's voice, slashdot, video, or email.

      Why would they be fearful of that? The FCC has had the power to make that move for a long time. The courts have told them that that is the only move they can currently make. And yet they try to regulate the internet in a different fashion.

      I love all these the stories that claim that the EVIL RIGHT, is completely wrong on this. They are wrong about a lot of things with respect to net neutrality, but not on everything. Again, there is no reason for the FCC to be doing what they are doing when common carrier rules would suffice. So the FCC IS looking for much finer control of the internet. I would not be surprised AT ALL if FCC regulations eventually state that ISPs be REQUIRED to block "illegal" packets, which would mean that they'd have to scan every packet. Oh, but what about encrypted packets? Well, my guess there would be that encrypted packets that aren't on 443 will end up dumped. Of course bittorrent will eventually tunnel through that but don't think for one minute that the RIAA and MPAA won't fight with all their power to ensure that FCC regulation of the net will provide them some of the means to do what they've always wanted to the net.

      Oh, look I didn't even mention political websites and such. Yes, indeed, THAT argument by the right IS a red herring, but what I just said about the AA's is not....

    6. Re:As the son of a politician by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Minor point: 858 billion tax cut is only ~8,000 times more than 108 million. It would be 8,000,000 times more only if you use the "other billion".

    7. Re:As the son of a politician by Surt · · Score: 1

      What's wrong with splitting the billing between the two parties involved in an exchange? Or are you arguing they make too much profit?

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    8. Re:As the son of a politician by orgelspieler · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You meant 8,000x not 800,000x. Unless you meant $1.08 million for the other program. However your point remains.

      It's one of the things I don't understand about Democrats. Why don't they hold Republicans' feet to the fire? They say they want to repeal health care reform. Dems should say, "OK, why do you want to allow insurance companies to deny coverage to 6-year-olds with leukemia?" Then run an ad with some little kid at the hospital saying how health care reform has saved their parents from bankruptcy.

      That's what the GOP used to do all the time with defense spending. They'd lament how the Democrats want US troops to die in combat since they wouldn't vote for a defense spending bill (that had a rider authorizing ANWR drilling).

    9. Re:As the son of a politician by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The bill was attached to a huge omnibus spending package. So the fact that a large number of both Dems and Reps were against it, was more because it was part of a huge over reaching bill that would have spent far too much money on far too many pork projects. And lets face it this amendment was tacked on specifically so that TROLLS like you can point their finger at the right and say "They are the ulitmate evil they want little girls to get raped."

      Neither side wants net neutrality. Both sides want their rich backers exempted from the costs of anything and the restrictions on any legislation they pass. Obamas Bail out benifited mostly rich democrat bankers that made money by preying on Working class and the poor. The rich lost houses that they paid far less in payments than they would have in rent for the same place. When the chips were down they walked away and let the government bail them out. Then they played the victim card and said they were used and preyed on. The poor lost houses they paid too much for, made payments that were more than they could have rented the same house for, and in the end lost houses that in many cases had more than 50% of their value paid for. This was done by Democrats. In the end they blamed the Republicans who argued that this would happen if the dems passed these laws.

    10. Re:As the son of a politician by ultranova · · Score: 1

      The joke used to be that the Democrats should come out against raping children, and see what the Republicans do. Horrifically, twp weeks ago, they did, and the Republicans, indeed, came in favor of it. Or at least not against it.

      The Right has not made it any secret that they care nothing about anyone once they're out of womb. Talk with any Republican, Libertarian etc. and you're invariably hear the lines "taxes are stealing", "why should I have to pay for X" and "people shouldn't have had children if they can't take care of them". In short, this should not shock or surprise you, since it's exactly what Right-wing people have always said they're about: lift yourself by your bootstraps, or die.

      Republicans and the rest of the Right are only concerned with the rich, and, well, a 13-year old sex slave is unlikely to be rich. That's all there is to it.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    11. Re:As the son of a politician by slashing1 · · Score: 3, Informative

      I don't have any comment regarding what the general Republican position is or is against, but I think their opposition to H.R. 2103 (International Protecting Girls by Preventing Child Marriage Act) is understandable on narrower grounds. If they are concerned about 1) expansive executive power, and 2) abortion funding, I can see why they might be concerned with a rather simple-looking bill that does not seem to contain much guidance or oversight regarding how the President spends on "health services" for girls. If you're involved with U.S. politics, certainly you must be aware that government provision of reproductive health services is a politically charged issue.

      I also don't know about the history of this legislation, but if you were cynical, you might consider the idea that some politicians could use exactly this type of legislation to paint others as "pro-raping children." It's pretty easy to slip in issues you really care about into high profile, difficult-to-publicly-oppose legislation. Especially when you're using procedural rules to push legislation through at the end of the year.

    12. Re:As the son of a politician by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      You meant 8,000x not 800,000x. Unless you meant $1.08 million for the other program. However your point remains.

      My math is very poorly edited today.

      Why don't they hold Republicans' feet to the fire?

      Because then Republicans say mean things about them.

      Of course, Republicans do that anyway, so I don't know.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    13. Re:As the son of a politician by DavidTC · · Score: 2, Informative

      The bill was attached to a huge omnibus spending package.

      No, it wasn't. You need to actually pay attention.

      The bill was S. 987. The text is here. It's three fucking pages on my screen.

      And you do realize that the bailout was under Bush, right?

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    14. Re:As the son of a politician by Dachannien · · Score: 1

      I don't need to cite a source - the entire point of saying that is because Limbaugh equates Soros and MoveOn.org. That's all I really need to explain the rationale for his statements, whether it's true or not.

    15. Re:As the son of a politician by DavidTC · · Score: 2

      Except the bill specifically states what can be funded.

      The Senate bill, which is what specifically what the Republicans voted down, is here. There is a list of things that can be done. None of it is even providing health care, just encouraging nations to enable to access to health care.

      The idea that 'support for community-based activities that encourage community members to address beliefs or practices that promote child marriage and to educate parents, community leaders, religious leaders, and adolescents of the health risks associated with child marriage and the benefits for adolescents, especially girls, of access to education, health care, livelihood skills, microfinance, and savings programs;' somehow is causing abortion is absurd. It's trying to get people to accept the idea that young girls are actually human beings.

      Plus, um, nothing was stopping Republicans from putting an amendment into the bill to stop any hypothetical issues WRT abortion.

      It's just an absurd goddamn excuse because the Republicans don't like to spend any money that doesn't benefit their rich friends.

      I also don't know about the history of this legislation, but if you were cynical, you might consider the idea that some politicians could use exactly this type of legislation to paint others as "pro-raping children."

      Oh, they're not pro-rape.

      They're just not anti-rape. Attempting to discourage rape is a huge overreach of government power.

      Or the alternate idea is that Senate Republicans are horribly sexist, which, frankly, is not insane.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    16. Re:As the son of a politician by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a mirror image of the left's position. Remember 2006, when Pelosi made the big speech about ending the years of Republican deficits? Or Obama's fierce moral urgency of ending the Bush surveillance state? All politics is theater.

      BTW, if a dollar not collected in taxes is equivalent to a dollar spent, not raising taxes didn't cost $858b. It cost $14,000b, since the government collects in total about $4000b in taxes out of a $14,000b economy.

      -fearsomepirate

    17. Re:As the son of a politician by AF_Cheddar_Head · · Score: 1

      We already do that.

      I pay my ISP A for the the speed/capacity I need and the provider (AKA website) pays for his ISP B for speed/capacity they need. Now the telcos want to have the ability to slow traffic at the peering points unless the provider who gets his capacity from ISP B also pays ISP A not to slow the traffic down.

      We both already pay for capacity it is just the telcos looking for more money.

    18. Re:As the son of a politician by slashing1 · · Score: 1

      The Senate bill, which is what specifically what the Republicans voted down,

      Incorrect. The Senate bill passed unanimously. The House bill was voted down.

      The H.R. 2103, available here, doesn't explicitly say provide healthcare, but it does "provide assistance... [by] ensuring access to healthcare services."

    19. Re:As the son of a politician by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...if we're lucky 10% of them understand the issue at a high level.

      if we're lucky 10% of them understand the issue at a high school level
      fixed that for you

    20. Re:As the son of a politician by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would be the same as what the us did in Iraq they got involved in other countries affairs or do you forget the reaction people had to us being in Vietnam.

    21. Re:As the son of a politician by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, what's another 108 million when compared to all of the other egregious spending. It is this kind of thinking that has gotten the US into unmanageable levels of debt in the first place and the reason that the damn 'bridge to nowhere' was ever ear marked.

      Maybe Congress should be more concerned about the country that they are supposed to be writing laws for. Maybe Congress should be more concerned with fixing the messes in the country that they are supposed to be representing. How about seperating the law that would require foreign aid recipients to 'do some explaining' about the crap that goes on in their country from the law spending more money? Can't see too many people being against that.

      It is funny how the USA is vilified for things they don't do just as much, if not more, than for the things they do.

    22. Re:As the son of a politician by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The joke used to be that the Democrats should come out against raping children

      to be fair, the republican party IS the party of buttfucking underaged boys (along with buttfucking the rest of the country)

    23. Re:As the son of a politician by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen brother.

    24. Re:As the son of a politician by diamondmagic · · Score: 1

      I find it funny you say "taxes are stealing" (it is, it's legalized theft) and then don't argue against it. Apparently you completely missed the point of the GP: The left advocates stealing from the rich, or at least disproportionately from the rich, and suddenly the "Right" is all of a sudden "only concerned with the rich" which is complete BS, equal justice under law means the "Right" don't care if you're rich, poor, you have the same individual rights everyone else does, to not be plundered.

      These terms are nonsense anyways, liberty and individual rights are neither left nor right.

    25. Re:As the son of a politician by uslurper · · Score: 1

      "Obamas Bail out benifited mostly rich democrat bankers that made money by preying on Working class and the poor."

      WTF!? How many times are we going to have to clarify this?

      "Bailout is law
      President Bush signs historic $700 billion plan aimed at stemming credit crisis."
      http://money.cnn.com/2008/10/03/news/economy/house_friday_bailout/index.htm?postversion=2008100309

      "Obama: Stimulus lets Americans claim destiny
      President signs $787 billion program into law "
      http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29231790/ns/politics-white_house/

      --
      oldhack: "Security is a waste of money until shit hits the fan. 5 minutes later, it becomes waste of money again. "
    26. Re:As the son of a politician by cbeaudry · · Score: 1

      What are you? Some kind of shit disturber?

      Nobody with more than 1 brain cell doesnt understand that both parties ALREADY PAY FOR THE USE OF THE NETWORK.

      What the hell are they supposed to be paying more for? Its like a bully charging to get into the courtyard. But the thing is, he has no legal right to charge you for that.

      Well, the telcos want to charge you to pass into the public courtyard (PUBLIC), and they are pushing politicians to make it LEGAL.

      Stop trying to start flame wars, when you damn well know what the hell it is we are talking about.

    27. Re:As the son of a politician by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Remember 2006, when Pelosi made the big speech about ending the years of Republican deficits?

      Hey, Pelosi actually deserves some credit there. If the economy hadn't exploded, the deficit would have gone down.

      Or Obama's fierce moral urgency of ending the Bush surveillance state?

      Obama, OTOH, deserves no credit at all.

      But that's not really the same thing. Those are just empty promise for actual useful things.

      Pelosi wasn't opposed to deficits because the Republicans were for them. (Lasted I checked, the Republicans are against them too, at least in theory.) She was against them because they're a bad idea. Except, well, they aren't, but we're pretending they're a bad idea.

      Likewise, while some of the left was against Bush's surveillance state because the right was for them, a larger percentage simple didn't like it.

      Although the 'percentage' isn't really the thing...party loyalists will always be okay with something if their own party does it, and politicians always lie.

      The difference is that the left cares about their own policies, except when party loyalty overrides that. The right cares about the left's policies, except when party loyalty overrides that. (This is quite possibly because the right literally has no policies anymore except 'cut taxes' and 'reduces spending'.)

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    28. Re:As the son of a politician by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Maybe Congress should be more concerned about the country that they are supposed to be writing laws for. Maybe Congress should be more concerned with fixing the messes in the country that they are supposed to be representing.

      They might be if uninformed people like you would learn that the debt isn't even slightly the cause of the problems in this country.

      The problems in this country are due to decades of neglect of the US industrial base, a massive theft by the superrich, and the destruction of the middle class. Combine that with a banking industry out of control that hallucinated it figured out how to make money from bad loans, which kept people from actually realizing how bad things had gotten by having them living on borrowed money, so the problem was hidden for an entire decade until it blew up.

      We do, at some point, need to deal with the debt, but that isn't the current problem at all.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    29. Re:As the son of a politician by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Hey, numbnuts, there's no such thing as legalized theft. Theft by definition is unlawful.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    30. Re:As the son of a politician by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      I stand corrected about the Senate not passing it.

      However, that bill did pass the House. It was the Senate bill I linked to that didn't pass in the House, even by people who'd voted for the House bill.

      I have no idea what the heck was going on there, why Senate bill ended up in the House instead of them both going to committee, but I suspect it was due to this 'suspension of the rules' thing.

      The bill was apparently so non-controversial that the House didn't even care what version passed, and was such an easy 'pass' that they did it under the manner which requires a 2/3 majority....until some Republican idiot invented some nonsense about abortion that isn't even vaguely in the bill, causing it not to get enough votes.

      To make it clear: abortion has nothing to do with this. In places with child marriages like this, abortion isn't even legal. In many of these places, women don't even have doctors. (They are getting abortions...in back alleys, and dying from them.)

      But the slightest hint that, somewhere, the US government might encourage the government of Mozambique to provide doctors for women, and that, somehow, abortion will become legal there, and that said doctor will introduce a woman to an abortion provider...

      ...that is worse than all the 'women', aka, teenagers, who die during childbirth because there are no damn obstetricians and teenage girls that age shouldn't be having children, and certainly without medical care. Hypothetical babies:1, actual dying women:-820 a year

      And that's just the death during childbirth aspect of child marriages. Let's ignore the entire 'living a life of ignorance, slavery, and rape' aspect.

      This is, frankly, idiotic. It's the sort of shit that happens when you have idiots repeating single wedge issues over and over for decades.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    31. Re:As the son of a politician by ultranova · · Score: 1

      I find it funny you say "taxes are stealing" (it is, it's legalized theft) and then don't argue against it.

      Theft, noun: the act of stealing; the wrongful taking and carrying away of the personal goods or property of another; larceny.

      Notice the key word "wrongful" there? Taxes are rightful taking property or, more generally, diverting some of the economic activity of a society towards its maintenance and development, thus avoiding both the tragedy of the commons and dictatorship of the owning class.

      Apparently you completely missed the point of the GP: The left advocates stealing from the rich, or at least disproportionately from the rich,

      No, the left advocates taxing the rich, and the more radical left advocates not allowing a handful of people a near-total control of resources in the first place.

      and suddenly the "Right" is all of a sudden "only concerned with the rich" which is complete BS, equal justice under law means the "Right" don't care if you're rich, poor, you have the same individual rights everyone else does, to not be plundered.

      Except that I am plundered. A small minority of people have plundered most natural resources for themselves, thus leaving me without. This same minority wields disproportionate political power, thus leaving me powerless. And, as an icing on the cake, they have also plundered the economy as a whole, leaving millions unemployed as factory after factory closes and is moved to China, where they'll run on cheap slave labour.

      Also, quoth Encyclopedia Dramatica: "The genius of the free market is that both the rich and poor get the choice of paying for expensive health care or dying."

      These terms are nonsense anyways, liberty and individual rights are neither left nor right.

      Liberty does you no good if you lack resources to exercise it, nor do individual rights when you have to give them up to be allowed to eat by your corporate overlords.

      It's becoming painfully obvious that while liberty is a necessary prerequiment for freedom, it's not sufficient. The powerful simply use it to oppress the weak, and we end p with the law of the jungle, without even the free bananas. We need to hold each entity to an increasingly strict code of conduct as their power grows, from near-total freedom for Joe Average on one end to the Constitution for the Government on the other, and various organizations each being allowed less and less freedom as their size and power grows.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    32. Re:As the son of a politician by diamondmagic · · Score: 1

      It's called an oxymoron.

    33. Re:As the son of a politician by diamondmagic · · Score: 1

      Notice the key word "wrongful" there?

      If I walked up to you and took (Say) the cell phone you were holding, that would be initiation of violence, it would be theft. unless I am the owner of that phone and there was no agreement for you to hold it, then it's my right to take it from you. That's what "wrongful" is. Just because an entity like the government does it, doesn't make it just. Whatever you want to call it, it's a violation of individual rights, period.

      Except that I am plundered.

      You can't be plundered of something you never owned! You realize the difference between allocation and rationing, right? It's the same difference between scarcity and shortage.

      Liberty does you no good if you lack resources to exercise it, nor do individual rights when you have to give them up to be allowed to eat by your corporate overlords.

      You cannot give up individual rights, by definition! They are yours alone. You can't give them away even if you wanted to! If there's a "corporate overlord" who is telling me how to run my Internet... oh wait that sounds a lot like the government doesn't it? Government, corporation, it doesn't matter, coercion is bad, immoral, period. In that sense yes, power is bad, but show me the last cooperation that was breaking into people's homes threatening to forcefully take money from workers -- It's really only something the government does (the State is the monopoly on the means of coercion, after all).

      The weak aren't suppressed by freedom, they are empowered by it, because of this thing called comparative advantage maybe you've heard of it. It doesn't matter how small and incapable you are, you still benefit from voluntary exchange, it's a logical consequence of the act of exchange.

    34. Re:As the son of a politician by Surt · · Score: 1

      It doesn't sound like you read the parent to whom I replied.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    35. Re:As the son of a politician by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      The joke used to be that the Democrats should come out against raping children, and see what the Republicans do. Horrifically, twp weeks ago, they did, and the Republicans, indeed, came in favor of it. Or at least not against it.

      It takes time. Republicans don't trust Democrats. If the Democrats are REALLY for something, Republicans need to take a moment and look it over.

      On its face, they may say that they want to put an end to child marriage, but Republicans suspect that they're really talking about sneaking some other BS along with it.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    36. Re:As the son of a politician by ultranova · · Score: 1

      If I walked up to you and took (Say) the cell phone you were holding, that would be initiation of violence, it would be theft. unless I am the owner of that phone and there was no agreement for you to hold it, then it's my right to take it from you. That's what "wrongful" is. Just because an entity like the government does it, doesn't make it just.

      Of course not. However, forcing you to pay your share of maintenance of the social and physical infrastructure which made it possible to manufacture that cell phone, deliver it to you, build and maintain the cell phone network, and do the exchange without having to barter... now that is entirely just. Also, since you obviously have already met your basic necessities, it's entirely just to tax you to help those less fortunate than you; after all, why would should you have a greater right to resources than anyone else?

      Whatever you want to call it, it's a violation of individual rights, period.

      Adding the word "period" at the end of your sentence doesn't prove your assertion. Sorry.

      You can't be plundered of something you never owned! You realize the difference between allocation and rationing, right? It's the same difference between scarcity and shortage.

      Coming to think of it, this whole concept of "owning" natural resources is pretty interesting. On what would you base such ownership claims? That someone, somewhere, claimed them as his? That sounds pretty much like the definition of plundering to me.

      You cannot give up individual rights, by definition! They are yours alone. You can't give them away even if you wanted to!

      So what about, say, non-compete clauses? Which one wins, your right to enter into any deals you wish, or your right to work where you will?

      If there's a "corporate overlord" who is telling me how to run my Internet... oh wait that sounds a lot like the government doesn't it? Government, corporation, it doesn't matter, coercion is bad, immoral, period.

      Again, adding "period" to the end of an assertion doesn't prove it. I can think of many situations where coercion is good and moral. For example, if people are dying of thirst because some rich plutocrat has claimed all fresh water for his opium plantation, the situation clearly calls for coercive methods of correction.

      In that sense yes, power is bad, but show me the last cooperation that was breaking into people's homes threatening to forcefully take money from workers -- It's really only something the government does (the State is the monopoly on the means of coercion, after all).

      The State holds the monopoly on force precisely to keep it from being used arbitrarily - whether it actually does a good job on this is arguable. However, force is not the only means of coercion. Resource starvation - such as literal starvation - is just as efficient. Failure to acknowledge this is why Libertarianism keeps on falling flat on its face, and why it causes such catastrophic effects every time any sliver of it manages to make its way into public policy.

      This latest economic crash is a good example of what happens when you give the powerful more liberty to exercise their power: they loot the economy, and the poor end up paying the bill.

      The weak aren't suppressed by freedom, they are empowered by it, because of this thing called comparative advantage maybe you've heard of it.

      The weak are suppressed by the powerful if the powerful have the liberty to do so. That's what's happened every time there's been a huge power inbalance in the society.

      p>It doesn't matter how small and incapable you are, you still benefit from voluntary exchange, it's a logical consequence of the act of exchange.

      If your choices are making the exchange or starving to death, is that voluntary? And if it is, why would having a gun to your head not be? After all, in either case, your alternative to doing what the other party says is the same: death.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    37. Re:As the son of a politician by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Oh, look, it's you, a level 13 Justifier of Republicans with +3 armor against anyone pointing out misbehavior of Republicans

      The reason 'Republicans don't trust Democrats.' is that Republican yammerers like Limbaugh and Beck, for the past two decades, have constantly invented conspiratorial nonsense about Democrats, and the people who've been listening to them for two decades have now gotten elected to office.

      Which is entirely the fault of people like you, supposedly 'sane' conservatives, who've put up with their crap as useful tools, and then lost control of the party thanks to your massive fuckup named Bush, so now we've got actual elected members of Congress who are birthers, and all it takes is the slightest whisper of 'This bill doesn't ban abortion' to make Republicans not attempt to stop massive worldwide rape.

      You don't get to be a 'sane conservative'. That's like being a sane member of the Earth Liberation Front at this point.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    38. Re:As the son of a politician by diamondmagic · · Score: 1

      However, forcing you to pay your share of maintenance of the social and physical infrastructure which made it possible to manufacture that cell phone, deliver it to you, build and maintain the cell phone network, and do the exchange without having to barter... now that is entirely just.

      If the infrastructure needed funding, I would have to voluntarily agree to pay for that price that is being charged -- Which is exactly how it happens, your idea that we have to force people to pay for that is ridiculous.

      Adding the word "period" at the end of your sentence doesn't prove your assertion. Sorry.

      BY DEFINITION it's a violation of individual rights. You can't argue with a by definition argument, sorry.

      For example, if people are dying of thirst because some rich plutocrat has claimed all fresh water for his opium plantation, the situation clearly calls for coercive methods of correction.

      If that were just, the person who stole it would still have to pay for their crimes. If an alien race threatened to blow up the earth unless we killed someone, well sure, let's find someone who will kill the guy, and then have our little parade celebrating how he saved the earth by murdering someone... and then we would promptly execute him too. But you see how perverted you have to get to undermine liberty?

      And seriously, since when was the last time people died of thirst? We have charities for that, never mind that you can find water free in practically every retail store in existence. It's a false dilemma, we do not need to steal water from people to keep people from dying of thirst.

      So what about, say, non-compete clauses?

      They are unenforceable... well technically you would be in violation of your contract, but there's no damages that the former employer could sue for if they have already gotten everything they asked of you in the way of labor, and have already paid you everything in the way of salary. At the very worst you could simply not get any pay that was due to come to you at a future date.

      his latest economic crash is a good example of what happens when you give the powerful more liberty to exercise their power: they loot the economy, and the poor end up paying the bill.

      Giving the federal reserve more leeway to ruin things is not deregulation, it's interventionism. You realize they held interest rates at 1% for years, right? What does economics teach about price fixing, again?

      If your choices are making the exchange or starving to death, is that voluntary?

      False dilemma. The only way death would be the only option is if a gun were pointed at your head in which case... that's coercion.

    39. Re:As the son of a politician by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      Oh, look, it's you, a level 13 Justifier of Republicans with +3 armor against anyone pointing out misbehavior of Republicans

      Oh, look. A level 1 Leftist bomb thrower.

      The reason 'Republicans don't trust Democrats.' is that Republican yammerers like Limbaugh and Beck, for the past two decades, have constantly invented conspiratorial nonsense about Democrats, and the people who've been listening to them for two decades have now gotten elected to office.

      No, Republican's don't trust Democrats because of condescending libtard douchebags, like you. We don't seek, nor do we need your approval of our beliefs.

      Which is entirely the fault of people like you, supposedly 'sane' conservatives, who've put up with their crap as useful tools, and then lost control of the party thanks to your massive fuckup named Bush, so now we've got actual elected members of Congress who are birthers, and all it takes is the slightest whisper of 'This bill doesn't ban abortion' to make Republicans not attempt to stop massive worldwide rape.

      Ahh. Yes, that's the crux of the matter isn't it? Well, if abortion is not an important issue why won't your side take it off of the table? That's where your douchebaggery is most blatant. You claim that it's not important, but it's important enough for your side to fight for it.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    40. Re:As the son of a politician by ultranova · · Score: 1

      If the infrastructure needed funding, I would have to voluntarily agree to pay for that price that is being charged -- Which is exactly how it happens, your idea that we have to force people to pay for that is ridiculous.

      No, what happens is that you refuse to pay, based on a cost-benefit estimation weighing deterioration from losing your share of maintenance to the cost to you. Everyone else does that too, and the thing collapses entirely. That's "tragedy of the commons".

      BY DEFINITION it's a violation of individual rights. You can't argue with a by definition argument, sorry.

      Of course I can, simply by disputing your definition. Specifically, I'm not buying your assertion that you have a right to not be taxed, or that property rights are absolute.

      If that were just, the person who stole it would still have to pay for their crimes. If an alien race threatened to blow up the earth unless we killed someone, well sure, let's find someone who will kill the guy, and then have our little parade celebrating how he saved the earth by murdering someone... and then we would promptly execute him too. But you see how perverted you have to get to undermine liberty?

      So first you show your approval of this guys actions by celebrating him, and then you show your disapproval by executing him. That is ridiculous. Either they were okay, in which case no execution, or they weren't, in which case no parade.

      And seriously, since when was the last time people died of thirst? We have charities for that, never mind that you can find water free in practically every retail store in existence. It's a false dilemma, we do not need to steal water from people to keep people from dying of thirst.

      Wasn't there, just a few days ago, a Slashdot article about someone trying to use a wind-power project as a cover for draining an aquifer? Water is getting rare, these days, and already people do die due to lack of clean water.

      Giving the federal reserve more leeway to ruin things is not deregulation, it's interventionism.

      Um, I'm talking about more regulation and less leeway for every bank here.

      You realize they held interest rates at 1% for years, right? What does economics teach about price fixing, again?

      That would depend on who your ask, now wouldn't it ?-) Economics isn't science, it's glorified astrology.

      If your choices are making the exchange or starving to death, is that voluntary?

      False dilemma. The only way death would be the only option is if a gun were pointed at your head in which case... that's coercion.

      No, it isn't a false dilemma, I'm sad to say. It's exactly the dilemma factory workers faced during the Industrial Revolution and minimum-wage workers face today.

      I understand it's difficult to accept something that will undermine your entire belief system, but... that's just the way it is. Libertarianism doesn't work, since it fails to acknowledge resource starvation as a form of coercion. That's why the more libertarian an economic system is, the more hierarchical and oppressive its power structures tend to get.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    41. Re:As the son of a politician by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      No, Republican's don't trust Democrats because of condescending libtard douchebags, like you. We don't seek, nor do we need your approval of our beliefs.

      Says the person who, in every political discussion, tries to assert he's a 'sane Republican'. Yeah, that's not an attempt to get approval.

      The goddamn 'sane' Republicans are the problem. You just keep pretending everything's nice and good over there and it's only a few crazies that you want nothing to do with, but we're not morons...we see how Republicans use crazies to get elected.

      You are oh so desperate for us to know you don't have anything to do with that, but you don't get to be part of that without having the taint rub off on you,

      You claim that it's not important, but it's important enough for your side to fight for it.

      No one 'fought' for abortion in this bill, you loon. There is no abortion in the bill.

      If anyone had a problem with any hypothetical abortion in the bill they should have amended one of the bills so as to exclude it. (Not that the bill actually funds any health care at all.)

      And before you mention that there wasn't time, or it couldn't be done under suspension of the rules...there wasn't time because the Republicans decides to have near continual filibusters in the Senate, and only stopped them when Reid made it clear the Senate was going to stay there until it actually voted on some damn stuff. (Or Republicans could leave at which point Democrats would happily vote without them.)

      At which point the Senate bill passed finally (unanimously, I must add) and the House tried to hurry it through (instead of going to committee) because there was no time and it was, apparently, a massively popular bill. At which point the abortion issue magically somehow appeared for the very first time, invented out of thin air by paranoid lunatics who read 'women having access to health care' as pro-abortion. (Or, even more worrying, read 'women having access to education' as pro-abortion.)

      Of course, under your interesting logic, THE SENATE VOTED UNANIMOUSLY FOR GOVERNMENT FUNDING OF ABORTIONS, and it took the House to shoot it down. Holy. Crap. Do Republicans know every single Senator is now pro-choice? Not even 'pro-choice', but actively in favor of abortions? (Hell, do Democrats know that?)

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    42. Re:As the son of a politician by diamondmagic · · Score: 1

      No, what happens is that you refuse to pay, based on a cost-benefit estimation weighing deterioration from losing your share of maintenance to the cost to you. Everyone else does that too, and the thing collapses entirely. That's "tragedy of the commons".

      If I refuse to pay then I don't get access to the network. This is already how it works how are you disputing this? A "tragedy of the commons" is what happens when you don't have property to allocate decision making, i.e. what we have with the oceans where it is profitable to over-fish because no one owns oceans, unlike as farms do for crops.

      Of course I can, simply by disputing your definition. Specifically, I'm not buying your assertion that you have a right to not be taxed, or that property rights are absolute

      Can you can find some objective way of allocating resources? Individual rights (including property ownership and rule of law) has the track record of being one of the most predictable, simple systems to determine who does what, and best of all, it's all about freedom.

      So first you show your approval of this guys actions by celebrating him, and then you show your disapproval by executing him. That is ridiculous. Either they were okay, in which case no execution, or they weren't, in which case no parade.

      I can't say for sure would happen in a free society, otherwise it would't be a free society, would it? Point is just because you violated someone's rights, even if for some greater good which everyone (subjectively) recognizes, is no excuse to make exemptions to the rule of law.

      That would depend on who your ask, now wouldn't it ?-) Economics isn't science, it's glorified astrology.

      The parts where people are imposing subjective theory as objective fact is where it's glorified astrology. We can observe the act of action, though. We can make logical conclusions from action, by observing the decisions made. But that's all you can do. You cannot say who benefited more in a voluntary exchange, that makes no sense, since value is subjective. You could compare who would be willing to abandon the exchange depending on how much money you bribe them, but of course you can't say that even that money is worth the same to different people. Likewise, we can observe that people, as an aggregate, are willing to exchange for more food than actually exists if what they have to give up is below the equilibrium price. That's a shortage.

      Short term shortages may occur if an entrepreneur did not correctly forecast the equilibrium price for a product, usually when launching a new product (for instance). Long term shortages simply do not exist in a free market. In this case, the Fed printed the money necessary to lower the interest rates to 1%, dramatically reducing the price of time (interest), making unsustainable capital projects like housing profitable, when in a free market it wouldn't have been. To argue that's a failure of the market is like paying farmers to destroy crops and blaming starvation on the free market because they voluntarily accepted the money. (Something which really did happen, too.)

      No, it isn't a false dilemma, I'm sad to say. It's exactly the dilemma factory workers faced during the Industrial Revolution and minimum-wage workers face today.

      I understand it's difficult to accept something that will undermine your entire belief system, but... that's just the way it is. Libertarianism doesn't work, since it fails to acknowledge resource starvation as a form of coercion. That's why the more libertarian an economic system is, the more hierarchical and oppressive its power structures tend to get.

      Since when is starvation a form of coercion? Food is an economic good. That means it's scarce. That means there isn't enough food for everyone if it were free to acquire. If what you were saying were true, coercion would be an intrinsic part of the system. C

    43. Re:As the son of a politician by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      Says the person who, in every political discussion, tries to assert he's a 'sane Republican'.

      I have no specific memory of using that term, but even if I did it would have been in response to a claim about all Republicans being insane. By providing a counter example, I'd disprove the assertion.

      Yeah, that's not an attempt to get approval.

      No. It's not. I really don't give a fuck what some libtard like you thinks.

      The goddamn 'sane' Republicans are the problem. You just keep pretending everything's nice and good over there and it's only a few crazies that you want nothing to do with, but we're not morons...we see how Republicans use crazies to get elected.

      We find those fringe elements preferable to you. You are the problem.

      Those crazy people are less repugnant than you are.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    44. Re:As the son of a politician by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      I don't care what you think, because I figured out something very important I am going to keep repeating.

      THE 2010 SENATE REPUBLICANS VOTED UNANIMOUSLY FOR GOVERNMENT FUNDING OF ABORTIONS (According to many House Republicans, and Lord Kano.)

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    45. Re:As the son of a politician by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      I don't care what you think, because I figured out something very important I am going to keep repeating.

      THE 2010 SENATE REPUBLICANS VOTED UNANIMOUSLY FOR GOVERNMENT FUNDING OF ABORTIONS (According to many House Republicans, and Lord Kano.)

      [citation needed]

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    46. Re:As the son of a politician by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This has nothing to do with right or left, but the green of the money being bribed^H^H^H^H^H^H given for campaigning. This is not something the hill knows a damn thing about, and if we're lucky 10% of them understand the issue at a high level.

      Glad you all are so damned smart that you can explain it to us "dumb Americans" Problem is, not left or right, the problem is that every business that the government gets involved in is ultimately abused by Govt. agencies, buearorats, or totally screwed up. Govt and private business do not mix. Get that through your pimpled faced pasty skinned little heads, and for heavens sakes, move out of your mom's basement.

    47. Re:As the son of a politician by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... by having them living on borrowed money, so the problem was hidden for an entire decade until it blew up.

      I think it was actually in the 1980's when the country started living more on borrowed money. It just didn't get bad enough to matter much until recently. In the 2000's the USA lost something like 44,000 manufacturing plants. There are some parts for US military hardware that aren't manufactured in the country anymore. How scary is that?

    48. Re:As the son of a politician by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      I think it was actually in the 1980's when the country started living more on borrowed money. It just didn't get bad enough to matter much until recently.

      Yeah, obviously, some people have always lived on it. But in the 00s, wages remained steady, and inflation continued, so essentially everyone borrowed. Borrowed, mostly, from their houses.

      This is, incidentally, why the nonsense about 'irresponsible borrowers' is bullshit. People didn't become irresponsibly, they did what we've always done throughout history...people who have money shortfalls end up borrowing money, hoping that things become better, but often they do not and the people can't pay it back. This is not the new thing, this is not what caused the problem.

      It's just, previous, banks wouldn't loan to such people, whereas this time, the banks figured out how to make money by loaning money they knew couldn't be paid back. (By selling the loans to other people.)

      Combine that with the fact that the amount of people who needed to borrow probably quadrupled, and, well, that's what happened, right there.

      If banks, in an orgy of fraud and gluttony, hadn't made such loans, the people pointing out 'You can't have price inflation and not wage inflation without everyone ending up poor' would have been listened to years earlier.

      And also the banks wouldn't have blown up, but that problem is orthogonal to the wage problem. The banks behavior caused their own problem, but just hide the wage problem. People should have started ending up homeless in 2000 or so, due to lack of jobs that actually paid enough money to live on, which would have been a lot more gradual and actually been a fixable problems.

      Instead, they took jobs that didn't pay enough, and lived off their house, and, perhaps most importantly, assumed it was just them...when it was actually a huge section of society. The whole 'slowly boil a frog' metaphor is generally stupid, but one place it does work is for the economy. Instead of a few people getting angry each year, everyone just got poorer and poorer. But, eventually, just like the frog jumps out in real life, people do too. And discovered, hey, everyone else had been getting boiled also.

      Sadly, apparently, Republicans have managed to make them angry at the debt, which literally has nothing at all to do with this.

      In the 2000's the USA lost something like 44,000 manufacturing plants. There are some parts for US military hardware that aren't manufactured in the country anymore. How scary is that?

      That is a serious national security risk. Not the second sentence, which is also a national security risk...but the fact that we cannot manufacture roughly the amount of goods we need is a serious security risk itself.

      Counties are rarely entirely self-sufficient, and don't need to be, but they really should be self-sufficient in most things, and be able to overproduce enough things to trade for the rest.

      And, of course, it's a pretty nonsensical economic policy on top of that. We can't all have jobs working in Best Buy selling stuff from China...at some point, all the money will end up in China. I mean, this is just blatantly obvious to anyone who glances at the problem.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    49. Re:As the son of a politician by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry, where in the constitution is it our government's job to deal with child marriage in other countries? Or manage development and aid programs for that matter?

  3. Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Limbaugh

    Isn't that a type of inedible, spoiled cheese?

  4. Oh, c'mon ... by jc42 · · Score: 1

    Since when does any political "debate" require any knowledge of the topic?

    Jeez; someone simply hasn't been paying attention. (But of course this would fit right into the tradition. ;-)

    --
    Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    1. Re:Oh, c'mon ... by rwa2 · · Score: 2

      Heh, pretty much. I'm actually not all that dissatisfied with the current state of affairs. The best Congress is a deadlocked Congress. So just don't waste any time, energy, and especially money on them or any other administrative overhead.

      If the politicians aren't successful at legislating the net, then the technologists will remain in control, as they should be.

    2. Re:Oh, c'mon ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How did a 12 years old get such a low Slashdot number?

      You think technologists are EVER in control of something which makes lots of money?

      You think the costs of running a congress are anything compared to the budget? You think them being deadlocked reduces their operational costs?

    3. Re:Oh, c'mon ... by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      The best Congress is a deadlocked Congress.

      So you would have preferred that Congress remained deadlocked, and not passed the 9/11 first responders health care legislation? If so, fsck you and the horse you rode in on, buddy. Not to mention the repeal of DADT, where a deadlocked Congress would have meant the persistence of legally enshrined bigotry and dishonor in our armed forces.

      I know "government is the problem, not the solution" has been an axiom of the far right since the Reagan era and the start of our decline into plutocracy and idiocracy, but I'd hoped that such a shining example of inactive government being a negative outcome would have temporarily restored some sense.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    4. Re:Oh, c'mon ... by BoberFett · · Score: 1

      It's pretty funny that you're criticizing the "government is the problem, not the solution" mantra by invoking DADT which is a problem caused by a standing government military, and 9/11 which was arguably a problem caused by US government meddling in the middle east. I daresay that government IS the problem, and that expecting them to also be the solution is extremely naive of you.

    5. Re:Oh, c'mon ... by Nadaka · · Score: 0

      9/11 would have happened eventually even if we never set foot in the middle east. Al Qeada and the taliban want nothing less than the establishment of a global caliphate under the absolute rule of an elite class of islamic clergy, the conversion or extermination of everyone who isn't a militant islamic radical and an end to science, education and freedom of all kinds.

      More of the harm caused to the American people is a result of the exploitation by the elite owner class through their corporate proxies rather than the government.

      Less government isn't the solution, neither is more government. What we need is a better, more principled government.

    6. Re:Oh, c'mon ... by vuke69 · · Score: 1

      To government! The source of, and solution to, all of life's problems.

      Which of course, is only half true. I'll leave it as an exercise for the reader to determine which half.

      --
      Time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so. ~ Douglas Adams
    7. Re:Oh, c'mon ... by jc42 · · Score: 1

      I know "government is the problem, not the solution" has been an axiom of the far right since <whenever> ...

      Maybe we should be making more of a point that we have no choice in whether we have a government; we can only choose what kind of government. After all, if anarchy were declared in some area and all governments agreed to keep away from it, we all know what would happen: Within hours, the local thugs would be running things, and they would constitute a new local government. This is pretty much how all human societies before the past couple of centuries were run, though the thugs characterized themselves as the "aristocracy". The development of democracies/republics/whatever recently has basically been a semi-successful way of giving the general population some control over the thugs that are at so often the top of the pecking order.

      So the old joke about "If X doesn't work, you need more X" is somewhat true of governments. In particular, we humans need governments that are strong enough to regulate themselves and reign in the people who manage to position themselves as our rulers. The one thing we haven't quite figured out is how to prevent the thugs from taking control of the government's self-regulatory mechanism, as has been happening in the US for the past few decades, and making themselves exempt from the laws. (In the US, they've successfully made themselves exempt from most taxes. ;-)

      Actually, I suspect that much of the US's "far right" understands this to some degree. How else would you explain their constant campaigning against "big government" while trying so hard to be the ones in control, and when they get control, they do nothing to make it smaller? Anyone smart enough to understand what it takes to get in power has to be smart enough to understand the contradiction in this.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    8. Re:Oh, c'mon ... by rwa2 · · Score: 1

      The best Congress is a deadlocked Congress.

      So you would have preferred that Congress remained deadlocked, and not passed the 9/11 first responders health care legislation?

      The two-party system sorta ensures that only the stuff that both sides agree on goes to pass. It's sort of a yin-yang thing.

      Of course, when they're in hyper-reactionary mode, both parties agree to go on and create some monstrosities such as the Patriot Act and the TSA. But occasionally they do good stuff too.

      As much as I'd like to see something "positive" happen with regards to NN, I'd just as soon see less legislation pass until they've got it figured out. In the mean time, the internet is doing just fine without them... though I'm sure monopoly-bustin' time will eventually come round again.

      --
      Anarchy might not be the best form of government, but it's better than no government at all.

    9. Re:Oh, c'mon ... by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      So you would have preferred that Congress remained deadlocked, and not passed the 9/11 first responders health care legislation? If so, fsck you and the horse you rode in on, buddy. Not to mention the repeal of DADT, where a deadlocked Congress would have meant the persistence of legally enshrined bigotry and dishonor in our armed forces.

      You've obviously never served. See, the first thing they do in the military is strip you of your identity. You are no better or worse than the soldier next to you. The only identifying characteristics you are allowed is your last name and rank. You all have the same clothes, hair cut, wall locker set up, sheets, pillow, blanket, boots, everything!

      Now, with the repeal of DADT, gay soldiers are now allowed to "come out" and say, "I'm special, I'm different, and I deserve to be treated differently than the rest of you losers."

      Frankly, the government has no business knowing which gender you fine appealing. That was the beauty of DADT. It made the government unable to ask, and it prevented members from trying to differentiate themselves. It was literally, "Don't Ask, Don't Tell, Don't Care". Now, with the repeal, gay members are allowed to be different. They may demand special treatment. They can, and will, say that any negative treatment that they receive, whether from superiors or fellow members, is due to their sexual orientation. Before the repeal, you were judged purely on your performance and time in service. Now, anyone coming out will have to be treated with kid gloves or else risk an EO complaint.

      And don't give me that crap saying that this is the same as integrating minorities into the service. Everyone knew who the minorities were by looking at them. No one knew who was gay before this repeal. If no one knows, it can't be used as a consideration for special treatment.

      To put it in a nutshell. You don't know what the hell you are talking about. Your primary bitch about DADT was that military members couldn't be themselves. The whole point of the military is that NO ONE is allowed to be themselves.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    10. Re:Oh, c'mon ... by Pence128 · · Score: 1

      9/11 would have happened eventually even if we never set foot in the middle east.

      Why?

      --
      404: sig not found.
    11. Re:Oh, c'mon ... by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      The US is culturally heretical to them and would be a significant target for that reason alone. Just like moderate muslims and educated women are.

    12. Re:Oh, c'mon ... by Pence128 · · Score: 1

      Only the US?

      --
      404: sig not found.
    13. Re:Oh, c'mon ... by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Not only the US.

      Did you miss the part where I said they wanted to exterminate or convert everyone who isn't like them and throw the world into a new dark age?

      The US is a preferred target because of our influence and interference, not our interference alone.

    14. Re:Oh, c'mon ... by Pence128 · · Score: 1

      What influence?

      --
      404: sig not found.
  5. The evil "American Right"... by icebrain · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yeah, like there are only two two kinds of people in this country ... and there are just as many on the "American Left" who will happily and blindly lap up what their "leaders" tell them to.

    This appears to be a combined case of blind partisanship ("they support it, so we must oppose it because they're the other side"), stupidity, and "a free market isn't defined by the presence of competition or the ability for all parties to make free, informed choices, but rather whether large corporations have any restrictions on them or not".

    I have no love for a lot of the "American Left" as most would think of it, nor for the "Right". But this is just fucking stupid.

    --
    The meek may inherit the earth, but the strong shall take the stars.
    1. Re:The evil "American Right"... by JesseDegenerate · · Score: 1

      cause real life is black and white.

    2. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Scrameustache · · Score: 0

      Yeah, like there are only two two kinds of people in this country ... and there are just as many on the "American Left" who will happily and blindly lap up what their "leaders" tell them to.

      There's almost no Left in the U.S.A., "right of center" seems like it's the Left only to those at the extreme Right.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    3. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 1, Informative

      ..."they support it, so we must oppose it"

      Just look at Michelle Obama's support of healthy diets and exercise to combat the obesity epidemic. Those republican idols Glenn Beck and Sarah Palin jump on the other side: the gubbermint is taking away our desserts! Ebil ebil gubbermint!

    4. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, like there are only two two kinds of people in this country ... and there are just as many on the "American Left" who will happily and blindly lap up what their "leaders" tell them to.

      There's almost no Left in the U.S.A., "right of center" seems like it's the Left only to those at the extreme Right.

      That is quite possibly the most idiotic thing I have read this morning. Where did you draw that conclusion from, Texas?

    5. Re:The evil "American Right"... by alta · · Score: 0, Troll

      the gubbermint is taking away our desserts! Ebil ebil gubbermint!

      The first part of your post was just noise. It was the end of it that mattered. The government is telling us what we can't eat now. Which is just another way of telling us what we are allowed to eat. HELLO?! Doesn't the government control us enough already?

      --
      Do not meddle in the affairs of sysadmins, for they are subtle, and quick to anger.
    6. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If someone is "Right" or "Left" in all aspects then they are either lying or have the mental capabilities of a sea cucumber. First of all, being fiscally conservative is not a matter of politics, but of basic math. If you do the math and can afford something without it impacting future plans, you can choose to buy it, otherwise you can't. Period. The only exception to this rule is in the case where deciding not to expend the money may result in there not being a tomorrow (disaster, invasion, etc). Socially people can choose whatever they want and not be incorrect in their choice as it is an opinion. Society is a collection of sub cultures and each sub culture has it's own societal beliefs, to start declaring one better than another only violates the basis of the original assumption of diversity and as opinions can not be inherently incorrect without being testable, the assumption can not be made to as which is correct.

    7. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only a complete moron would call a recommendation by a public figure, who holds no office, 'control'.

    8. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Nimey · · Score: 1

      Right, because saying "you shouldn't eat this" is the same as sticking you in prison if you eat it anyway.

      I really hope that this was a satire, because if not you're a moron.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    9. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      If you're from Europe, where everything is left or far left, America does indeed look like it is right or far right. It all depends upon where you stand on the "left vs right" line. But America has always had a strong individual streak compared to old Europe, and its perpetual caste system.

      You just don't realize that you've replaced one set of ruling elites, with another. Some of us don't want that kind of leadership, and you can frown all you want at us, we don't care (except Obama and his apology tours).

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    10. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is a real fun to watch you Americans debating politics. You are all retarted.

    11. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is a real fun to watch you Americans debating politics. You are all retarted.

      It is this repeated consumption of tarts and other sweets that makes us all so fat.

    12. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Scragglykat · · Score: 1

      Wow, you make the American Left sound a lot like Linux zealots... "they are a major corporation (MS/Apple), so we must oppose them because they're the other side" :o)

    13. Re:The evil "American Right"... by GooberToo · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The government is telling us what we can't eat now.

      So its agreed then! All of your health problems, be it directly or indirectly related to your obesity absolutely should not be covered by health insurance.

      For those who don't understand the connection, its government reclassification of obesity as a desease which mandated coverage of self destructive behavior which we all now pay for - both in taxes and health insurance.

      So now a government representative says, you might want to consider stop eating stuff which only an idiot constantly eats on a regular basis...and your response is...the gubberment, which is funding my stupidity, wants to control me...Ahhhh.....

      Riiight....

    14. Re:The evil "American Right"... by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      Which is why politicians constantly attempt to include more and more uneducated masses into the equation. They are, by far, easier to manipulate and are directly responsible to the steady erosion of the US government and the rights of the people. Uneducated, ignorant masses, are exactly why so many people suffer around the world and why so many are easily manipulated by the government and the press.

      Hell, most Americans don't seem to even understand the first and second amendment - or worse, have bought into the bullshit that its hard to understand at best, and ambiguous at worst. Anyone who says that is truly ignorant or attempting to pull one over on the American population.

      And as the US education system is steadily destroyed, the number of ignorant, easily manipulated masses, grows on a daily basis. Ignorance and lack of education is the first ring of power.

    15. Re:The evil "American Right"... by DavidTC · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I remember when Obama recommended that people check their tire pressure (And maintain their cars.) instead of allowing new offshore drilling during the election.

      The Republicans, of course, decided to act like checking your tire pressure was an insanely stupid thing for human beings to do. (Sadly, as Obama was not elected yet, they couldn't act like his suggestion was a government dictate.)

      eventually happened with offshore drilling.

      Remember my Republican friends, if a Democrat suggests something that would, for the cost of a $10 air pump from Wal-Mart and 5 minutes of your time every month, save you 3% of your gasoline costs, (Which by my math would pay for itself the first time you use it, if you spend at least $33 on gas a month.) why, they're crazy. If they're elected, or even if they're just the spouse of someone elected, they're a fascist.

      The government should never attempt to provide information that would make the lives of their citizens better!

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    16. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It has been studied to death and repeatedly shown that more conservatives suffer from misunderstandings/ignorance of various current affairs than liberals. That's not to say there aren't a lot of idiots on both sides, but as a general rule progressives are the way they are because they seek out new information. Conservatives do not, by their nature.

    17. Re:The evil "American Right"... by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      American politics, however, is. Not black and white, but left and right. There are only two parties of any note, and each adopted a political side - both defining it, and becoming defined by it. It's lead to a level of polarisation in which the middle, though present in debate, is effectively excluded from organised or serious politics.

    18. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 2

      If you're from Europe, where everything is left or far left, America does indeed look like it is right or far right. It all depends upon where you stand on the "left vs right" line. But America has always had a strong individual streak compared to old Europe, and its perpetual caste system.

      America's caste system is stronger than most European nations -- we have lower intergenerational economic mobility than France, Germany, Sweden, Canada, Finland, Norway, or and Denmark; another source has us even lower then the U.K.

      I know that this data does not fit with American mythology, and so will probably be discarded by most of my fellow Americans.

      Being leftist -- that is, in favor of the interests of working people as opposed to aristocrats or capitalists -- is far more compatible with a strong individualist streak than right-wing thought. There's nothing "individualist" about favoring a system that leaves most individuals few degrees of freedom, enthralled to their corporate masters.

      We don't have a strong left in the U.S. because for much of the 20th century we deported socialists, or outright criminalized talking about leftism, for the years of "Red Scares", and because the flow of information remains dominated by right-wing corporate media.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    19. Re:The evil "American Right"... by JWW · · Score: 1

      The only reason I'm not for congress passing a net neutrality law is that I have no belief whatsoever that the law they come up with will be any good at all, and very real fears that it will be much worse than having no net neutrality law at all.

      This debate is frankly terrifying because I think the users of the internet may very well end up royally screwed either way.

      I can't help but get the feeling while watching this debate that I'm watching the internet die in slow motion.

    20. Re:The evil "American Right"... by CookieForYou · · Score: 1

      Socially, America is in the 90th percentile of "right" leaning countries.

      There are plenty of issues where it falls "extreme right" in the midst of few peers, such as Somalia, Saudi Arabia, Iran, etc.

      There are other issues where the US is "center" by the rest of the world's standards (not just talking Europe). There are virtually NO issues where the US falls left of center by a global standard.

      Just sayin...

    21. Re:The evil "American Right"... by CookieForYou · · Score: 2

      Go buy a twinkie and tell me if the government stops you.

      In fact, go eat some dirt. Did someone stop you?

      so... what exactly are you saying?

    22. Re:The evil "American Right"... by JWW · · Score: 1

      You know what, I am SOOOO pissed at that "but you'll increase our health insurance costs!!!" bullshit.

      Until someone who doesn't smoke, exercises regularly, eats only healthy foods, drinks just a little wine but no more, eats fish but not too much, doesn't eat processed foods, doesn't eat too much sugar, etc. manages to not DIE in the end ANYWAY, then you can have that argument back.

      I know it can cost more, but it doesn't always. Everyone's life doesn't all fit on the actuarial charts directly. The problem isn't that we don't have enough health care, its that the health care we have costs way too much. It frustrates me that the goal of health care legislation always seems to tilt towards rationing it to save money. Why the HELL can't we try to get more PRODUCTIVE and EFFECTIVE health care instead of clamoring to all try to have LESS. The US manufacturing industry (the parts that have survived) have been increasing their productivity AND lowering their costs for over FOUR DECADES, but the health care industry thinks that stagnant productivity and double digit percentage cost increases every year a just unavoidable. More, cheaper, health care is what is needed, not the same priced health care but less in addition to "you can't eat that" laws that vainly try to decrease the need for health care.

    23. Re:The evil "American Right"... by h4rr4r · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Where is this American left? I want to join their party. All I see is the Democrats on the right and the Republicans on the far right. A major left party would be wonderful.

    24. Re:The evil "American Right"... by GooberToo · · Score: 0

      manages to not DIE in the end ANYWAY, then you can have that argument back.

      Wrong. Absolutely wrong. Absolutely wrong in every way anyone can possibly be wrong. Please go learn about the almost endless list of costly health issues which is directly and indirectly associated with obesity. The FACTS are, we all pay extra in taxes and health insurance to cover this self destructive lot. On a per person basis, its likely not a lot but the facts are, its money which could be spent on other things.

      And that's ignoring other government services which also fuel the insanity above. Have you ever see food stamps being used? Some regulations have helped limit some of the insanity, but its still common. Its crazy how much assistance dollars are used on processed foods, sugary drinks, and just generally poor nutrition. All too often these dollars are used to fuel a diet which directly feeds higher taxes and higher insurance rates.

    25. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Nadaka · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And what you don't realize is that the right also has its body of ruling elites that it serves with blind and absolute allegiance that more closely resembles deification than mere political affiliation.

      Modern democracy is a circus to distract us from the people who are really pulling the strings and controlling our nation and our world.

      Left? Right? It doesn't matter. What matters is that there is an elite class of people who are dismantling our nation and siphoning every last drop that they can from the people before our nation collapses under their greed and lack of foresight. Unless something happens soon to change that, our little experiment in liberty will have been nothing but a minor intermission in a long line of authoritarian kleptocracies and America as we know it will not see the 22nd century.

    26. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're from Europe, where everything is left or far left

      Sounds like something you'd hear on Fox.

      Hate to break it to you, but Europe is a large, diverse continent with very diverse politics. There's politicians so far to the right they'd make Limbaugh uncomfortable. The US, on the other hand, is clustered on the right with very little difference between your politicians.

    27. Re:The evil "American Right"... by vuke69 · · Score: 1

      And as the US education system is steadily destroyed, the number of ignorant, easily manipulated masses, grows on a daily basis. Ignorance and lack of education is the first ring of power.

      The sole purpose of the US educational system, and all those modeled after it, is to provide a continuous stream of docile, obedient, and minimally trained workers. Free thought is something to be discouraged, and mindless obedience is glorified.

      Now, beyond the obvious primary effects of this type of policy, are the wonderful (if you're a politician) secondary effects of it; wave after wave of new morons released from captivity, and all too eager to dilute to informed voting population.

      --
      Time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so. ~ Douglas Adams
    28. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Notquitecajun · · Score: 1

      From one perspective, it's a reasonable starting position - I immediately questioned net neutrality because of who was supporting it - anti-business (and I'm NOT just saying "anti-corporate" here) hard-leftists. It's the one time that they may at least be partially correct, but I DO believe that they wish to regulate content (particularly free speech issues a la "fairness doctrine"), and didn't quite get what they wanted.

      I DON'T trust the government on net neutrality, however.

    29. Re:The evil "American Right"... by JWW · · Score: 1

      I understand that in general, statistically, costs are higher for obese people. But, I DO NOT think that that requires the government to regulate people's weight.

      The argument "they increase our health care costs", it the perfect foil for those that want to control ACCESS to health care procedures.

      With the health care bill and with all this "lifestyle legislation" that is so popular, the real issue was chucked aside.

      Most of the American people were not upset about the availability of health care, they were upset about the excessive cost!! But instead of solving the cost problem, the government tried to solve the availability problem. It was the much, much, easier problem to solve. Everyone has to have health care, everyone has to be covered. The health insurance companies got more customers in exchange for covering everything, plus the got to raise their rates too!!

      The cost of health care was not addressed with any effectiveness whatsoever. The current health insurance setup in this country today guarantees that we'll get good health care for the highest possible price. There are too many middlemen, too much pressure to increase cost and cut service. The health care bill was done wrong, I'm not sure what is right. It severely bothers me that I consider myself to be libertarian, but can see that perhaps single payer may be one of the better ways out of this health care mess.

      Back to the gov. controlling the food you eat angle. Sure I know that for huge groups and for statistical averages my stance is not strong. But as we look at individuals it breaks down. And I hate this issue being looked on as a group issue. Because that means that our health care must then trend towards treating the groups and not the person. And when we get there we will have lost. We'll get to the point where eventually, someone will have to say "you're too fat, we're not going to save you, its too expensive" and I don't want our society to be like that. The only way away from that I see is to increase the productivity, availability, technology, and decrease the costs of health care. And yes I do have ideas about how that can be done, but I've rambled on enough already.

    30. Re:The evil "American Right"... by hey! · · Score: 1

      I have no love for a lot of the "American Left" as most would think of it, nor for the "Right". But this is just fucking stupid.

      I've lived long enough that I've gone from the right side of the political spectrum to the left side without moving one damned inch. One thing I've never been able stomach is weasely claim that both sides are just the same. That's the argument people make when they want to stop paying attention.

      We aren't talking about whether to join the "left" social club or the "right".We're talking about an issue of public policy -- whether vendors of network services should be allowed to control consumers' access to information. Now there is a kind of equivalence here, I suppose, in that both sides have some good points to make. But that doesn't mean that the positions are equivalent.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    31. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with the left is that it has no mathematical abilities whatsoever, which is why they invariably ruin the economies of countries where they are in charge. How much is 3% of $33? How many time do $100 million go into $800 billion? Both lefties above fail.

    32. Re:The evil "American Right"... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      If you're from Europe, where everything is left or far left

      So, are the two British National Party MEPs left or far left in your world? They are against immigration, think people who are not 'proper' British people (e.g. the third-generation offspring of Pakistani immigrants) should be sent back 'home'. They want to repeal anti-discrimination legislation, remove the UK from the EU, and are generally considered to be pretty right wing in the EU, so I'm interested how left you consider them to be.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    33. Re:The evil "American Right"... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Likely from looking at the rest of the planet. For the most part, the Dems heavily resemble moderate right of center parties in almost all other democratic nations. There are no Social Democrat/socialist parties in the US of any note. There may be a few legitimate left wing members of the Dems, but by and large the party is no more left-leaning than the British Tories.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    34. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Oh, of course. I mean, they would never actually create laws or public policies that would put restrictions on unhealthy food, and would certainly never try to restrict the consumer access to certain foods!!

      People that think that must be morons.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    35. Re:The evil "American Right"... by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      I DO believe that they wish to regulate content (particularly free speech issues a la "fairness doctrine")

      Congratulations, you've been indoctrinated.

      This particular "fairness doctrine" argument is the most batshit insane part of the "war on net neutrality" - it just came out of fucking nowhere (or more specifically, Glenn Beck's ass).

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    36. Re:The evil "American Right"... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Last time I checked, Michelle Obama isn't part of the government. By virtue of her husband being President, she has a certain degree of precedence at formal functions, as well as the Secret Service making sure she's safe, but beyond that, she's just a citizen.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    37. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Healthy food costs much more than high carb low nutrition food. Assistance dollars tend to go towards high carb low nutrition food because it allows people to stretch those food stamps farther. I grew up poor, $250 in food stamps would not provide healthy food for 5 people for a month even back in the 80s.

    38. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 1

      I agree with everything you say, but I don't know what your point is. Her association with her husband and president is all the right needs to make knee jerk attacks on anything she supports, including healthy diets and exercise.

      As you say, she is not in a position to implement policy so all the claims that this is nanny state intrusion is pure deranged fantasy.

    39. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which by my math would pay for itself the first time you use it, if you spend at least $33 on gas a month.

      No, that would save you just $1, not $10. So you'd need to spend ~$330 on gas to get your money back.
      I don't disagree with your argument, just your math.

    40. Re:The evil "American Right"... by JesseDegenerate · · Score: 1

      While the two main parties drown other voices out (mainly with fears that if you take votes from us, then THAT will win type arguments) Those are valid arguments, and most of the time with Government it's the lesser evil. Doesn't mean those voices aren't out there, or heard by someone. It's never ever black and white.

    41. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Checking your tire pressure does not make an energy police; even if it's a good idea to do so.

    42. Re:The evil "American Right"... by ArcherB · · Score: 2

      Go buy a twinkie and tell me if the government stops you.

      In fact, go eat some dirt. Did someone stop you?

      so... what exactly are you saying?

      Go get a Happy Meal in San Francisco. Oh wait. You can't. It's been banned... BY THE GOVERNMENT!!!!!

      (Granted, it's the local government, and I fully support the local government's right to ban whatever they like, but don't sit there and act like the government is not banning food.)

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    43. Re:The evil "American Right"... by elashish14 · · Score: 1

      You're right - what's really destroying politics is simply ignorance and a lack of interest in doing anything about it. It's obvious, common knowledge to anyone aware of what's going on that corporate bribes (AKA lobbyists) are running the government and that they have no interest in it outside of their selfish interests. They are what define 'left' and 'right' in what's really an artificial, meaningless discrimination which simply boils down to wherever there's more power to be gained.

      What we need is for people to stand up to this practice. That is where the next battle will truly be waged. Forget left and right. Let's start discriminating between knowledgeable citizens with honesty and clear judgement and well, whatever you want to call America/country of choice.

      --
      I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
    44. Re:The evil "American Right"... by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      I was originally assuming that tires would remain pumped up for a year.

      Then I googled what he said and realized you should probably check more often then that, and changed it to every month, and didn't fix my math.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    45. Re:The evil "American Right"... by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      It was a counter to the energy policy of 'more offshore drilling' that the Republicans were pushing for. (That got cut out with my truncated sentence, I think.)

      Obama pointed out that, at most, that would produce 1% of oil we needed by the time they were built, and that everyone simply checking their tires air pressure would save 3% of gas used in cars, and maintence would save another 4%.

      Which would not, let's be clear, actually reduce total oil used by 7%, because automobiles are not the only users of oil. But it would probably reduce it by at least 1%.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    46. Re:The evil "American Right"... by alta · · Score: 1

      Went to subway (in ALABAMA NO LESS) last week to get my kids lunch. They've pulled soda and chips off the kids menu. When I pressed the manager on why, her words were "It's not a law yet, but Mrs. Obama is working on it, so we went ahead and made the change"

      Now, granted, this isn't the same as completely denying chips and soda to kids, but it has the same spirit. I'm a responsible parent. My kids eat their green beans, broccoli and carrots. If I want to give them a treat every now and then, it should be my choice. Not Mrs. Obama's.

      --
      Do not meddle in the affairs of sysadmins, for they are subtle, and quick to anger.
    47. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Nimey · · Score: 1

      In all cases those are restrictions on companies, not private citizens. You're free to stuff your face on home-made junk or go outside the San Francisco city limits and feed your kids junk there.

      Besides, isn't it a conservative article of faith that localities should be able to make their own laws, and that if you don't like them, then other states or cities won't have 'em and you can move?

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    48. Re:The evil "American Right"... by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      If you're from Europe, where everything is left or far left, America does indeed look like it is right or far right.

      No, it's pretty much everywhere else except America. You would be hard-pressed to find any other remotely civilised country where the American "Left" wouldn't be seen as "Right".

      You just don't realize that you've replaced one set of ruling elites, with another.

      Heh, just like America, you mean ?

      Some of us don't want that kind of leadership, and you can frown all you want at us, we don't care (except Obama and his apology tours).

      Indeed. Heaven forbid the almighty USA show a bit of humility. That might imply it's not actually the pinnacle of human civilisation !

    49. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      So your entire argument rests on the actions of a Subway manager in Alabama?

      If I want to give them a treat every now and then, it should be my choice. Not Mrs. Obama's.

      It is your choice, not Mrs. Obama's.

    50. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      In all cases those are restrictions on companies, not private citizens.

      In several cases, it involves restrictions on anyone selling specific goods. So, for instance, if I'm fond of raw milk, I have to buy a cow? That's not a restriction on private citizens to you? It's a distinction without a difference.

      Besides, isn't it a conservative article of faith that localities should be able to make their own laws, and that if you don't like them, then other states or cities won't have 'em and you can move?

      I have heard that excuse used for draconian measures before - I don't know whether it's a "conservative article of faith" of faith or not, though, and don't care. I do think that government should be strongest at the local level and weakest at the federal level, though. The point is that it seems government meddling is always justified as "consumer protection", and that the policy always ends up reducing consumer choice. Eventually it will be nothing but sackcloth and gruel for everyone but the "protectors".

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    51. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what you are saying is, they should learn better math and you should learn better history?

    52. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      Funny, you point to socialism and confiscatory taxation as a means for whatever "fairness" you thing you're proving, by all means have at it. I'm not going to argue with methods that steal from people to give to others, under the frame of "fairness".

      Being Libertarian, I don't pit one artificial group against another artificial group. I pit liberty against slavery, and freedom against totalitarian/authoritarian rules.

      If you see things as rich vs poor, and right vs left, that is your right. But you're no better than those you hate, forcing your views on others. You just dress it up in populist terminology.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    53. Re:The evil "American Right"... by bckrispi · · Score: 1

      Gee! I just read the United States Constitution a month ago and I totally missed the section where power is vested in the wife of the President to create laws! I can't tell here who is the bigger flake: you, or some hick restaurant manager.

      --
      Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
    54. Re:The evil "American Right"... by bckrispi · · Score: 1

      First of all, being fiscally conservative is not a matter of politics, but of basic math. If you do the math and can afford something without it impacting future plans, you can choose to buy it, otherwise you can't. Period.

      There's your problem in plain black-and-white. "Basic math" works for keeping a family budget. But when you're running a country, it's far more complex. Say you have a government with a budget of $1000. Do you spend it on military research or social programs? You say $1000 isn't enough? Do you raise taxes or cut education? Is it better to fund services for the disadvantaged now? Or to fund prisons for them later?

      --
      Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
    55. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you want a communist party, where all your decisions are made by the government. No what is needed is a constitution party.

    56. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The president has absolutely nothing to do with this. Congress has never suggested, nor approached such a law. To put Obama's name it is is simply partisan mumbo jumbo and nothing else.

      OBAMA IS EVIL. BWAAHAHAHA. DUN CARE ABOUT NO FACTS, SOCIALSM!!! BLAABWAAAHAHA!!!!!

      Welcome to Alabama? Where Subway managers remove products from the shelves in protest against speeches about organic veggies... I guess...

      I dunno what to say. Stop living in such a hick hole in the ground?

    57. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember my Republican friends, if a Democrat suggests something that would, for the cost of a $10 air pump from Wal-Mart and 5 minutes of your time every month, save you 3% of your gasoline costs, (Which by my math would pay for itself the first time you use it, if you spend at least $33 on gas a month.)

      No wonder your side causes so much economic destruction, your math is removed from reality. 3% of $33 is $0.99, which is far less than the $10 air pump cost, and to get the full $0.99 the first time you use it means you only buy gas once per month. So, no understanding of mathematics and bad assumptions... You are indeed a Democrat.

    58. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      The problem with the left is that it has no mathematical abilities whatsoever, which is why they invariably ruin the economies of countries where they are in charge. How much is 3% of $33? How many time do $100 million go into $800 billion? Both lefties above fail.

      They are not thinkers, they are feelers. If they were thinkers, they'd be on the right.

      Case in point.

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    59. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, 3% of $33 = $1, not $10.

    60. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't pit one artificial group against another artificial group.
      After reading some of your comment history, this particular bit is absolutely hilarious.

    61. Re:The evil "American Right"... by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      But, I DO NOT think that that requires the government to regulate people's weight.

      Whoosh. Saying you're not covered for a well established, self destructive behavior is not "regulating." Regulating is saying, you must do x - else. This is saying, if you do x, then you suffer the consequences - its not fair for everyone else to pay for your willful and destructive behavior. Because your entire argument is based on an obviously and horribly flawed falacy, there really isn't a point to directly engage your meaningless counter points.

      Just the same, a great example is air travel. The FAA deems the average passenger to be 180 pounds for males. These days, its common for them to have passengers twice that weight, plus some change. The impact of carrying that extra weight is extra fuel burn. Expensive fuel these days. There is a very real cost (fuel burn and pollution) for carrying that extra weight. Society attempts to punish airlines for charging reasonable fees for their unjust punishment of carrying lots of fat people. As a result, everyone pays extra. As fuel prices have risen, airlines hoped to recoup some of their fuel costs by charging more for passengers who carry more, and as a result, cause yet more expensive fuel to be burned. The public almost rioted as fair and reasonable fees.

      So what you're saying is that its unjust if it happens to you, no matter how equitable it is for the rest of the world. Ya...right...

      The reality is, fat people negatively effect almost every aspect of everyone's lives, including their own; via costs, happiness, etc., to some degree or another. And in exchange for that, society is insisting they get a free lunch. You can get angry all you like, but it doesn't change the fact they are largely free loading on society - which actually is unjust.

      As a side note, why have the moderators become so absolutely fucking stupid these days? Not a single negative moderation of my comments in this thread are the least bit accurate. Why is it so hard to moderators to understand that disagreement and negative moderation is censorship. If you disagree, post. But this wonderfully typifies just how stupid the slashdot masses have become these days. Okay, so THIS post is negative moderation worthy, but considering my other posts have been troll moderated by absolutely stupid fucking moderators, to fair this post should be moderated up or at least left alone. Otherwise, moderators are endorsing troll moderation and validating my entire point about the fall of slashdot - that moderators these days are completely fucking useless idiots.

    62. Re:The evil "American Right"... by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      Healthy food costs much more than high carb low nutrition food.

      Sorry, but that's a well established myth.

      The facts are, people would rather eat a twinky than beans and rice. People would rather drink a Coke than water or tea.

      Anyone who believes the poor are condemned to low nutrition food are completely uneducated on the foods which are generally available. Largely this is an issue of education. By in large, most Americans really have no concept of nutrition. Made worse is the fact that the poor tend to be uneducated and the uneducated tend to be more attracted to cheap, advertised products. This in turn leads them to high card, low nutrition food. That, however, is not the same thing as insisting only high carb, low nutrition foods are available for purchase and consumption in their price range.

      I grew up poor, $250 in food stamps would not provide healthy food for 5 people for a month even back in the 80s.

      I did too, and in a fairly small town, though we never had food stamps. Just the same, the food my mother purchased was frequently, far, far less expensive than those who purchased with food stamps and there are never a need for nutritional dense comparisons. Then again, our shopping cart didn't have tobacco, soda, chips, and other crap food (all of which are low nutrition, expensive, and generally bad for your long term health) which so many consider necessities.

      Contrary to your assertion, many high carb, nutritionally dense foods, with name brand packaging, are actually very expensive when you bother to break it down. Many people on food stamps have historically insisted on name brand products. Furthermore, given a choice, they consistently prefer "garbage food" (high carb, nutritionally challenged) over nutritionally dense foods.

      To be clear, I'm not saying that's your case. I don't know you're case. Just the same, statistically speaking, if I did not describe you, then you are by far the exception rather than the rule.

    63. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Evtim · · Score: 1

      Non-smoker.

      In:

      Working life - 40 years (25-65 if you have Univ. degree) 30-40 % taxes a month.
      Health insurance - 150 euro a month

      Out:
      Pension years - 12+ years (lifespan Holland male 77.5 yrs) - you can get 75-100% of your income (as was while you were working).

      Health care - Alzheimer, Parkinson, heart problems, dementia (you will get those, or others - I am not a doctor, regardless of how healthy you live)

      Old people care - common in the West, subsidized somewhat, don't have figures

      Smoker.

      In:

      Cigarettes - 4.8 euro a package from which approx. 80% is tax and license fees - goes directly to government, but let's underestimate - 3 euros per package, 90 euros a month (pack a day) i.e. already paying to government 66% higher health "insurance".

      Health insurance - 150 a month

      Working life - 40 years (25-65 if you have degree) 30-40 % taxes a month (my dad smoked 2-3 packages a day and still managed to die a year after pension, thus amassing 44 years of working life - he started earlier with only college degree).

      Out:
      Pension - almost ZERO (according to the statistics I am decreasing my lifespan with approx. 10 years because of smoking)

      Health care - in case of lung cancer - almost ZERO (a bit of morphine for a few months + price of euthanasia if it gets too torturous) the other smoking related killer - heart attack occurs to all of us, smokers might get it SOONER, but eventually this price is the same for smoker and non-smoker). If you think lung transplant I happily agree to remove that option from the insurance for smokers, but only if you remove it for all because I don't want to pay for people that were "stupid" enough to expose themselves to industrial pollution, right?

      Old people care - ZERO (you are dead)

      Now, I am sure my numbers are off and we can haggle about details till the cows come home, but the official "proof" of how much more the smokers are expensive to society is UTTER BS!!

      When it comes to severe obesity, start chasing the motherfuckers that arm-raced between themselves how much more salt and sugar to put in the food to addict their customers (well proven scientific fact - we are programmed to be high-fat high-sugar junkies) in the same way the tobacco manufacturers are chased. I dare you to do it, for there is the smoking gun. In my list of mafia industries tobacco comes quite late after such champions as (in order of nastiness from top to bottom): Pharmacy, Cosmetics, Food and Drinks, Entertainment, Professional Sport, Energy and Defense.

    64. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Notquitecajun · · Score: 1

      Well, considering that was what happened before it was removed, I believe the position is reasonable.

    65. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      If you're from Europe

      Elseif?

      You just don't realize that you've replaced one set of ruling elites, with another. Some of us don't want that kind of leadership, and you can frown all you want at us, we don't care (except Obama and his apology tours).

      Ignoring for a moment your pretentious and erroneous assumption about geolocation, we'll bring your jingo mind's attention to the fact that you came pretty damn close to having Bush-Clinton-Clinton-Bush-Bush-Clinton as a presidential sequence.

      Stop trying to teach Europeans lessons about splinters of ruling elites and pay attention to the damn beam in your own eye. The revolving door between military, industry and congress should really bother you.

      you can frown all you want at us, we don't care

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jingoism

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    66. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      I'm interested how left you consider them to be.

      If neither Rush Limbaugh nor Glen Beck has broadcasted an opinion on them, he has no opinion on them beyond 'his' opinion of "Europeans" (those people being inferior to himself and his kin all in the same way, of course).

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    67. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Far left. They sound just like every other National Socialist Party out there.

    68. Re:The evil "American Right"... by orthicviper · · Score: 1

      Who will have a say in how this law is written? My guess is it will ONLY be the biggest corporations out there, and some people in the government who want to expand the power of the government. There's not enough freedom-loving guys like Ron Paul working high up in the government to make sure that any net neutrality that passes is really going to be beneficial. There's too much money and power involved in the internet for any law on it to turn out good. I consider it a miracle it ever turned out as free as it did.

    69. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you don't want to have that either.

      My grandpa used to live in three dictatorships, my father in two and myself in the latest one (Germany). Red socialism, brown socialism are both two sides of exactly the same medal. It never worked out fine, it doesn't right now and it won't in the future. Noone who ever read some hitory books wants to have that again since it never worked in any of the worlds countries.

    70. Re:The evil "American Right"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's time you stopped depending on your TeeVee for information; the corporate media won't provide any that is useful.

      The parties exist.
      http://www.therealdifference.org/issues.html
      http://www.rpusa.info/platform.htm
      http://www.peaceandfreedom.org/home/about-us/platform
      It's up to *you* to make one of them a major party.
      Stop voting for the lesser of the status-quo evils.

      gewg_ (CAPTCHA: mutable)

    71. Re:The evil "American Right"... by JWW · · Score: 1

      Well, with regards to moderation, we have strayed considerably off-topic.

      I fully understand your points on the behavior of people affecting the cost of things and the law of averages and such.

      My argument is basically this. It is futile to try to control the behavior of individuals for the purpose of saving money on healthcare/aviation/whatever. People will do what they want to do. Shit, we've been trying to stop EVERYONE from smoking for 50 freaking years and its STILL not working. My contention is that its time to STOP doing this. As you can see with smoking. The failure to get people to stop doing it (ostensibly purely to save money on health care costs, the perfect example for this discussion) has only lead to more and more draconian restrictions on it. Yes, that means more and more meddling with people's lives. Smokers now days feel like second class citizens. Basically the only acceptable place to smoke nowadays is outside on private property. I should note here that I have some pretty profound allergic reactions to second hand smoke and am not a smoker myself, and that I benefit personally from these laws. But I still think we've (as a society) gone too far in regulating what is a personal practice.

      This is why I fear the health police so much. Are they going to meddle to the extent of the anti-smoking lobby? Are they going to double the cost of certain foods with taxes to make them more difficult to buy? Are they going to make those foods illegal (see salt ban in NYC). The reason I'm arguing this is that while you are COMPLETELY correct with respect to the cost implications of personal choices, but the only fix that will really work to mitigate those costs is the FUCKING NANNY STATE!! I don't want to live in a FUCKING NANNY STATE! There, does that explain my position well enough.

      Sometimes, when it becomes obvious that you can't make the laws draconian enough to make people stop doing things that are bad for them, its time to give up trying. Yes, to be completely blunt and consistent on this issue, I would favor making marijuana legal because the costs and consequences of enforcing its illegality are getting ridiculous. For my last example, there's prohibition, which IMHO was such an abysmal failure at enforcing personal behavior in the populace that it is a shining example of why, for so many many things (bad foods included) we should never try doing that again.

    72. Re:The evil "American Right"... by migla · · Score: 1

      Socialism/Capitalism is kinda like GPL/BSD. One wants to look out for the end user, the little guy. The other would arguably allow you more freedom upfront, but that includes the freedom to fuck over the little guy if you have the power.

      --
      Some of my favourite people are from th US; Vonnegut, Chomsky, Bill Hicks.
  6. who is educating who? by reynols · · Score: 1

    "Since the opposing side is so badly misinformed, those of us who want the internet to remain open to innovation and freedom of expression have to help educate them before the debate can really be held."

    HA! That will never happen.

    1. Re:who is educating who? by Surt · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up, this is actually the core problem. There is absolutely no hope of educating the anti-net-neutrality side. They aren't in opposition for a lack of education.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
  7. Who do politicians work for? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Right, Left... what's the difference? Answer: a slight variation in the companies bankrolling them. But many of these companies bankroll both sides at the same time.

    It is disingenuous to claim that there is any kind of political ideology involved. Any time a politician talks about ideology, he is just grandstanding in order to justify the position of his employers. The rest of their "differences" are ploys to make them look like they are distinct individuals, instead of all employees of the same interests.

    Make no mistake: all national politicians are fully-owned subsidiaries of large corporations. Never be distracted into thinking that they have the slightest interest in doing anything that is actually in your interest except by accident (or occasionally in order to get reelected, if it seems like their owners' money alone isn't doing the trick).

    1. Re:Who do politicians work for? by initdeep · · Score: 4, Funny

      You mean AL Gore was lying to me when he told me that Ethanol from corn was a viable and statistically proven "green" fuel that would have no impact on the price of food and provide me with ultra cheap fuel for my car, just so he could get votes from farmers?

      oh wait........

    2. Re:Who do politicians work for? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't get this "they're all the same" attitude. Both parties and their associated politicians may suck in their own way, but it's pretty obvious that the evil coming from the republican side of the aisle is orders of magnitude worse than the other side. The same group who can't stop talking about budget deficits when it comes to destroying social programs fight tooth-and-nail for spending tens of billions of dollars on tax cuts for millionaires in a country where the income distribution is approaching 3rd world levels of inequality. No, it's not even fucking close.

    3. Re:Who do politicians work for? by TheL0ser · · Score: 2

      He also invented the internet, so he probably should be the go-to guy on this.

    4. Re:Who do politicians work for? by jandrese · · Score: 2

      I don't think Al Gore was as two faced as people apparently think he was years ago. Corn Ethanol had its detractors, but it was really the only viable alternative energy game in town at the time (switchgrass Ethanol is still a no-show for instance). It's not like he was arguing against other forms of alternative energy, he was just advocating for what we could do now.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    5. Re:Who do politicians work for? by AtomicSnarl · · Score: 1

      Indeed! Do we want the Internet run (or overseen) by the Post Office? DMV? Medicare? Etc...

      --
      Pacifist paratroopers yell, "Ghandi!" when they jump.
    6. Re:Who do politicians work for? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean AL Gore was lying to me when he told me that Ethanol from corn was a viable and statistically proven "green" fuel that would have no impact on the price of food and provide me with ultra cheap fuel for my car, just so he could get votes from farmers?

      I don't know. He may have believed it. He probably wasn't lying, just wrong.

      He was lying (being deliberately dishonest with the intent to deceive, knowingly), though, when he took the position that corn ethanol as fuel was such a good idea, that government policy ought to encourage it.

      Thinkers come up with ideas. Some are good and some are bad. Whether they're good ideas or bad, though, we're all better off with lots of thinkers around.

      Crooks mention ideas and point a gun at you, saying, "do it." This is a totally different set of people, and we need fewer of them. For some reason, though, almost everyone we elect happens to be from this group, instead of the other.

    7. Re:Who do politicians work for? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except that he said,

      "One of the reasons I made that mistake is that I paid particular attention to the farmers in my home state Tennessee, and I had a certain fondness for the farmers in the state of Iowa because I was about to run for president." --Al Gore

      He's saying that he pandered... and that it was a mistake. Good on him for admitting it.

    8. Re:Who do politicians work for? by BoberFett · · Score: 1

      And Republicans think the same about you. There is no difference between you and some Bible thumping retard from Kansas. You're both idiots.

    9. Re:Who do politicians work for? by Anon-Admin · · Score: 1

      You mean AL Gore was lying to me when he told me

      Oh young one, you should have realize that he was lying. His lips were moving, and with a politician it is a dead give-away that they are lying.

    10. Re:Who do politicians work for? by mrjimorg · · Score: 1

      Recently, Al Gore admitted that he was wrong and that corn-ethanol is not a viable alternative. In fact, "It was the votes, not the science that led me to back corn ethanol" http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40317079/ns/us_news-environment/

    11. Re:Who do politicians work for? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Al Gore probably also invented the Metagovernment.

    12. Re:Who do politicians work for? by KingSkippus · · Score: 2

      He also invented the internet, so he probably should be the go-to guy on this.

      Saw that one coming. You need to educate yourself before spreading this knee-jerk lie.

      Al Gore didn't say he invented the Internet. What he said was that he took the initiative in creating the Internet, and the very next sentence ('cause, you know, context actually matters), referred to other initiatives he advanced as a legislator. If you and the thousands of sheep that repeat this tired old joke bothered to look it up, you'd find that he's 100% right, he did significantly advance the underlying research through his legislation and funding.

      If President Eisenhower had said in the mid-1960s that he, while president, "created" the Interstate Highway System, we would not have seen dozens and dozens of editorials lampooning him for claiming he "invented" the concept of highways or implying that he personally went out and dug ditches across the country to help build the roadway. Everyone would have understood that Ike meant he was a driving force behind the legislation that created the highway system, and this was the very same concept Al Gore was expressing about himself with his Internet statement.

    13. Re:Who do politicians work for? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Corn Ethanol was never viable without massive subsidies.

    14. Re:Who do politicians work for? by navyjeff · · Score: 1

      Considering how much better run the DMV and Post Office are today, and how much easier they are to deal with than Comcast or Verizon, I think I'd be okay with that.

    15. Re:Who do politicians work for? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, there is nothing we can ever do about it. Politicians are our lords and masters. They own our asses.

      Nobody will ever, ever come up with any sort of way we could ever possibly hope to maybe have a chance at someday escaping their stranglehold on us.

      So just give up already and accept that you are their property. Better yet, take the blue pill. It goes down easy.

    16. Re:Who do politicians work for? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Better yet, take the blue pill. It goes down easy.

      Hehe you said "goes down easy"

  8. But will they listen? by RiotNrrd · · Score: 1

    Sadly, it has been my experience that the kind of people that are easily swayed by their favorite entertainers are usually not the kind of people that would be willing to listen to ANY opposing arguments. I have tried to explain the situation to people using all sorts of different analogies but all they hear is "BIG GOVERNMENT IS TAKING OUR INTARWEBS!".

    What I don't get is why so many big businesses (not necessarily "internet companies" like Amazon and Google) have remained silent on the issue. You know that massive B2B e-commerce system that connects you to your suppliers and your customers? It uses the internet. Ever think about how the new FCC regulations will affect you?

    1. Re:But will they listen? by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The truth is that Net Neutrality is the government taking over the Internet, while a lack of Net Neutrality is big business taking over the Internet. Sorry little man, but you can't win; what we have now is both sides being too stupid to realize that somebody has ground rent up to now on a large piece of land somebody else had a cabin on, and now they're negotiating on whether to pay the rent or buy the ground while we've been playing in the part of their back yard they didn't realize was theirs until now.

    2. Re:But will they listen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They can afford to pay more for favoritism and a lack of net neutrality will help price smaller competitors (who could potentially become big competitors) out of the market.

    3. Re:But will they listen? by MonChrMe · · Score: 1

      Uh... no?

      Net Neutrality - when done right - is an assertation that nobody owns or controls 'the internet'.
      'Net Neutrality' - when done the way the government wants - is the government taking control.
      A lack of Net Neutrality is TELECOMS taking over the internet.

      The problem is that the government has co-opted the term to mean something it wasn't supposed to - which serves to confuse the argument. We could try to raise true NN under a new name, but the governments likely to try the same thing there as well, so it'd need a fast and hard blitz to get the real meaning embedded in the public consciousness before they manage that. Unfortunately, there isn't the will at the moment.

    4. Re:But will they listen? by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>[Limbaugh listeners] not the kind of people that would be willing to listen to ANY opposing arguments.

      This works both ways. When I share videos of cop misbehavior, such as when they killed a man's pet cat, or shot a little girl, or murdered a man holding a watering hose, or beat a man walking his dog, or threw a blind woman to the ground and killed her seeing-eye dog, or ..... I immediately get accosted by people saying that I should not be criticizing cops. These persons (almost all of them self-proclaimed Democrats) act as if cops can do no wrong and any attempt to show otherwise is met with "You shithead!" and other insults.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    5. Re:But will they listen? by mapkinase · · Score: 1

      Net neutrality is just a specific law as part of more general antimonopolistic regulation.

      There would be no need in net neutrality whatsoever if I had a choice at least between FIOS and Comcast at my location. http://politics.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=10/12/28/1441255#

      --
      I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
    6. Re:But will they listen? by hedwards · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's not true. In what way does the government directly control the internet by requiring that providers offer their services in an equal way to all who want them. They aren't requiring them to provide service to those that won't pay nor are they telling the providers what prices they can charge. And so long as the prices and availability are the same regardless of organization they can do more or less as they have been.

      Net neutrality more or less codifies the way things were done until relatively recently.

    7. Re:But will they listen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The government is (in theory) selected by and accountable to the people. The only thing that the corporate oligarchy controlling internet access in your region is accountable to is its shareholders. If the choice is between 'big government' and corporate oligarchy, the best choice for the little guy seems pretty fucking clear.

      But this isn't a any sort of takeover of the internet at all. Net neutrality would merely be a narrow set of rules limiting some of the ways telecoms might attempt to fuck over the little guy.

    8. Re:But will they listen? by jeffmeden · · Score: 1

      Uh... no?

      Net Neutrality - when done right - is an assertation that nobody owns or controls 'the internet'.
      'Net Neutrality' - when done the way the government wants - is the government taking control.
      A lack of Net Neutrality is TELECOMS taking over the internet.

      The problem is that the government has co-opted the term to mean something it wasn't supposed to - which serves to confuse the argument. We could try to raise true NN under a new name, but the governments likely to try the same thing there as well, so it'd need a fast and hard blitz to get the real meaning embedded in the public consciousness before they manage that. Unfortunately, there isn't the will at the moment.

      Thinking that something should be "uncontrolled an unowned" in order for it to prosper sounds like the viewpoint of someone who never worked in a sufficiently large organization. If no one has an interest in controlling and owning something, that thing DIES. A commune of hippies can't keep the internet alive with a love-in, it takes the concerted effort and great expense of a lot of organizations. If those organizations aren't getting what they want out of it, they will walk away.

      The Internet has worked so far since generally everyone has been getting what they want. Innovation, god bless it, has come marching in giving visibility to where the actual revenues and expenses are incurred on the 'net, and thanks to that just about every organization with a stake in the 'net has been scurrying to shore up their own interests. Times are changing, there is no law that can be passed to make the internet feel like the "good old days", and we have to accept that.

      The best thing that could happen is for a mutual agreement between business and government (possibly in the form of a law) that still keeps giving each side some of what they want. The worst thing that can happen is for business, or the government, to do whatever they want in spite of the other. Make no mistake, control WILL be had, the question is how visible and balanced will that control be?

    9. Re:But will they listen? by gad_zuki! · · Score: 1

      The philosophies of the politics of the US falls under two umbrellas:

      Republican: Big business and big religion are your masters.
      Democrat: Big business (slightly less so than GOP), federal government regulations, and enlightenment/secular principles are your masters.

        A modern economy needs to be regulated to be successful. Either its a potentially democratic process done by the government or guys like Rupert Murdoch just make the call, fight it out with their competitors, and pass the cost onto you (tiered internet pricing).

    10. Re:But will they listen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously? I associate with a lot of liberals as friends and hang out in the forums for several liberal blogs and I've only very rarely encountered this attitude. I see this authoritarianism frequently in the conservatives I hang out with (I work in the defense industry -- this seems to be something like 90% of my coworkers), however. I was once present for a lunch conversation where the topic of DNA testing came up and how awful the innocence project was because "these people were probably guilty of something." The other guy said to him "yeah, I never thought of it like that before." The conservatives I associate with also seem to be huge advocates of our drug war, which goes a long way to enable a lot of this law enforcement misbehavior.

    11. Re:But will they listen? by Nimey · · Score: 1

      Oh, christ. NN isn't a government takeover; the telcos are throwing fits because the government wants to not allow them to discriminate against their competitors. The same telcos who owe their ability to do business and make tons of money on the legal rights-of-way and monopolies granted to them by that same government.

      It's all selfishness.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    12. Re:But will they listen? by davek · · Score: 2

      The truth is that Net Neutrality is the government taking over the Internet, while a lack of Net Neutrality is big business taking over the Internet. Sorry little man, but you can't win;

      Not quite true. If I don't like the way "big business" is regulating the Internet, I'm free to start my own business to compete with "big business," one which is less expensive and provides more features to customers. This is still possible even in today's heavily regulated free market economy.

      On the other hand, I am not free to start a competing government and remain an American citizen. This is the fundamental flaw in most government regulatory arguments: bad companies tend to go away, but bad government regulations tend to stick around for a LONG LONG time.

      --
      6th Street Radio @ddombrowsky
    13. Re:But will they listen? by imroy · · Score: 1

      The truth is that Net Neutrality is the government taking over the Internet, while a lack of Net Neutrality is big business taking over the Internet.

      No. Your false dichotomy contains a strawman. Net Neutrality is about government regulating Internet connections, so that conflicts of interest don't artificially disadvantage some people (either end users or service providers) based purely on who they're connected through. So that, you know, the network is neutral. It has nothing to do with content and censorship, or anything like that.

    14. Re:But will they listen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is really amazing how US debates always turn to the "something is taking over us." As everything is a conspiracy in the US it is no wonder creationism, anti-federalism and such ideas get support there. They are elements of the God Conspiracy, apparently. The federal regulations must be the sign of anti-Christ taking over us. The corporate conspiracies of the left is even more puzzling. Did they read too much Neuromancer and the like at the time?

    15. Re:But will they listen? by MonChrMe · · Score: 1

      Generally agreed - but I've found it's important to oversimplify when you're dealing with anything that involves politics (as NN now does). Trying to spell out the technical specifics of things such as NN has a habit of confusing the technically inadept, which tends to send them back to the talking heads or makes them apathetic towards the whole thing.

      As far as oversimplifications goes, 'no ownership or control' is a position that people understand, and while not technically accurate it's at least close enough that they layfolk can get a rough understanding of the positions.

    16. Re:But will they listen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      id like SMALL business(like they sorta do now) to control the internet, not big or gov
      thats what would be best not big or gov trying to fight over control

    17. Re:But will they listen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They don't go away that fast: Comcast has certainly stuck around.

      You can at least vote against the politicians. You cannot really compete in business against these companies anymore; they have too many monopolistic local agreements, tax supported infastructure, etc. You've already paid for them to own the market, a startup has no leg to stand on.

    18. Re:But will they listen? by Brewmeister_Z · · Score: 1

      Dare I say this but does this problem actually work with a car analogy? If you dub the Internet as the "Super Information Highway" which I hate but works for the analogy that stupid people may understand. Your vehicle (make, size, fuel economy, etc.) is the content. The roads are owned and/or controlled by various entities (city, county, state, federal) with correspond to the ISPs, telcos, etc. and you have tollbooths at certain road transitions (ISP controlled or government controlled).

      Pure Net Neutrality is removing all toll booths but allowing stoplights at on-ramps and intersections to keep the flow efficient as possible without favor or penalty to any the traffic.

      Without government control over the ISP's actions, certain cars pay higher tolls or outright banned from their roads. That seems a bit more reasonable if the banned or higher tolled vehicles are overweight vehicles but not if it is Ford cars versus GM cars.

      With government control and the fairness doctrine, the government sets the toll rates and gets a cut and also imposes silly rules like there must be an equal amount of Fords and GMs on the road at any given time so you cannot get past the tollbooth in a GM car until another Ford car comes along so the traffic stays equal. This sounds crazy since some days you will wait in line at the tollbooth and other days you get to go through immediately.

      Many people are fearful of the overreach of government so they would rather be at the mercy of big business. The reality is that big business has control with or without government intervention since they can manipulate the government with their money more than the average person can with opinion/protest/voting power. The government intervention is like gambling though; sometimes you win but mostly you lose.

      --
      I Cater to the Needs of Stupid People. - from a coffee mug Christmas gift
    19. Re:But will they listen? by Internalist · · Score: 1

      Not quite true. If I don't like the way "big business" is regulating the Internet, I'm free to start my own business to compete with "big business," one which is less expensive and provides more features to customers. This is still possible even in today's heavily regulated free market economy.

      On the other hand, I am not free to start a competing government and remain an American citizen. This is the fundamental flaw in most government regulatory arguments: bad companies tend to go away, but bad government regulations tend to stick around for a LONG LONG time.

      Huh!? I'm not seeing the analogy you're trying to make here...you ARE perfectly free to start up a new (state or federal) political party, one which "provides more features" to its clients. In fact, it's probably EASIER to do that than it would be to start up a new telco and try to gain any traction.

      --
      Research is what I'm doing when I don't know what I'm doing. -- Wernher von Braun
    20. Re:But will they listen? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Really? Most of the Cop worshipers I meet seem to be republican/right sort of folks. I wonder if geography has an effect on this.

    21. Re:But will they listen? by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      The same telcos who owe their ability to do business and make tons of money on the legal rights-of-way and monopolies granted to them by that same government.

      Fuck 'legal right-of-ways'. Let me fix it for you:

      The same telcos who owe their ability to do business and make tons of money on the fact the government has granted them a corporate license.

      Remember that Every. Single. Fucking. Time. you hear about 'the government interfering in the free market'. All corporations, every single one, exist solely because the government created the laws that allow them to exist, period, end of story.

      If corporations don't want fucking 'government regulation in the marketplace', let's get get rid of corporate existence at all, and see how powerful businesses get without limited liability and existence independent of their owners.

      No government created corporation ever, under any circumstances whatsoever, gets to complain about being regulated by the government. It's the equivalent of people crying 'censorship' because their posts were deleted on a private forum by the forum owner.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    22. Re:But will they listen? by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Erm, that the fuck are you talking about?

      Almost all 'the cops are out of control' organizations are formed by liberal activists, often because the cops are blatantly racist in addition to being abusive. Hell, all you have to see where Copwatch was founded...Berkley California.

      But let's stop talking generalities. Let's take the most famous tape of police misbehavior, and Limbaugh. Let's check what he said about that:

      "The videotape of the Rodney King beating played absolutely no role in the conviction of two of the four officers. It was pure emotion that was responsible for the guilty verdict."

      Yes, that's right. Apparently, it was just 'emotion' that convicted two of the officers caught on tape beating someone. Not any sort of justice.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    23. Re:But will they listen? by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      These persons (almost all of them self-proclaimed Democrats) act as if cops can do no wrong and any attempt to show otherwise is met with "You shithead!" and other insults.

      That's odd, because it runs directly counter to my experiences, and to studies done on the sociological predilections of conservatives. Obeisance to authority is a conservative trait, not a liberal one.

      I think you've either got a very unusual sample set for your observations, or you're full of shit.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    24. Re:But will they listen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The truth is that Net Neutrality is the government taking over the Internet, while a lack of Net Neutrality is big business taking over the Internet.

      this is so not true. lack of net neutrality is NOT big business taking over the internet. we have lack of net neutrality and i can create whatever site web/ftp/whatever, share files with torrents or post to newsgroups, all i want. i can open up my own business, go to whatever site, and have no restrictions at all. and since my isp doesn't offer binary newsgroup service, i buy that specially from a third party. the system is working fine now.

      comcast was exposed for shady practices a couple years ago. they're paying for it now in customer dissatisfaction and are forced to re-brand. all regulation does is add cost to owning/operating an ISP. you will have to make sure that certain services/packets come through at certain speeds, be subjected to audits, and fill out paperwork. and that is just the start. net neutrality is DEFINITELY a government takeover of the internet and we don't need it. it's fine how it is.

    25. Re:But will they listen? by Surt · · Score: 1

      That's bizarrely backwards. Liberals are almost universally anti-cop, and very strongly anti-corruption. They favor, strongly, things like laws to allow videotaping cop misbehavior. They were incensed into the streets when cops killed an unarmed man in Oakland. Republicans tend to hold the pro-police position. Go look at which candidates tend to get cop money.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    26. Re:But will they listen? by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      "Regulation" is good, but doesn't describe what actually happens in the US. Well, it does, but not in the way you think it does. It has been said often that regulation prevents giant monopolies from squashing consumers and squashing out competition; and also that regulation in the US helps solidify big business by throwing things at them they can handle ($$$) but that the small competition can't afford to follow ($$$).

    27. Re:But will they listen? by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Especially since being a Level 1 provider costs bazillions of dollars and being anything else involves renting pipes off the people you are "competing" with, amirite?

    28. Re:But will they listen? by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      I love how in theory the theory and practice are the same, don't you? Enjoy your dream world.

      For the record, Net Neutrality will irritate the hell out of AT&T and Verizon because they'll be forced to carry huge amounts of shit on their pipe or rent boxes from Netflix et al to avoid the tons of downstream. Netflix will probably find some way (SSL?) to break a regular caching system.

      On the other hand, small ISPs like Juno and NetZero won't get any traction ever again. Small-scale DSL competitors won't pull it off either, thanks to leased lines being per-capacity and per-use charged or just extravagantly expensive for "unlimited" and they can't throttle Netflix. Oops. Not that THAT matters because holy hell, Netflix doesn't work on this ISP? Who would want that, go back to Comcast! (their pipe would be too narrow to carry Netflix traffic, even without the cost factor).

    29. Re:But will they listen? by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      Yeah I agree that it's backwards from what I expected.

      I thought all my Democrat friends would agree with me that the Cops in the videos deserved jailtime (instead of being left free), but then I remembered that it's the Democrats who are currently in power. My friends/colleagues are defending the cops (and the new "If You See something suspicious, Call the DHS" policy), because it's the Democrats who are currently in power. They are defending their team.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    30. Re:But will they listen? by Compaqt · · Score: 1

      The problem is, NetNeut has gotten mixed up with the Fairness Doctrine, somehow, in the minds of conservatives.

      Now, the Fairness Doctrine actually *was* a plot to tame the Right, courtesy of JFK who was being pummeled by right-wing radio at the time.

      However, conservatives haven't been able to understand NetNeut is nothing like the Fairness Doctrine.

      --
      I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    31. Re:But will they listen? by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      I see some responses giving you the benefit of the doubt, but I'm going to go out on a limb and say you're completely making that up. Just who do you think you're fooling with your claim that, contrary do what pretty much everyone in America knows from first hand experience, it is actually conservatives that are know for being anti-authoritarian.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    32. Re:But will they listen? by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      Oh bullshit.

      I really don't have anything more to say in response to that nonsense.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    33. Re:But will they listen? by Tenebrousedge · · Score: 1

      Let's talk about you actually getting the trillion dollars you need to compete with those businesses, and the actual, real-world issues you'd have laying that much fiber. Infrastructure is usually not something the private sector does well, as far as we've seen they just like taking your money instead. Barriers to entry are inherently anticompetitive (by definition), and expecially when combined with high exit barriers, leads almost inexorably to monopoly control. The telecommunications industry is a textbook example---you may remember Ma Bell.

      The FCC doesn't have a huge amount of power here, and it's not necessary that they do. We simply say that it's illegal to discriminate against network traffic based on end-point, and open up Comcast to class action lawsuits if it's determined that they violate the law. Why does this need to be more complicated?

      If you think this economy is heavily regulated, read the NYT article 'The Reckoning' concerning the 2008 banking scandal, and then read TARP and the Dodd Act. Yes, it's a lot of reading, and if you start from the position that regulation is the root of all evil you're probably going to read many things that you won't believe. Try instead to read with an open mind. Once you're done with all that, tell me if there's enough market regulation. I would be most gratified to hear from an informed and presumably opposite viewpoint.

      --
      Those who advocate genocide deserve every protection afforded by law, and none afforded by common human decency.
    34. Re:But will they listen? by hrvatska · · Score: 1

      The financial requirements to starting a broadband ISP are so high that only a very tiny proportion of the population could consider starting an ISP that would have a chance against Comcast, TimeWarner, or other large ISPs. Back in the day, when dial up was prevalent, it was a lot easier to start an ISP, and lots of people did. Today, not so much. If individuals with very limited financial means and no connections in high places could start ISPs and compete against the corporate giants they would.

    35. Re:But will they listen? by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      Not quite true. If I don't like the way "big business" is regulating the Internet, I'm free to start my own business to compete with "big business," one which is less expensive and provides more features to customers. This is still possible even in today's heavily regulated free market economy.

      No, it's not possible to start your own business to compete with multinational megacorporations, not in any meaningful or useful sense. Everybody hates all of the cell phone carriers, everybody hates their cable company, but very few people have meaningful choice available -- at best it's giant douche vs. turd sandwich. Why? Because big business doesn't compete on cost and features; it "competes" on controlling the market. As James K. Galbraith, explaining his father's work, put it, "Corporations exist to control markets, and often to replace them. Business leaders reduce uncertainty not through clairvoyance (or 'perfect foresight,' as the economics textbooks call it), nor by confident exploitation of probability ('portfolio diversification'). They do it by forming organizations large enough to forge the future for themselves."

      UnitedHealth Group's revenues are about the same as the total GDP of the nation of Bangladesh. Exxon-Mobil's profits -- not gross receipts, but profits -- are several times the budget for the entire EPA. The idea that corporations of this magnitude are controlled by market forces or are subject to competition from entrepreneurs is sheer fantasy.

      On the other hand, I am not free to start a competing government and remain an American citizen.

      But you can take over the existing government, if you get a majority of voters to back you. You can't take over an existing megacorporation, or compete with one, unless you get a majority of the dollars to back you.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    36. Re:But will they listen? by Ornlu · · Score: 0

      The power to

      requir[e] that providers offer their services in an equal way to all who want them

      is the power to tell the telco's what to do. If they can tell them to do things we like, they could also tell them to do thing we don't like, like censor, exclude, or politically filter traffic.

      The problem with giving the FCC power to do this is that the FCC has the potential to become more tyrannical than Comcast does. Comcast can only impose its will on Comcast subscribers; the FCC can impose its will on all Americans.

    37. Re:But will they listen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These persons (almost all of them self-proclaimed Democrats) act as if cops can do no wrong and any attempt to show otherwise is met with "You shithead!" and other insults.

      Disclaimer, I am not defending cops in this post.

      It's probably far more likely that they are just exercising their freedom of speech to criticize your ignorance at criticizing an individual's split-second decision that you've had months to analyze.

      Remember, freedom of speech goes both ways. ;)

    38. Re:But will they listen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am still confused on how all this will affect quality of service agreements on one end of the scale and stopping spam on the other end. will all quality of service agreements need to go away and will spam suddenly become a protected service?

  9. From the unbiased Daily KOS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Daily KOS as a source?

    For a moment I thought I typo'd the URL.... slashmao.org.

  10. lollerskates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I agree with the basic premise of net neutrality. But if you look at what the FCC is trying to do, it's not net neutrality any more than an individual mandate is health care. Call a turd a turd.

    1. Re:lollerskates by hedwards · · Score: 1

      You should actually read up on issues before mouthing off about it. The individual health care mandate was necessary in order to get the concessions from health insurance companies and doctors necessary to make insurance affordable and avoid the case where people don't buy until they have to have it.

      The only issue I have with the FCC's efforts here is that there's an awful lot of loopholes in the proposal and that it doesn't go anywhere near far enough. But then again, the FCC tends to be pretty weak when it comes to standing up to telecoms that abuse their spectrum and tends not to be willing to just take it back when it's needed for more important things.

  11. Karate Kid had it right by Stenchwarrior · · Score: 5, Funny

    Mr, Kesuke Miyagi: [sighs] Daniel-san, must talk. [they both kneel] Walk on road, hm? Walk left side, safe. Walk right side, safe. Walk middle, sooner or later, [makes squish gesture] get squish just like grape. Here, Internet, same thing. Either you Internet do "yes", or Internet do "no". You Internet do "guess so", [makes squish gesture] just like grape. Understand?

    Daniel LaRusso: Yeah, I understand.

    --
    Loading...
    1. Re:Karate Kid had it right by GaryOlson · · Score: 1

      I find your thoughts amusing and interesting; and would like to subscribe to your comedy channel.

      --
      Every mans' island needs an ocean; choose your ocean carefully.
    2. Re:Karate Kid had it right by Stenchwarrior · · Score: 1

      Well, technically they are the thoughts of Robert Mark Kamen...I only plagiarized.

      --
      Loading...
    3. Re:Karate Kid had it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, you walk *against* traffic if there is no sidewalk. Never walk on shoulder with traffic.. You bike with traffic, never against traffic. If that means crossing the road, then do that.

      It's amazing how many fail then go "squish" like that bug.

  12. I have to deal with this all the time.... by gandhi_2 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm pretty right-wing... but I have some awesome arguments about this with other right-wingers.

    Some of them can't seem to evaluate the situation for themselves so they just go with whatever their media talking head tells them.

    None of them can explain how the Internet is supposed to work, nor how companies are screwing it up, nor what net neutrality means.... but they are pretty sure that gay socialists are going to take over the internet.

    I usually paint it like this:
    What if ISPs and common carriers started deciding to block FoxNews.com because they didn't like the message? That seems to get thru to some of them.

    The right-wingers have one point though:
    Liberals usually work incrementally. It starts with simple net neutrality rules. Then later on, they add some more rules. And more. And more. A Killswitch and some hate-crimes legislation later and before you know the government is all up in your intarwebs.

    Now before you liberals get all self-congratulatory on your enlightened position.... none of my liberal friends can think for themselves on several liberal bandwaggon issues either.

    1. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Liberals usually work incrementally.

      Everyone *usually* does, until they get to a point, where they're close enough to the power source to grab it for themselves. Hitler, for instance...

    2. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed an well said...the point is that later the companies will start charging more for certain kind of content. Or gov will start taxing certain kinds of content. The companies already want to charge more for streaming sites. That is where it starts. Then later it's any and all high traffic sites. Then at some point the gov will take over the regular media because they will "need a bailout" due to the extra fees imposed by a lack of net neutrality..

      I do agree though that if Soros is involved we need to step back and tack another look at why. He has these charities which put a nice face on him, but he doesnt give a damn about America. He WANTS to see a weak dollar. This is how he works. He supports groups which want big social programs which are very expensive. No state can pay for them over the long term. So, he helps an Obama get into office, and then shorts the dollar using 10x leverage. The End.

    3. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by rwa2 · · Score: 1

      Heh, not bad.

      Politics is a waste of time... should be minimized, like administrative overhead. At best, it's a form of entertainment.

      I think I might consider myself a conservative in theory, but a liberal in practice. But as long as both sides are doing what they're good at and not doing what they're bad at, things are fine by me.

      As for my friends, ironically the conservatives tend to be the nicer people, while the bleeding-heart liberals tend to be 4$$holes. But I love them all the same.

    4. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Scrameustache · · Score: 0

      The right-wingers have one point though:
      Liberals usually work incrementally.

      Tell them to stick that point to the end of their wedge and shove it up their own asses. "Liberals work incrementally", riiight, "hey, make the tax cuts temporary *wink*wink*". Bunch of hyprocritical... grrr...

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    5. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On this issue the liberals are definitely the ones to trust. I mean, odds are that they are members of the ACLU! If I had to trust any organization to not stifle free speech that would be the one. On the other hand the free-market conservatives are likely to agree that banning websites is a totally legitimate thing for a company to do and if you don't like it you can go elsewhere. Of course when you have a local monopoly there isn't anywhere else to go...

    6. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by gandhi_2 · · Score: 0

      Tax "cuts" are the wrong way to think about it.

      The government should get enough money from the population to act as a limited social contract among free people to secure life, liberty, and property.

      Anything extra should be given back to the people who payed in.

      You and Obama seem to think it's fine to use private property as communal property and the government will tell you how much to pay in.

    7. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by dkleinsc · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Liberals usually work incrementally.

      As a liberal, I can play this argument too: It starts with short-term tax cuts to stimulate spending after a recession. Then later on the short-term has become a decade and then permanent. And the cuts go deeper, and deeper. Then comes a deficit commission and Social Security and unemployment insurance is gone and you have a significant population of desperate unemployed people starving to death on the streets.

      The trouble with the "work incrementally" line of reasoning is that it can be used to shut down any real evaluation of perfectly reasonable proposals solely because they come from the 'other' side. Once that short-circuiting is completed, you're halfway from turning somebody from a reasoning adult to a partisan moron. (The other half is convincing the potential partisan that they should support anything their leaders propose because it's necessary to achieve ultimate victory for their side where all their dreams can be realized.)

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    8. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Jaysyn · · Score: 2

      *Politicians* usually work incrementally.

      There, I fixed that for you.

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    9. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Liberals usually work incrementally.

      Isn't that how most government works?
      ...like how we got to groping and nudie pictures at the airport - if they had just gone straight there people would have been more upset.. but instead it was a slow process of knocking down expectations until we expect to be raped by the TSA.

      Now before you liberals get all self-congratulatory on your enlightened position

      While we're on the topic of internet freedom, the [D] voters should also remember who signed the DMCA and 120-year-copyright into law.

    10. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      Double Godwin! You both lose.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    11. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by jandrese · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Maybe you should point out that "slippery slope" arguments don't hold a lot of sway, because they require people who are acting rationally today to act irrationally in the future, simply because it's an expansion of an idea that was previously rational to them. It doesn't make sense, and if you hear someone using it know that they're basically agreeing with the current policy (or at least they can't form a sane counter to it).

      This came up a lot in Gay Marriage for instance, where people couldn't really say no to two people in love getting married, so they started talking about people marrying sheep or dogs instead.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    12. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1, Funny

      And ghandi_2 was doing so well before he revealed he was insane.

      The hunt for a reasonable American rightwinger continues...

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    13. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by hedwards · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Citation necessary. Hitler has far more in common with modern American conservatives than liberals. Ever notice how quick the right is blame Islam and people of color for pretty much every problem and to fight tooth and nail against even meager efforts to fix those unwarranted abuses of power?

    14. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "Liberals usually work incrementally. It starts with simple net neutrality rules. Then later on, they add some more rules. And more. And more. A Killswitch and some hate-crimes legislation later and before you know the government is all up in your intarwebs."

      The right does the same thing. That's why the top 1% took home 8% of GDP in the 80's, 15% in the 90's, and 24% now. Tax cuts without spending cuts (the Reagan legacy) over time, slowly peeling away regulations, not funding the regulators, and the current push to privatize everything, all direct wealth up, instead of directing wealth out.

      I used to be a raging libertarian, but now in my 50's I see the system is rigged for the rich, and the GOP's stand on net neutraility is just another way to push money and control up.

      The right tends to worship the wealthy and believes the poor are poor for a reason. Control of the internet is more of the same.

    15. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Eunuchswear · · Score: 0

      He [Soros] supports groups which want big social programs which are very expensive. No state can pay for them over the long term.

      Of course we can afford them in the long term. We just make the fucking rich (Soros for example) pay.

      If they don't pay we kill them.

      What's so hard to understand?

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    16. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Drakkenmensch · · Score: 4, Informative

      The right-wingers have one point though: Liberals usually work incrementally. It starts with simple net neutrality rules. Then later on, they add some more rules. And more. And more. A Killswitch and some hate-crimes legislation later and before you know the government is all up in your intarwebs.

      Is it just me, or do the right-wingers always claim the slippery slope argument whenever they can't provide valid arguments? Everything seems to lead to death panels when you listen to Rush and Fox.

    17. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Abcd1234 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Anything extra should be given back to the people who payed in.

      There *isn't anything extra*, dumbass. What part of "deficit" don't you understand?

      Don't want to raise taxes? Okay, start by cutting military and entitlements.

      Wait, you're telling me the right-wingers don't want that? Oh, okay, then raise taxes.

      Wait, they don't want that either?

      Oh, I see. They're a bunch of fucking hypocrites. Gotcha.

    18. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On the other hand the free-market conservatives are likely to agree that banning websites is a totally legitimate thing for a company to do and if you don't like it you can go elsewhere. Of course when you have a local monopoly there isn't anywhere else to go...

      One of these things is not like the other one...

    19. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Liberals usually work incrementally.

      I think you're confusing an evolutionary process with Creeping Socialism. The present-day attitude is "Total Victory for Us, Total Annihilation for the Enemy". No Compromise. Sounds strong and impressive, no?

      However, absolutism is a terrible fit for life, which is why Procrustes wasn't the hero of his little story. Life is sloppy, slippery, and needs periodic adjustments. Incremental sliding in one direction doesn't rule out the ability to incrementally slide in the other. It simply means that you can't pound obstacles into a fine paste and go on to the next one.

    20. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't understand why you would have friends that are 4$$holes...

    21. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Nobody even has a moderately precise idea how to regulate the internet in a way which guarantees "net neutrality". That's because "net neutrality" is an undefined buzzword, and it's because even those who have a rough idea what they want don't know what the rules would have to be to realize their idea of net neutrality. Under these circumstances, no regulation is better than the alternatives. The governments of the world are definitely trying to get a foot in the door.

      The one thing which could make the net more resilient to price gouging, vertical integration and anti-competitive practices won't be tried: Break up monopolies wherever they arise. Instead they're going to plaster all sorts of micro-managing rules over the monopolistic exploit of the day. And the "community" will keep rallying behind a buzzword instead of making a clear statement what network neutrality is actually supposed to mean and thinking about how to get that. We've all but lost this because this is not a technical problem and we've relied on the suits for fast internet access for much too long.

    22. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the world was how liberals claimed, every country would spend as much time discussing whether to lower taxes as much as they discuss whether to raise taxes.

      In Europe, no liberals ever discuss lowering taxes. Ever. Raising taxes is wanted about 50% of the time. Does any of them think about the implications of this? Never.

    23. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by ArsonSmith · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Liberals usually work incrementally. It starts with simple net neutrality rules. Then later on, they add some more rules. And more. And more. A Killswitch and some hate-crimes legislation later and before you know the government is all up in your intarwebs.

      They don't call it "Progressive" for nothing.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    24. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yes. Mainly because private property and capital are just used as leverage against those without. i.e. those without become a commodity. A race to the bottom. An extremely effective race to the bottom. The same quality of life as 30 yr ago costs 150% more, while wages are stagnant, people have moved to double income households, more hours, and debt. But of course, they're just lazy assholes who didn't try enough... People are scumbags and capitalists are no exception. Your utopian liberty idea is fine in theory, in fact, I'm willing to support absolute liberty over all else, aka law of the jungle. Evidently, it does not work in practice due to aforementioned point that people are fucking scumbags. Relax regulations and scumbaggery increases. Here are some examples where relaxed regulations produced epic douche-baggery Energy, Banking, Airlines, Telecom, Auto, Construction, Media, and GOVERNMENT. Sure you can blabber on about loopholes and abuse all you want, but it doesn't change the fundamental premise. People need to be policed and the police need to be policed. Do you have 300 counter examples? Capitalism has the same flaws as any other system. It can only really work when you can verify the integrity of each member of the group. The lazy asshole leeching off a commune is the same disease as the greedy capitalist (inefficiently) renting out his assets.

    25. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by MonChrMe · · Score: 2

      Tax "cuts" are the wrong way to think about it.

      The government should get enough money from the population to act as a limited social contract among free people to secure life, liberty, and property.

      Anything extra should be given back to the people who payed in.

      As an outsider, I'd like to point out that while I agree with this on paper, there's a problem - the people who've paid in the most have always been the poorest (their individual tax burdens far outweigh those of the extremely wealthy), yet those are also the same people getting the least back.

      It's interesting to note that when it comes to taxes, the' American Left' and the 'American Right' (neither of which live up to their names imo) seem to have pretty similar policies on tax - the difference is that 'Left' see it as scalable with income (ie, Rich pay more into the pot), whereas the 'Right' see it as absolute (Rich pay the same as the poor).

      Both sides seem to have the goal of increasing governments role and the size of the pot, but the difference is in how - the 'Right', through increased spending on security and military capabilities, the 'Left' through increased spending infrastructure and social support. In both cases your line about private property being used as communal property is true.

      Neither are necessarily wrong, but I don't see anyone in America's political spectrum actually working to your ideal of reduced government.

    26. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As he would in the modern conservative category. There, now it sounds stupid doesn't it. Well, it sounded stupid when you wrote it too.

    27. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Nimey · · Score: 1

      Nice slippery slope fallacy. The rest of your post was sensible, but that kinda ruined it.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    28. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by trickyD1ck · · Score: 1

      I would have modded this troll, but I want more people to see this adherent of American "liberalism" showing his true face. Liberal fascism indeed.

    29. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by ScentCone · · Score: 0

      Is it just me

      Yes, it's just you.

      Everything seems to lead to death panels when you listen to Rush and Fox.

      Just like everybody who wants less government, or who is worried about heaping trillions of new debt on the bonfire that is our economy is ... a racist who actively wants, as their goal in life, for poor people to be sick and die. That is, if you listen to Al Franken and MSNBC, right?

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    30. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually I would put my self down as slightly right of center.
      The problem is that people who put them selves as Liberal or Conserative tend to become mindless cheerleaders.
      Really I hate all "talking heads" on tv and radio. We should stop feeding the bank accounts and egos of the likes Rush Limbaugh and Michel Moore today. They all lie because their truth is more important than the truth.

      Okay so Google is for it.
      Here I will do the flip side of Rush's argument for you.
      Who is anti net neutrality? The Comcast, Time Warner, AT&T, and Verizon! Yes the fun loving beacons of truth justice, and the american way.

      Really ?
      Who does Net Neutrality help? That is simple, Google, Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, FaceBook, EBay, and Yahoo to just name a few.
      But wait there is more. It helps every website you use and ever customers that uses them. Throw in all the small businesses that have sprung up using ebay and over the internet to provide a small store front.
      Now lets me honest about this. Comcast, Time Warner, At&t and Verizon have used law suits and regulations to stop small towns from building their own fiber networks! Comcast, Time Warner, AT&T, and Verizon have gotten "exclusive" franchases and right of way from cities to put in lines.
      And Comcast, Time Warner, AT&T, and Verizon have gotten BILLIONS of dollars in goverment mandated users fees to fund broadband.
      So like most things Rush is wrong.

      Really we need to stop making this idiots rich.

    31. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Darby · · Score: 1, Informative

      I'm pretty right-wing

      So what is it about Feudal Theocracies, Nazism, and Fascism that you find so wonderful? These are the examples of right wing governments that have existed. If you do so hate Liberalism, which as a right winger you do by definition, why would you choose to live in a country like America that is entirely defined by Liberalism? Why wouldn't you move somewhere like Iran or Saudi Arabia or some other place that already shares your right wing values?

      Or are you like most of the rest of the idiots in America who describe themselves as right wing in spite of the fact that our grandparents fought 2 world wars against right wing ideology and you can't be bothered to take the 5 minutes it would take to inform yourself even slightly on the issue?

      I mean seriously, if you weren't so deeply ignorant, you might have the decency to be a bit embarrassed about your support of totalitarianism.
       

    32. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Drakkenmensch · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Just like everybody who wants less government, or who is worried about heaping trillions of new debt on the bonfire that is our economy is ... a racist who actively wants, as their goal in life, for poor people to be sick and die. That is, if you listen to Al Franken and MSNBC, right?

      I'm not that short-sighted, of course. I'm perfectly aware that conservatives aren't actively working to kill off all the poor and underprivileged. Who would be left to work factory jobs in abject conditions for minimum wage (or worse)?

    33. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by trickyD1ck · · Score: 1

      the people who've paid in the most have always been the poorest

      Please, educate yourself: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taxation_in_the_United_States#Progressive_nature

      A sizable part of the population don't pay taxes at all. If you consider the worth of government services people use (probably 10-20k a year), even more are net recipients in the system.

    34. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 0

      >>And ghandi_2 was doing so well before he revealed he was insane.

      Actually, he's right. Hitler doesn't exactly fall into the traditional left-wing / right-wing divide we have here in America, but in terms of being a pro-gun control, media-controlling, strong government sort of fellow, he falls into the left wing category more than the right. I'm not saying he'd vote Democrat, but he doesn't really match, say, a Tea Partier's view of limited government and lower taxes.

      The only reason people *think* that he's right wing is because he's been very successfully branded that way by a bunch of idiot college students yelling "Fascist" at cops that take their marijuana away.

    35. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by dethtungue · · Score: 1

      I usually paint it like this: What if ISPs and common carriers started deciding to block FoxNews.com because they didn't like the message?

      Then I'd switch ISPs. If they all blocked it, I'd get together with individuals who reject that sort of censorship and we'd invest in a new ISP would not block that content. However those ISPs who would choose to block content would lose customers and need to answer to their stockholders. Democracy and Capitalism at their best. However, when I delegate control to the Federal Government however incrementally, I'll eventually get hundreds of thousands of pages of regulation. And only the largest carriers can afford to understand and comply with that. And you will probably end up with China-level censorship anyway. Why pay a bunch of bureaucrats to "interpret" the wavering and politicized intent of NN when I have so much more influence by keeping them out of it.

    36. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by sauge · · Score: 1

      Until one side or the other is engaging in jewish cook-outs, declaring war on the world, full outright theft from the populace, and leading a populace not to a fear of their rights disappearing, but fear for their very own lives (or fingernails), neither can be compared to the horrors the nazi's perpetrated on the world. I find it ridiculous to compare Dems or Reps, Bush or Obama, to nazis.

      It doesn't take a comparison to Nazism to declare something is wrong, unsavory, and of an anti-(fill in the blank) creed.

    37. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Historically, most of our worst governments in the world have started with leftist propaganda. Most of the things they want sound reasonable in theory, but in reality end much worse. This makes many people who are either libertarian or conservative (actual conservatives) very wary of any new attempt to have the government help. Having lived a significant time in a successful socialist/fascist country, I can say that big brother can work in maybe small situations though still many people will get thrown under the bus (ie. the last thing you want to do is speak out on obvious problems or get noticed in any way politically or personally).

      I would rather only trust a government that only needs to nudge corporations or business models to more profitable/safer ones, limit monopolies, and once in a while take on huge public works if we can actually afford it(and privatize it or minimize control soon after). People with big ideas about government are very dangerous (either because they are naive or lying). All politicians lie and are stupid. When there is a problem, I want my government to try not to do anything first.

    38. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 2

      >>As an outsider, I'd like to point out that while I agree with this on paper, there's a problem - the people who've paid in the most have always been the poorest (their individual tax burdens far outweigh those of the extremely wealthy), yet those are also the same people getting the least back.

      What? Historically, sure. But not now.

      Your average working poor family receives a net subsidy from the federal government, and doesn't pay any income taxes at all. Look up the EITC and CTC.

      In 1970, a poor family with two kids paid a combined 8.5% of their income toward income tax and payroll tax (i.e. medicare/social security). In 2002 they paid a total of -15.6% of their income in taxes.

    39. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A Killswitch and some hate-crimes legislation later and before you know the government is all up in your intarwebs.

      Because as we all know, the first sacrament of TR00 CONSERVATIVE religion is HATE, amirite?

    40. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A sizable part of the population don't pay taxes at all.

      You posted a link to American income taxes. I don't know what country you're from or where you learned about America, but you're very badly misinformed about how taxes work here.

      Here's a hint -- income taxes are not the only type of taxes Americans pay.

      Anyhow, if you ever come and visit, look me up. I'll be glad to show you all of the different taxes that people pay, and you can learn that the income tax is not the only type of tax.

    41. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      So what is it about Feudal Theocracies, Nazism, and Fascism that you find so wonderful? These are the examples of right wing governments that have existed. If you do so hate Liberalism, which as a right winger you do by definition, why would you choose to live in a country like America that is entirely defined by Liberalism? Why wouldn't you move somewhere like Iran or Saudi Arabia or some other place that already shares your right wing values?

      Or are you like most of the rest of the idiots in America who describe themselves as right wing in spite of the fact that our grandparents fought 2 world wars against right wing ideology and you can't be bothered to take the 5 minutes it would take to inform yourself even slightly on the issue?

      I mean seriously, if you weren't so deeply ignorant, you might have the decency to be a bit embarrassed about your support of totalitarianism.

      Yes, those damn National Socialists were totally right wing.

      If you weren't so deeply ignorant, you might stop to think about the ideas that have been spoon fed to you through your soft spot.

    42. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by pitchpipe · · Score: 0

      ...I have some awesome arguments about this with other right-wingers...

      Some of them can't seem to evaluate the situation for themselves so they just go with whatever their media talking head tells them.

      None of them can explain how the Internet is supposed to work, nor how companies are screwing it up, nor what net neutrality means...

      ...none of my liberal friends can think for themselves on several liberal bandwaggon [sic] issues either.

      Sounds like you pick your friends based on their knowledge and IQ: if it's less/lower than yours they're coo. Either that or your view of yourself is over-inflated.

      --
      Look where all this talking got us, baby.
    43. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by vlm · · Score: 1

      Then comes a deficit commission and Social Security and unemployment insurance is gone and you have a significant population of desperate unemployed people starving to death on the streets.

      They can always riot and thanks to the 2nd amendment they'll be some pretty exciting riots. Which is a good thing, as it tends to discourage the creation of conditions resulting in said riots.

      Thats why (some) rich people tolerate or even support social programs... Even if they are utterly self centered, and have no empathy or responsibility for their fellow humans, or for the random whims of chance that could strike them down, they personally don't want to live in 24x7 rodney king riot conditions, so maybe UI and SS and some civilized medical care is not such a bad idea after all. Its nice when even the most despicable inherently line up with the somewhat more intelligent.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    44. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by skine · · Score: 1

      The only way this would be possible is if the American conservative is now so far to the right that they make even the most notoriously right-wing party of all time look liberal.

    45. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Eunuchswear · · Score: 0

      Don't call me a "liberal" you little shit,

      Or an American.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    46. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1, Informative

      Actually, he's right. Hitler doesn't exactly fall into the traditional left-wing / right-wing divide we have here in America, but in terms of being a pro-gun control, media-controlling, strong government sort of fellow, he falls into the left wing category more than the right.

      You need to get out more.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    47. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Who would be left to work factory jobs in abject conditions for minimum wage (or worse)?

      Right, because the economic pie is of a permanently fixed size, and the right knows that only by keeping other people from having things, can they hang onto their own wealth.

      No, that's how the left sees things. They can't fathom that business owners make more money when more people are making more money to spend. Instead, they think that the only way for a person who doesn't make much to get more is to take it from someone else. You couldn't have it more backwards. The left is all about people "getting" what they want, as opposed to creating what they want.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    48. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by pnuema · · Score: 3, Informative
      What? Historically, sure. But not now. Your average working poor family receives a net subsidy from the federal government, and doesn't pay any income taxes at all. Look up the EITC and CTC. In 1970, a poor family with two kids paid a combined 8.5% of their income toward income tax and payroll tax (i.e. medicare/social security). In 2002 they paid a total of -15.6% of their income in taxes.

      This may be true. However, due to wage stagnation since Reagan took office, the buying power of that family has steadily declined (greater than the 23% discrepancy you describe). In short, since we have transferred all of that wealth to the upper classes, and we have consistently eroded the buying power of the lower classes, they need more help. DURRRR NUMBERS ARE RELATIVE DURRR.

    49. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by dethtungue · · Score: 2

      No I have not noticed this -ever. That is an ad hominem employed by hateful people who are ignorant of history. American conservatives are thoughtful, well-educated, charitable people. We are also typically people of faith and that includes those who follow Islam. We recognize that Muslim does not equal terrorist and we entirely reject any racist attempt to blame any problem on a group's skin color. American conservatives are the ones seeking to roll back the federal government's unwarranted abuses of power by enforcing the limitations placed on it by the US Constitution and the Bill of Rights. Turn off MSNBC and read a little history on the Nazis before you try to hang that badge on anyone. While you are at it, how about learning a little about what American Conservatives actually believe. Here's a good place to start: http://www.youtube.com/user/BillWhittleChannel

    50. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by enderjsv · · Score: 1

      No he doesn't. This whole idea that liberals want big government and republicans don't is ridiculous. It's never been true. It was a conservative president who sent us to war in Iraq. That's pretty big government. It's the conservatives that want to continue fighting a ridiculous war against Marijuana. It's the conservatives who continue to want to decide who is allowed to marry or serve in the military. And every time laws limiting police power (like Miranda rights) are put up for debate, who do you think sides with law enforcement over citizen's rights? Conservatives.

      The REAL difference between liberals and conservatives is that they both are in favor of big government, but under different circumstances. Liberals want big government when it comes to social services like medicare and social security, or when it comes to regulation like environmental laws. Conservatives want big government to preserve what they consider to be the idealistic lifestyle and strip the rights of those who don't want to conform, like anti-drug anti-gay marriage laws, or their continual opposition to police over site with things like Miranda rights. They also want big government when they want to flex America's muscles (which usually has some big business implications).

      Believe me, Hitler was not supporting big government because he was in favor of social services or commercial regulation. He was ALL about flexing Germany's muscles and attempting to control what he considered to be the idealistic lifestyle. Trying to equate Hitler to liberalism because he was for "big government" is a tired argument. Please stop doing it.

    51. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason there is a deficit is because the budget is out of whack. The term 'deficit' in this context refers to the budget deficit. That's something that is basically arbitrary. If we decide to spend 0 next year, we will have a budget surplus for that year. We didn't half our tax revenue per year from '08 to '10, we more than doubled our spending per year. The sooner you realize this, and why there isn't anything "extra", the better.

    52. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe if history didn't repeatedly validate slippery slope arguments when it comes to power-grabs by governments, the "right" wouldn't be so leery of giving the government more power.

    53. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by CookieForYou · · Score: 1

      The problem here is that SEVEN carriers carry almost all traffic in the US. Most smaller cities are only served by four or less.

      If you live in Portland, you have three choices in peering. All of them are large corporations. If those three decide to block your traffic, you have no recourse other than to leave the state, or invest $100 billion in creating a new backbone, and then arrange peering agreements with all of these companies AND provide direct connectivity to the content you want published.

      The problem isn't necessarily Fox News, because they have a substantial demographic, but rather, for smaller groups. Sure, it is nice to think about blocking the KKK or something similar, but what about other somewhat fringe groups like radical libertarians. The first amendment says the government cannot prevent their speech, but what if three major backbone companies decide to restrict it? They are effectively wiped away. There is no "soap box" if you are compelled to stay inside your "virtual" house by corporate owners.

      The government stepped in (rightly) when the 19th centry mega-corporations began to dictate local laws with their wholly-owned corporate shantytowns, where employees were required to live.

      But in a digital era, when more jobs are going online and most communication is online, a corporation restricting speech is just as dangerous as the government doing it, because the corporation is the de-facto government of the internet, by the nature of their control over its traffic...

      Unless there is some rule that says otherwise.

      I regard net neutrality akin to the first amendment or the anit-monopoly laws in "meat space". They are simply that important.

    54. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is an extremely good question. How *is* the internet supposed to work?

    55. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by SuricouRaven · · Score: 2

      It might be more accurate to see he is closer to American Conservatives in his social views (Anti-homosexuality, pro-life*, openly advocated Christianity as the state religion) but closer to American Liberals in his economic views (An active government involved in much economic activity, as well as setting social policies and promoting them). In his political positions, he isn't either. Neither liberals nor conservatives want to abolish democracy (Well, a tiny number on each side), though they both seem to accuse the other of that.

      *One of the first things he did was ban all abortion. He later made an exception for 'undesireables' though.

    56. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That "private property" is only yours because of an infrastructure which supports your acquiring and keeping it. The rules of that infrastructure -- what can be owned and what cannot, the value of fiat money, security provided by the police and military and social support nets, laws regulating financial interactions -- are entirely arbitrary, and slanted to benefit some at the expense of others.

      In the absence of a functioning government and society, "your" property would rapidly go to whoever has more guns. And if we continue down the road towards plutocracy, it most likely will.

    57. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by mrjimorg · · Score: 1

      As an economic conservative, the problem that I have with net neutrality is that it puts in place artificial barriers that stifle innovation and prevent new products from appearing. For instance, what if a flower company is willing to subsidize internet access but all web searches related to flowers would forward to their site? I might or might not be willing tolerate that depending on how much they are paying. Also, I have to plead ignorance on this matter, but would this prevent me from offering a internet service that give priority to VOIP? If so, this bill could kill VOIP, which could be an intended consequence of some of its sponsors (are phone companies giving some cash to politicians here?) Third, is this going to create a bureaucracy that will continue to try to expand it's scope and power? The FCC has already been making me feel less comfortable lately, I can only image what an internet regulation board would do. Don't let the camel get its nose in the tent.

    58. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, where are mod points when I need them... :-)

    59. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by MonChrMe · · Score: 1

      Fair enough, I may have cocked up on that one.

      My understanding was based on statements made by some of the more wealthy Americans, such as Warren Buffet, and other tricks to avoid income taxes (the typical one being a salary, but high income from stock dividends which are taxed at a much lower rate). Both WB and Steve Jobs reportedly pay a lower tax burden than their secretaries - jobs pays ~15%, which is roughly the same rate as the 20k/yr example in your link.

      From media reports I'd been led to believe that was fairly standard practice - apologies if that's not in fact the case.

    60. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Abcd1234 · · Score: 2

      The reason there is a deficit is because the budget is out of whack. The term 'deficit' in this context refers to the budget deficit. That's something that is basically arbitrary.

      Arbitrary? What? You're making no fucking sense, buddy.

      If the US government spends more than it takes in, there's a deficit. There's nothing "arbitrary" about it. That's why I used that term in the first place, ffs. ie, to reflect the fact that there is *nothing extra* to give to people, since the US is already spending more than it takes in in total income (including tax receipts).

      If we decide to spend 0 next year, we will have a budget surplus for that year. We didn't half our tax revenue per year from '08 to '10, we more than doubled our spending per year. The sooner you realize this, and why there isn't anything "extra", the better.

      Yeah, no shit sherlock. And who was the pioneer of this sort of "budgeting"? Why... the right-wing's favourite son, Ronald Reagan!

      As an aside, why harp on the period from '08 to '10? It's not as if the US was running a surplus prior to that. In fact, in the last, oh, 20 years or so (and probably longer), the US has only come close to running a surplus once, back during those heady days in the 90s when a blowjob could get a president impeached.

      Interestingly, during that same period, it was, once again, the Republicans responsible for the biggest deficits... but, as usual, the fucking hypocrites believe deficits matter until they don't.

    61. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Fascism would not do that, it would enrich the rich at the cost of the poor. It is a union between state and capital for the advantage of both and to take from the poor.

      I would say if they don't pay toss them in jail. The reality is the rich get out of paying their fair share via deductions and paying capital gains instead of income tax. All income should be taxed the same above a certain dollar amount.

    62. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by hey! · · Score: 1

      You make it sound like working incrementally is some kind of clever stratagem by the left. Let me tell you, the small number of people on the left in the US are not at all for incrementalism. For example, they don't want health insurance reform, or even health insurance reform with a public option. The left hates the "public option" just as much as the right. What they want is single payer.

      What confuses people is that the left has no media clout. Sure, there's Michael Moore, but the right gets more out of him as a whipping boy than the left does in terms of seeing its policies enacted.

      The "leftist incrementalism" you are talking about is really just centrist pragmatism. The centrists want health insurance form, are open to single payer as a feature of that, but aren't going to go to the mat for it. Centrists are the furthest right that is visible in this country, except on a few narrow Internet based forums. Nancy Pelosi is the media's idea of a hard core left winger? The left hates her as much if not *more* than the right does. They just do it in private because they don't have a platform.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    63. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      They were right wing, they chose that name for a reason. It is also why real socialists are international socialists. Try reading a book.

      Even 60+ years later you seem to believe the propaganda they wrote.

    64. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good point, I'd like to think that American liberals have more sense than you displayed with your previous post...

    65. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by noidentity · · Score: 1

      As a liberal, I can play this argument too: It starts with short-term tax cuts to stimulate spending after a recession. Then later on the short-term has become a decade and then permanent. And the cuts go deeper, and deeper. Then comes a deficit commission and Social Security and unemployment insurance is gone

      And that would be a bad thing, letting people get private insurance and invest for retirement?

    66. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by AltairDusk · · Score: 1

      My personal view is that it should be an absolute percentage. Everyone feels the same pinch and it does scale with income. What I disagree with is that percentage rising the more you make. How is raising the percentage of your money taken the more money you make seen as "fair"? If the poor cannot afford to pay that percentage and have enough left to live on that is certainly a problem but I don't think the current "solution" is ideal.

    67. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Ironsides · · Score: 1

      As a liberal, I can play this argument too: It starts with short-term tax cuts to stimulate spending after a recession. Then later on the short-term has become a decade and then permanent.

      And as a Liberal you ignore inconvenient facts. Facts such as the origin of the income tax and how it has not always been around. Or how it was originally passed by liberals as a "soak the rich" amendment (class warfare at its finest) that eventually was being payed by everyone and included a 25% starting bracket within 20 years of its passage. Or shall we look at Social Security, which has been expanded to included people over the years who were never supposed to have been covered under the original scheme. Or Medicaid, which last year cost over $700 billion more than the Medicaid tax brought in. So yes, you do work incrementally.

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    68. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Stradivarius · · Score: 1

      As a liberal, I can play this argument too: It starts with short-term tax cuts

      You could, and there is truth to the argument in that direction too. But if you look at the history of government in the US, it has been pretty uniformly in the direction of bigger and more expensive, so I doubt you have to worry that we'll be getting rid of popular entitlement programs like Social Security, incrementally or otherwise.

      But when an "incremental" change involves the granting of new authority to a regulator, we do need to be careful. Especially when that regulator is the FCC, which has a long history of standing in the way of competition and new technology (ie the public interest), to appease politically connected incumbents. It's a stretch to think that the FCC leopard is suddenly going to change its spots and become some sort of protector of the consumer.

    69. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      No, that sounds about right.

      If you started from a state of nature, people would tend to band together for mutual reasons, such as defense and engaging in projects that are impractical or impossible for one person to do alone (e.g. building an aqueduct). Legitimate governments get set up in order to administer these things efficiently, and may levy taxes by mutual consent in order to fund them (e.g. everyone benefits from the aqueduct, but if you can't spare time from your farm to help build it, you would need to pay someone else to build it for you, perhaps in food so that the builder doesn't need to spend their time on their farm).

      If someone claims some property for themselves that no one else believes is theirs, or avoids their obligations, they are likely to get punished, in ways ranging from fines (people who don't pay their taxes get property seized), to exile from the community that they're trying to free ride on, to imprisonment or execution.

      Governments and polities today are much more complex, but are basically the same. If the government is legitimate, it derives its power from the consent of the governed, and likely has democratic features (what with enlightened despots being rare on the ground). While there should be some protection for the minority, lest they suffer from mob rule, the majority is still apt to be in charge. Property rights throughout history have been limited to what a person can defend themselves, or what other people are willing to consent to, because a naked claim of ownership that isn't backed up by force or the consent of others is, and always has been, worthless. If high taxes on the wealthy are desired, wealthy people will either need to stock up on weapons to defend their property (unlikely to work given how few wealthy people there are) or will need to submit. Or they have to wage a propaganda war to convince the majority to deny their own economic interests, in favor of the interests of a wealthy elite that they'll never be members of, which has been popular lately. If they can't convince people to act foolishly, don't submit to taxes, and can't physically protect themselves from literally everyone else, they're apt to get punished.

      I am not sure how you think things ought to work, and whether things could realistically work in whatever fashion you'd like.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    70. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am very right wing and I would respond to your question with .... I would let my ISP know that unless they restored my prefered channels / URLs, then I would take my business elsewhere. I would say that the ISP is a private property owner and has the right to use their private property as they choose. I would also say that as a consumer, I have the right to move my business to other providers.

    71. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Chardansearavitriol · · Score: 1

      Nah Id have to say that killing off the poor and the unprivlidged is among their top priorities. Sure, maybe not directly, but when you use end-of-america rhetoric over insurance covering a yearly talk with a doctor about end of life planning ... *If you want it!* ...Then its hard to trust anything youd say. And when you keep doing this time after time after time, making the most ridiculous arguments imaginable, to the point of contradicting it because the 'other' liked it too, your words become hollow and meaningless. Its like the whole biblical literalism thing. Its not really about literal interpretations, its about finding ways you can ram words together to support your cause. And that is exactly how the right operates in the modern climate: debate and nuance have become roadkill. And now we have to deal with several hours a day of raving lunatics/vicious jerks with persecution and martyr complexes, telling people that things that have been going on since 2004 have actually been started wholly by the left, in the last year, despite the impossibility of these claims. Im sorry, but until the rightwing is willing to stand up for the truth, then they dont deserve to wear...Sorry, channeling Picard again. Yeah, they dont deserve to be trusted on any issue, until they can account for and retract the ones that a quick Google search will show you are complete fabrications, from stem to stern, from alpha to omega, Complete-and-utter Lies. How can we trust ANYONE who is so willing to do such disconnected things? The reason doesnt matter. Whether through bigotry, political favoritism, greed, stupidity or just plain jackassery, the lies are there, and they remain there. They never get retracted. As such, the side who supports these things cannot be trusted either. Remember when Obama gave arizona to mexico? Did I miss the insurrection, or is it just another week-long hissy fit that actually had no meaning in reality? Fortunately, they dont have an answer for that. We should all hide under our blankets as http://mediamatters.org/blog/201012270004 "Obama to Give Manhattan Back to Native Americans." Conservatives, heres your chance, prove me wrong. Denounce this conservative jackassery and start to reclaim your position in our society. We will always welcome you back to the real world, but YOU need to step through the door!

    72. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by admiralh · · Score: 1

      Two things:
      1) Both left-wingers and right-wingers work incrementally. For examples: (Right-wing) the loosening of handgun laws (where many states now allow concealed carry) has been done gradually. (Left-wing) The program that provides kidney dialysis to all people started small in the early 70's but has grown in scope significantly since then.
      2) Care to elaborate on the liberal bandwagon issues that your friends cannot think for themselves about? Surveys have consistently shown that right-wingers (especially Fox News Viewers) are more mis-informed about the issues than are left-wingers. And since the left tends to be much more fragmented, it's understandable that any one particular liberal might be uninformed about some issue that's near and dear to another set of liberals. Conservatives tend to be more unified, because it's much easier to argue for "No!" than to argue for "We must do [insert pet project here]".

      --
      Hopelessly pedantic since 1963.
    73. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by The+Shootist · · Score: 2

      ". . . and Social Security and unemployment insurance is gone . . . "

      Our collective asses are tied up by Social Security; three or four generations have planned on its continued existence. But, if it take 100 years to phase it out, so be it.

      As to UI, that is an issue for the Several States, NOT an overwhelming, overarching, overreaching, National Government.

      Modern Liberals (not Thoreau or Whitman or Clemons) have done their ever-loving best to destroy what is best in America. All high school students to get a college prep education? For the the love of God, why? University should be for the top 10% (and this ain't Lake Wobegon, where all the children are above average). Just another example.

    74. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by orgelspieler · · Score: 1

      The right-wingers have one point though: Liberals usually work incrementally. It starts with simple net neutrality rules. Then later on, they add some more rules. And more. And more. A Killswitch and some hate-crimes legislation later and before you know the government is all up in your intarwebs.

      I can play that game, too! First conservatives get rid of capital gains taxes, then they get Kansas to teach intelligent design, then they cut tax rates for the ridiculously rich, and before you know it, we're looking at regressive taxes and the elimination of public schools.

    75. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Chardansearavitriol · · Score: 1

      So..Im confused. Im too sick too work, and since im too sick to work I cant get health insurance ,and cause i cant get health insurance I cant go to work to afford health insurance, and so on. And this is my fault? Because I was in such a catastrophic accident, I should just lay down here and die quietly? You can pretend its about money all you want. It isnt. Its about basic human decency, the SAME basic human decency we demand from all aspects of society. Can you make your computer? Give it to us. Do you understand how to make a successful business online? Then get off. If you wanna whine about the awful non-neutral internet, maybe you should do it with one of those other telephony systems. You seem to so enjoy going to strawman level extremes while professing a level of clairsentience that lets you both see the actions of all the left-wingers, and read their thoughts and emotions with perfect accuracy. Or you're making things up about people you dont like, with information given to you by people who dont like the people you dont like, and viewing everything done anywhere through that broken lense. So either theres a superduper left wing conspiracy that is REALLY BAD at what it does, especially compared to anyone else who ever tried, or your side is greedy and selfish and will do all they can for political and financial gain, leaving us to clean up your mess. I hope you can reconcile this soon. The feather of Ma'at is surpsingly light, and Ammit is usually hungry.

    76. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by orgelspieler · · Score: 1

      Who would be left to work factory jobs in abject conditions for minimum wage (or worse)?

      Guatemalans?

    77. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The problem is that cutting the military cuts defense of the nation a Constituionally mandated federal responsibility. Granted there are probably programs that are pork built into the military budget and there are areas that could be cut. BUT, even if you cut the ENTIRE military budget, it is only a drop in the bucket compared to the entilement programs such as Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. These programs are established by law and are NOT mandated by the Constitution. Progressives want to spend money on programs that are not mandated by the Constituion as a means of implementing their religion of "social change" or "social justice". What progressives fail to understand is that no matter how much you raise taxes, you will not collect more than 20% of the GDP during peacetime. But they dont want to be limited by this reality.

      We are currently collecting taxes at 19% of GDP. Spending is the problem, not tax collection. We are currently spending between 22% and 24% of GDP depending on who is doing the counting. Until spending comes down in alignment with tax collection, not only will we continue to be in debt, but we will continue to make the debt worse.

    78. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by The+Shootist · · Score: 1

      The Army-Air Force NEEDS to be cut. America NEEDS to be out of NATO, Japan and Korea. The Cold War is Over. The Army-Air Force should (finally) return to its pre-WWII size. There is no modern military threat.

      And Net Neutrality is a GOOD thing.

      btw, I'm Right of Genghis Khan. Newt Gingrich is a RINO and Ron Paul is only slightly to his right.

      "Despair is a sin" Jerry Pournelle

    79. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like these?

      http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/26/us/politics/26death.html?_r=3&hp

    80. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Surt · · Score: 1

      Politics, like everything social, is a way for one guy's genes to win out over another's. It's definitely not a waste of time for the winner.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    81. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      What the fuck kind of crack are you on, AC?

      BUT, even if you cut the ENTIRE military budget, it is only a drop in the bucket

      A *drop in the bucket*? Are you fucking *kidding* me? Try 23% of the entire budget. Social Security and Medicaid make up another 40%.

      "probably programs that are pork"... please, what a fucking understatement.

      But that's *not the point*. My point is that US Republicans are against cutting *any of these programs*, as they're important to their precious base (lest we forget that wonderful right-wing refrain, "Keep the government out of my Medicare!"). But at the same time, they're against raising taxes. Well, guess what? They gotta make a choice, or they gotta quit bitching about budget deficits.

    82. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by MonChrMe · · Score: 1

      The normal talking point (not taking sides here) is disposable income; this is a bit of simlification, but hopefully it illustrates the idea well enough.

      There's a lot of people on low incomes that live paycheque to paycheque. They literally pay rent (or mortgage, if they're luckier), food, heat and light and that's their paycheque gone. Given the rush to minimum wage following its introduction (we saw the same thing in the UK) there's a significant number of people in that position.

      Someone who's got a larger income typically has disposable (or excess, if you prefer) income above and beyond what they need to maintain their quality of life, and so a larger tax burden doesn't actually impact them in the same way as it does for the lower earners - a higher tax burden might delay some purchases, but doesn't generally cause real trouble.

      For the very high earners - the minority we normally think of as 'rich' - the tax burden is almost irrelevant - they literally earn more money than they can spend, and what's not spent simply heaps up in a bank account somewhere. Bearing in mind that a higher tax burden here has almost literally no impact on their quality of life (as the extra money is just a number of a statement), it becomes more a question of 'why not?'.

      Bear in mind that a lot of people in this last bracket are seen to give away huge sums in aid anyway, which makes it difficult for society to argue they can't afford it.

    83. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Surt · · Score: 1

      And what exactly is the problem with people marrying sheep or dogs anyway?

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    84. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Surt · · Score: 1

      I've always wondered why liberals didn't just turn around and ask why privately run death panels for profit were better than democratically elected death panels.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    85. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      But if you look at the history of government in the US, it has been pretty uniformly in the direction of bigger and more expensive, ...

      Actually, that depends on how you measure. For instance, if you go with absolute number of dollars, it will definitely appear like there's an average 2% increase each year, but that's because of inflation. If you look at percentage of GDP, you'll see fluctuations that reflect the fact that GDP drops during recessions. If you look at inflation-adjusted dollars, you'll get a slightly different picture.

      In short, when it comes to government budgets, the numbers are awful.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    86. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      So either theres a superduper left wing conspiracy that is REALLY BAD at what it does

      Actually, that sums it up very well.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    87. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by jandrese · · Score: 1

      In general: The other party can't consent. That's also why you can't marry 10 year olds in any civilized country.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    88. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am right wing and want to cut everything across the board, including military spending. I am not alone. You are confusing RINOs with conservatives.

    89. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Surt · · Score: 1

      The left can fathom it just fine. The left just wants to redistribute the extreme inequities. And frankly, evidence suggests that the bulk of the people were better off (social injustices aside for a moment) when marginal tax rates were much higher. Now, if you can make a convincing argument that the marginal tax rates and the social injustices are connected, that would be interesting, but otherwise I think the evidence is pretty solidly on the side of things being better for the majority when marginal tax rates are high.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    90. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Haha I thought the same thing.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    91. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Surt · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, thanks to your pro-oligopoly/monopoly business stance, your own party has made it impossible to found that competing isp.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    92. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Yes, you're right, No True Scotsman would believe such things...

      Amazing, though... evidently virtually the entire Republican caucus is Republican In Name Only. Which begs the question, who's the real RINO, here?

    93. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      I think the evidence is pretty solidly on the side of things being better for the majority when marginal tax rates are high.

      Not only is that a grotesque case of confusing correlation with causation, it also ignores the fact that standards of living are up for everyone.

      Regardless, how will taxing a business owner more cause him to spend more money, hire more people, and - most importantly - result in people who already pay no income tax paying less income tax? Which "things" were better for a poor person fifty years ago?

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    94. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, tax cuts are terrible, terrible evil, and inevitably lead to people starving on the streets. As a liberal, you are a prime example of the morons you yourself are decrying, who don't really know what they are talking about but scream anyway. Go read up on economics.

      I am willing to bet that none of the enlightened liberals posting here actually read the new FCC rules. So, you don't know what they are about any more then Rush Limbaugh.

      As somebody who knows how the Internet works, I cannot think of any terrible harm that would befall us if the ISPs were allowed to discriminate traffic based on volume. There is plenty of dark fibre around, and its capacity is almost unlimited with FDM. The broadband providers will not cut off your Youtube, because they know that this is why you are paying for broadband in a first place. But a good question the liberals who know how the Internet works might want to ask themselves (if by some accident they feel like reflecting) is how the FCC plans to enforce these brilliant rules, and what it will take for the ISPs to comply. While I doubt that Soros and Co will achieve their dark plans to control Rush, this is no doubt a way for the FCC to expand their bureaucratic staff.

    95. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You provide examples only based in thought. If you look at history of bigger-government activities, you'll see that there's an actual trend towards growing the government, a little bit at a time. One example would the be seat-belt laws in MA. About 15 years ago, the law was passed to require people to wear seat belts. There was small punishment and police were not allowed to stop the car if you weren't buckled. Promises were made that it would never be any more stringent. Fast forward to now, and the police can pull you over and give you a ticket if you're driving without a seat belt - or if any of your passengers is not wearing a belt. Government always trends to get bigger and more invasive.

    96. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As an economic conservative, the problem that I have with net neutrality is that it puts in place artificial barriers that stifle innovation and prevent new products from appearing.

      What artificial barriers?

        Here is network neutrality (NN) in a nutshell: a network, connected to the internet, carrying internet data, cannot change how it handles packets on its network based on source or destination. Ie, the network must be 'neutral' in how it looks at data. Thats it. This does not restrict QOS, such as your example with VOIP. If an ISP says "VOIP packets have right of way when our network is congested" this does not violate NN: it is data class based QOS. If an ISP such as Comcast says "on our network, Comcast Digital Voice(tm) packets have right of way and Vonage packets get best effort" this DOES violate NN.

      Thats NN. Everything else people like Limbaugh et all try to lump into NN is classic FUD, period.

    97. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by TehBrando · · Score: 0

      Obviously neither side cares about a deficit as long as the things they want are getting through. The right didn't want the healthcare bill passed so they complained about how we couldn't afford it. The left didn't care that we couldn't afford it as long as they got what they wanted by passing the healthcare bill. The right wanted tax cuts all across the board, not just for middle and lower class even if we can't afford it. The left didn't want tax cuts and complained about how we couldn't afford it. Before you get all high and mighty you should realize that both sides play this game.

    98. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by WWWWolf · · Score: 1

      Liberals usually work incrementally. It starts with simple net neutrality rules. Then later on, they add some more rules. And more. And more. A Killswitch and some hate-crimes legislation later and before you know the government is all up in your intarwebs.

      Hint from a random European leftist scumbag: You don't need special legislation for the internet content. If hate crimes are illegal, then they're illegal whether they're online or offline. All you need to do is to regulate the infrastructure itself: you need to have clear, effective, just, and hard-to-abuse rules that govern the terms of cooperation between Internet service providers and the law enforcement. Cops can't stomp on you and you can't hide from cops if there's a reasonable suspicion of wrongdoing.

      Also, a small hint: don't the newbies these days remember that "killswitches" don't frigging work? Propose one, get laughed at. I can't really remember the specifics, but there was this stupid American law, called CIPA or something, introduced by some fellow called McCain or something like that. It hasn't succeeded eliminating Internet pornography or peoples' access to it, last I checked. Probably because they forgot to apply it to every device on US soil, which sounds to me like it's a little bit infeasible. Also, it failed because the filters just don't work. If there's one thing anyone should be aware of, it's that content and access are two things that are notoriously difficult, even impossible, to police.

    99. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      The Left doesn't use "fiscal responsibility" as a talking point in their campaigns, and used it as a defining component of their party platform. When they start doing that, you might have a point. Until then, the Republicans are the abject hypocrites, here.

    100. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Surt · · Score: 1

      Since most business owners who do most of the hiring are small to medium business owners, you could actually tax them less by taxing the large businesses and the ultra-rich more.

      And government food stamp programs, for example, were more effective 50 years ago.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    101. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      Or Medicaid, which last year cost over $700 billion more than the Medicaid tax brought in.

      First off, there is no "medicaid tax". Perhaps you meant Medicare?

      Secondly, even if it existed, it didn't cost $700 billion more last year than it brought in in taxes. Last year (2010), Medicaid cost only $290 billion , which is a bit less than $700 billion more than any possible positive number of dollars taken in (non-existent) Medicaid taxes...

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    102. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you think is altruistic about social programs? What the hell is this 'random whims of chance' thing? Class mobility in this culture is zero. These bread and circus programs just keep us peasants from rocking the boat.

      What you're describing as a riot sounds like terrorism. You know, violence used for political gain? Who gave that right to the American people? Oh yeah, no one. What we have is a right to demand new forms of government when our current ones no longer serve, i.e. revolution. Don't advocate anything less.

    103. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Brannoncyll · · Score: 1

      I don't think its an issue of rational or irrational. In order to understand the politician, look no further than his pocket. Today the politicians might agree on some 'rational' piece of legislation, but you can be sure that 'irrational' legislation will be built on top of it if it serves their interests. The slippery slope arguments do make sense, as people with foresight will see that today's rational legislation is paving the way for a whole host of irrational yet profitable outcomes.

    104. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by onefriedrice · · Score: 1

      The thing you're struggling with is your assumption that higher taxes automatically leads to more income for the government (and thus a reduced deficit); unfortunately, that's not a safe assumption in today's world. Higher taxes means more people searching out and taking advantage of loopholes in the insane tax laws. It's not unrealistic that lowering taxes and cutting meaningless spending (military expenditures are not usually considered meaningless, but many entitlement costs are) will lead to a deficit reduction. So no, it's not hypocritical; it's just a point of view.

      --
      This author takes full ownership and responsibility for the unpopular opinions outlined above.
    105. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by rwa2 · · Score: 1

      Man I've never wanted to Godwin a thread so bad ^_^

    106. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      This may be true. However, due to wage stagnation since Reagan took office, the buying power of that family has steadily declined (greater than the 23% discrepancy you describe). In short, since we have transferred all of that wealth to the upper classes, and we have consistently eroded the buying power of the lower classes, they need more help.

      Median personal income in the USA in 1970 (in 2000 dollars) was about $25600. In 2000, it was $28300. Doesn't look like buying power has changed all that much in that 30 year period. It certainly hasn't declined, steadily or otherwise.

      DURRRR NUMBERS ARE RELATIVE DURRR.

      Which is why we look at the real numbers, rather than using vague phrases like "steadily declined".

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    107. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, every single increment is considered "completely reasonable" yet every single time a law is passed towards the liberal agenda, after a month or two, it's suddenly decided by liberals that it's not enough and that another law that is "completely reasonable" until the liberal agenda is completely in effect.

      As for the taxes, it's because of massive levels of pork spending and a refusal to even consider cutting the the costs of the bottom line, for example, repairing the tomb of the unkown soldier. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomb_of_the_Unknowns#Damage_and_repair_to_the_Tomb_Monument
      John Haines spent $31,000 of his own money to get a piece of marble and have it carved to the tomb's dimensions and provided for transportation, yet he was completely brushed off for $2.2 million estimated cost...

    108. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Av8rjoker · · Score: 1

      Or screw the increment and jump straight to the Patriot Act.

    109. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are those the only options you came up with? Please never run for any sort of office or take a job that requires thinking of solutions.

    110. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by elashish14 · · Score: 1

      Now before you liberals get all self-congratulatory on your enlightened position.... none of my liberal friends can think for themselves on several liberal bandwaggon issues either.

      There's nothing to feel proud about in calling one's self a liberal (or for affiliating in whatever party). The only real pride to be had is in knowing the facts and using them to make an intelligent, honest and uncompromising decision.

      --
      I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
    111. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now before you liberals get all self-congratulatory on your enlightened position.... none of my liberal friends can think for themselves on several liberal bandwaggon issues either.

      I have to point out that (while I'm considered a liberal) I personally don't have an opinion on a number of political issues, because they do not affect me in any immediate or distant foreseeable way (especially with the way our government decides to create laws and then revoke those same laws 4-6 years later because a different party took office). The things that I do know about, and think for myself on, are the things that directly affect me or someone I know well. So, while I agree that both sides just jump on the bandwagon, not knowing may not mean not being able to think for yourself. It may very well mean that it does not directly (or appear to directly) affect them.

    112. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by aitikin · · Score: 1

      As well as a significant disgust for homosexuals, a love for big military spending, and seemingly small government that turns out to be bigger than it claims...

      But yeah, Hitler was totally a liberal!

      --
      "Don't meddle in the affairs of a patent dragon, for thou art tasty and good with ketchup." ~ohcrapitssteve
    113. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      No, that's how the left sees things. They can't fathom that business owners make more money when more people are making more money to spend.

      /golfclap

      This is the ENTIRE FUCKING PHILOSOPHY of the "left", summed up in ONE SENTENCE.

      I don't know shit about your political viewpoints except that you don't understand what the left wants, so I won't try to strawman you with some political position that you may or may not agree with, so I'll just leave it at that. Your problem is that *you* don't understand the liberal position.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    114. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes... social programs are not in the short term best interest of rich people. So, you have rich conservatives who support social programs because the consequences if the masses rise up would be catastrophic. And, you have rich liberals who support social programs because it is the right thing to do.

    115. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Problem is that too many of the smart right wing spokespeople with well reasoned positions have been drowned out; and yes this happens on the left too. Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck are not political thinkers, they are rabble rousers. I can completely disagree with someone and yet still respect them if they came to their conclusions thoughtfully. But too many people are forming their political views through sound bites or splitting everything into a binary us versus them.

    116. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you know what "right-wing" means? I am guessing not.

      Right-most = anarchist.

      Draw your conclusions from there.

    117. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by jandrese · · Score: 1

      If it's lining their pockets and getting them elected, I fail to see how an action could be considered "irrational". That's why it's so important to have watchdogs with teeth in government, because corruption is rational. It's only when there is a danger of being caught with appropriately dire consequences does the equation change.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    118. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A "slippery slope" argument is a bit different than learning from experience. It's not as though we don't have a whole alphabet soup of federal agencies that started small and then, through mission creep, grew and grew until their tendrils are in everything. Liberals like to talk about federal regulation as though it's still 1925, and the idea of a heavily regulated bureaucratic state is still an untried experiment whose methods, tendencies, and outcome are completely unknown, therefore anyone who suggests that hey, maybe this won't end as planned, are paranoid slippery-slope lunatics. The left lives in a world where the previous eight decades of bureaucratic mission creep and regulatory failure/excess didn't happen. An FCC power grab over the Internet isn't going to end in the wonderful land you imagine.

      -fearsomepirate

    119. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by jc42 · · Score: 1

      Liberals usually work incrementally. It starts with simple net neutrality rules. Then later on, they add some more rules. And more. And more. A Killswitch and some hate-crimes legislation later and before you know the government is all up in your intarwebs.

      Except in this case, the actual history is pretty much backwards from that.

      The Internet started with 100% US government (military, actually) funding for and control of the ARPAnet, back in the 1960s. The initial design was a massively multiply-connected system, so that no matter what "the enemy" did, the network would find a route around the damage and get the data through.

      In our situation, "the enemy" can be read as "the ISPs and comm companies that supply the connectivity". Some ISPs have implemented "kill switches" that block certain kinds of data and some entire sites. We've had several discussions here about Comcast doing this, but it's actually fairly widespread now.

      The final result (so far) is your first step: A public call for "net neutrality", to undo the damage to the open Internet that was specified in the Internet's official specs, and built by government-funded projects. And to get back to your first word, the initial construction of the Internet was done almost entirely in Academia, which is a hard-core liberal part of our society that the "conservatives" have never much liked.

      So what we're doing could be described as trying to reverse the actual Internet history and restoring the original design.

      We should also note that an important motive for the initial design was that the US military was using more and more electronic comm equipment, and was finding that it had a serious problem: Devices purchased from different manufacturers would rarely interoperate. Even when built to DoD "standards", the manufacturers were quite good at finding interpretations of the standards that would make devices incompatible with devices from competitors. The ARPA folks decided that fixing this was hopeless; the only workable solution was an "interface" device that would talk to device X, translate its messages to a standard format, send that to the interface device at device Y, where it would be translated into Y's language. These interface devices (Interface Message Processors, or IMPs) were the early form of Internet routers, and were designed from the start to have multiple comm ports so they could use any comm equipment that was available -- and so that they could provide multiple paths from X to Y, in case any "enemy" tried to block communication between X and Y.

      This situation is exactly the same as the current problems that have led to the proposed "net neutrality" rules. The only difference is that 45 years ago, ARPA was thinking of military opponents attempting to interfere with communication. Now we have commercial opponents trying to interfere with communication. But other than what we call these enemies of communication, the technical aspects of the problem are the same as they've ever been. And "net neutrality" is just a new name for the decades-old solution.

      (The technical part of the solution has changed a lot. It's no longer a desk-size IMP machine; it's a single card, sometimes a single chip, plus a small chunk of code in memory. But this doesn't change the fact that it's dealing with an old problem, or that the commercial world was and is a major part of the problem. What we've wanted from the start is efficient communication with whoever we want to communicate with. The commercial world is openly opposed to this, even if it's what we're paying them for. History says that government is the only organization that is willing and able to fix the basic problem. Of course, government brings along its own problems, but that was also true 65 years ago.)

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    120. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Since most business owners who do most of the hiring are small to medium business owners

      According to the current administration and the party in charge of both houses of congress, people making over $250k are the rich ones who aren't paying enough taxes.

      tax ... the ultra-rich more

      The top 10% of earners in the country already pay 70% of all of the income taxes. The top 1% are paying more than half of that.

      And government food stamp programs, for example, were more effective 50 years ago.

      Being on food stamps is your idea of things being better?

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    121. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by _Sharp'r_ · · Score: 1

      I understand how the internet works just fine... I started with a 300 baud modem in the days of BBSs and started an ISP along the way. This issue is about property rights vs government regulation being the best way to preserve freedom.

      Net Neutrality is about increasing government control of the private portions of the internet for the ultimate benefit of large corporations and federal bureaucrats.

      It's the same story of regulatory capture over and over again. It happened with the ICC, the FCC, the WTO, the FDA, FAA, the MMS, etc... It's standard public choice economic theory.

      Regulatory capture starts with well-meaning people (of which I assume you are one) who see a potential problem and call for allowing the government the power to solve it. It ends with the most powerful of the special interest groups involved running things to keep out competition and cutting in some bureaucrats and politicians to keep them happy.

      --
      The party of stupid and the party of evil get together and do something both stupid and evil, then call it bipartisan.
    122. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anything extra should be given back to the people who payed in.

      There *isn't anything extra*, dumbass. What part of "deficit" don't you understand?

      Don't want to raise taxes? Okay, start by cutting military and entitlements.

      Wait, you're telling me the right-wingers don't want that? Oh, okay, then raise taxes.

      Wait, they don't want that either?

      Oh, I see. They're a bunch of fucking hypocrites. Gotcha.

      you seemed to miss the part where he mentioned a "limited social contract" emphasis on limited. Yes the current government spends a lot more than comes in. But I would argue that means the government is spending too much money, not that we should attempt to increase revenue. Most "right-wingers" would be more than happy to cut entitlements. Medicare/Medicaid and Social Security alone account for about 40% of the national budget.

      Also note I said increase revenue, not taxes. They are not the same thing. While, the congressional budget office is legally obligated to pretend that taxes do not affect fiscal behavior they can have a rather large impact.

    123. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 2

      Or how it was originally passed by liberals as a "soak the rich" amendment (class warfare at its finest)...

      And what's wrong with that? It seems we already have an undeclared "class war" and the rich are winning because idiots say that "class warfare" is wrong - it hasn't stopped the rich from kicking the poor. If you can broker a "peace" in this war (something that we haven't managed to do since... well, forever) then more power to you. But, when your in the middle of a war, there are only the victors and the dead. Personally, I want to be on the winning side.

      --
      That is all.
    124. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1

      ... why liberals didn't just turn around and ask why privately run death panels for profit were better than democratically elected death panels.

      Several did. They got labeled as "shrill" and were then ignored by the media. I guess it's fine to lie, but calling out a liar makes you shrill.

      --
      That is all.
    125. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 0

      While you are at it, how about learning a little about what American Conservatives actually believe.

      Then, to appropriate the words of another of your tribe (or fellow travelers thereof), why don't you "refudiate" the so-called "Conservatives" that practice verbal terrorism?

      --
      That is all.
    126. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Brannoncyll · · Score: 1

      The actions are certainly rational in that the politician makes a rational decision (in its 'derived from reason' meaning) based on his or her personal gain, but the law itself may not seem rational (in its 'reasonable/sensible' meaning) to the people subjected to the action. Do tax cuts for the rich seem like good sense when the economy is collapsing? Do the Republicans blocking every motion by the government simply because the Democrats proposed it seem rational? Do the (thankfully recently repealed) laws discriminating against gay people in the army seem rational? To me these seem like the actions of a bunch of greedy and ignorant school children and not those of rational people.

    127. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>they need more help

      They're already paying negative taxes when people like you claim they're bearing the majority of the tax burden while the rich skate away tax-free. How much more detached from reality can you be? Do you even know what a negative tax rate means? We're paying them to work.

    128. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1
      Cut the entire DOD budget - we still have a ~$600 billion deficit. Cut SSI and Medicaid and we have a $200 billion surplus. I think the AC got it right - we have a spending problem, not a revenue problem...

      .
      Oh, and the last time a Republican tried to fix Social Security the Democrats and liberals screamed bloody murder. Allowing 2% of the total SSI funds to be privatized (which, over the course of any 30 year window pretty much outpaces the returns you get from SSI) was the suggestion and was labeled as killing grandma. So how about the Democrats come up with a solution for SSI? Because more taxes won't work - read up on Hauser's Law and see how you're really not going to get more than ~19% of the GDP, regardless of tax rates...

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    129. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>It is also why real socialists are international socialists.

      No shit. They wanted to differentiate their brand of socialism (National Socialism) from the International Socialism based in the USSR. Look up the COMINTERN and so forth and educate yourself.

      >>Even 60+ years later you seem to believe the propaganda they wrote.

      Rather I don't believe the propaganda spread by the USSR. You should try educating yourself a little bit more on the subject before you post and embarrass yourself.

    130. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by GeodesicGnome · · Score: 1

      Everyone with a brain works incrementally. In a democracy, this is what we call finding common ground and reaching compromises.

    131. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by pnuema · · Score: 1

      Source, please?

    132. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by pnuema · · Score: 1

      And your point is? If we paid them a living wage to begin with, they would not need government assistance. The buying power of minimum wage is steadily dropping.

    133. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Cruxus · · Score: 1

      Suspension of civil liberties; an aggressive, militaristic ideology; concern with racial/national purity; and preference for a social Darwinist worldview pretty much put Nazism on the far right--not the libertarian right but the authoritarian right. Left-wing concerns are more humanitarian: remove concentrations of power (large corporations being considered a power against employees, consumers, and the environment that can be counterweighted by government regulation), increase individuals' well-being (end hunger, disease, poverty; help people live more rewarding, self-actualizing lives), peace (oppose wars, gun violence, genocide, violence against women), etc. Marxism-Leninism, Stalinism, and Maoism represent the authoritarian left, which shares the authoritarian traits of the authoritarian right but instead pursues vaguely "left-wing" goals. To the authoritarian left, the problem isn't so much concentrations of power but power belonging to the wrong class (the bourgeoisie) instead of the proletariat. The authoritarian left would happily put total power in the "vanguard of the proletariat" (i.e., a Communist party).

      --
      On vit, on code et puis on meurt.
    134. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Cruxus · · Score: 1

      Conservatives want tax cuts, a strong national defense, and a reduced budget. What they want is to defund entitlements--things like unemployment benefits and disability.

      --
      On vit, on code et puis on meurt.
    135. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You might want to use a more realistic example next time if you want to be considered credible. The previous poster had a credible point that was backed upon motive. Your argument was based upon a point with no foundation other than demonizing the other side. Because the final point was people starving on the street. How exactly does that benefit anyone whatsoever?
      His point was the government and left would have full power in the end, that is a believable point.

      Believe what you want, but if you plan on arguing a point. You need to first base your argument on logic and reason. My opinion is that most on the left simply cannot do this. Because none of their beliefs are based on logic, but just emotions that cannot be backed up with all the facts (Notice I said all, not pieces of facts that many on the left try to use.)

      Please try harder next time.

    136. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is, the argument made is not a slippery slope argument.

      Slippery slope arguments start with someone setting up something to help a situation, that eventually gets used by others to cause damage.

      This argument is about a plan being set up with the intention of leading to a set goal. Meaning it is presented as one thing, but is simply a plan to get something else done.

      For instance, your own example. Those setting up Gay Marriage have no intention of helping people marry sheep or dogs, but the argument given is that it could lead to that in time. No one believes that the purpose of Gay Marriage is to eventually allow people to marry animals.

      So while I understand what you mean, the post you are responding to is not a slippery slope argument.

    137. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by suomynonAyletamitlU · · Score: 1

      Is it just me, or do the right-wingers always claim the slippery slope argument whenever they can't provide valid arguments?

      As a depressed person (and not a right-winger, if it matters), I can say that that slippery slope comes up a LOT whenever you tread around your insecurities, and that those insecurities have a lot to do with inexperience and/or ignorance.

      I've been pretty antisocial most of my life so far, and so as a result, I have lots of questions I just don't know how to answer about how normal people would respond if I did something weird, wrong, or stupid. If for example I broke out in song in a public space, would something horrible happen--spontaneous violence or something? Logically, no. But what if / what if / what if / what if / oh god I'd better not risk it. Calling someone who doesn't know I'm going to call? Logically, if they're interrupted, they'll say so and I'll call back, rather than the worst case, they turn out to be a serial killer who makes me their next target.

      I really don't think the extreme right and left understand that you can come to understand the people on the other side (on a person by person basis), and by understanding them, you can learn to predict their (personal) opinions and responses. There's no need to make people into ogres.

    138. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by bckrispi · · Score: 0

      The only reason people *think* that he's right wing is because he's been very successfully branded that way by a bunch of idiot college students yelling "Fascist" at cops that take their marijuana away.

      When people start thinking that Nazis were anything other than a radical right-wing movement, our country is truly fucked.

      --
      Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
    139. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by bckrispi · · Score: 1

      I've seen how conservatives vote! That tells me all I need to know about what they believe.

      --
      Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
    140. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Darby · · Score: 0

      No shit. They wanted to differentiate their brand of socialism (National Socialism) from the International Socialism based in the USSR. Look up the COMINTERN and so forth and educate yourself.

      Umm...Dipshit, you do know that anybody with leftist leanings were sent to the concentration camps along with the gays, the cripples, the unionists and, of course, the jews.

      You do know that Hitler defined Nazism as rabid opposition to Liberalism and the Left, right?
      You do realise that the sides in WW2 were fairly clearly drawn between Liberalism (America, France, etc) and the Left (USSR etc) versus the Right: Fascism (Italy) Nazism (Germany) and Hereditary Monarchy (Imperial Japan).

      Yeah, really, it's everyone else in the world who needs to read and learn...not you oh glorious one who is so clearly repeating the same bullshit Fox and Rush spew all day and they're rich so why would they ever do anything but look out for your best interests after all.

      The stupid is strong with this one.

    141. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Pence128 · · Score: 1

      The United States almost spends as much money on military as the rest of the world combined. I think you could afford to cut back a little.

      --
      404: sig not found.
    142. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by qmaqdk · · Score: 1

      They don't call it "Progressive" for nothing.

      It's favoring change as opposed to being aversive to it (conservative), not to develop in stages. So yes, they don't call it progressive for nothing, but not because incremental development is their modus operandi.

      --
      My UID is prime. Hah!
    143. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      Liberals usually work incrementally. It starts with simple net neutrality rules. Then later on, they add some more rules. And more. And more. A Killswitch and some hate-crimes legislation later and before you know the government is all up in your intarwebs.

      How is this limited to just liberals? What about the DEA, or DHS? What about the systemic undermining of checks and balances? What about market deregulation? What about the attack on science? What about making things more cozy for the rich?

      Those in power (either right (democrats) or far right (republicans)) know how to boil a frog. You can't take drastic measures unless you have a drastic event, and those don't happen all that often. During those lulls you grind away slowly and surreptitiously. You master the arts of misinformation and misdirection. You use tools like wedge issues to divert and distract. You get people to see the issues you want them to see, but not to understand them in any meaningful way. You want people to know the issues, but for $DIETY's sake you don't want them actually THINKING about them.

      Truthfully, the far right (republicans) are leaps and bounds ahead of the democrats in these abilities, but make no mistake both parties do this.

      --
      ~X~
    144. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      In addition, people seem to equate income tax with total tax burden, which is pure bullshit. The poor may get a break from paying income taxes but that doesn't have any effect on all the other taxes that they must pay. In fact, the income tax is not even the highest tax taken out of their paychecks.

      In relative terms, the tax burden of the lower class has INCREASED due to inflation and wage stagnation the lower class has experienced. The burden has also increased on the middle. The only tax burdens that have decreased over time is the upper class (while at the same time their wealth has increased substantially).
       

      --
      ~X~
    145. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Pence128 · · Score: 1

      A free market is defined by the absence of regulation except against force or fraud. If they didn't obtain their monopoly status through force or fraud, they can do whatever they want. If no one wants to spend billions of dollars in order to compete with them, they remain a monopoly.

      --
      404: sig not found.
    146. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Pence128 · · Score: 1

      Participant A sends a packet to Participant B. Participant B receives packet sent by Participant A. Everything else is just means to that end.

      --
      404: sig not found.
    147. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      Check the US Census Bureau. They're a goldmine of (mostly useless) information.

      Oh, and it helps to have a halfway decent inflation calculator on hand to convert to a standard year. Google inflation calculator, and you'll probably find one. I use the Bureau of Labor Statistics' one myself.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    148. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Surt · · Score: 2

      Since most business owners who do most of the hiring are small to medium business owners

      According to the current administration and the party in charge of both houses of congress, people making over $250k are the rich ones who aren't paying enough taxes.

      tax ... the ultra-rich more

      The top 10% of earners in the country already pay 70% of all of the income taxes. The top 1% are paying more than half of that.

      And government food stamp programs, for example, were more effective 50 years ago.

      Being on food stamps is your idea of things being better?

      Better than not being able to afford food, and not getting enough out of the food stamp program to help with that? Yes.

      The top 10% should pay 90% of all taxes for fairness. At 70% they are getting an overly generous deal.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    149. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 2

      >>You do realise that the sides in WW2 were fairly clearly drawn between Liberalism (America, France, etc) and the Left (USSR etc) versus the Right: Fascism (Italy) Nazism (Germany) and Hereditary Monarchy (Imperial Japan).

      LOL. LOL. LOL.

      Wow. You're an ignorant fuck, aren't you?

      You do know that Stalin wanted to enter the alliance with Germany as the 4th Axis power, right? And that Hitler and Stalin were allies at the outset of WWII, dividing Poland up between them?

      No? You don't?

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molotov-Ribbentrop_Pact
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German-Soviet_Commercial_Agreement_(1940)
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German%E2%80%93Soviet_Axis_talks

      The USSR was only marginally better than Hitler in the eyes of the US, and was only an "Ally" in the sense that Stalin had 10 million people he could throw in the wood-chipper of the Germany military after Hitler broke the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact. General Patton, for example, wanted to continue the American push into the USSR to free Eastern Europe from what would become the Iron Curtain.

      The difference between National Socialism and International Socialism is right there in the name - Nationalism. Nazis were racist and, well, nationalistic to an extreme. Nationalism is hardly a right-wing phenomenon (witness the love for "Mother Russia" and all that). Hitler hated capitalists, called himself a Socialist as in "Marxism", and stated that national control of industry was the solution to the working man's woes. Try to explain that away all you like.

    150. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>And your point is? If we paid them a living wage to begin with, they would not need government assistance. The buying power of minimum wage is steadily dropping.

      The point is that people keep repeating the myth that the poor bear the lion's share of the tax burden, when they actually get substantial negative taxes.

      No matter how many times you rub people's faces in the actual numbers, they keep repeating the same misinformation they once heard from other ignorant fucks.

    151. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Darby · · Score: 0

      dividing Poland up between them?

      Duh. I'm obviously quite aware of the small details as I've demonstrated mastery of the complicated ones. Had you any insight at all, you might have noticed that Hitler Blitzed straight through Poland and into the Russians. That means that his deals with them were...get this Sparky...lies. Wow, you've really proved something with your deep insight, Nitwit.

      The USSR was only marginally better than Hitler in the eyes of the US

      Yet better nonetheless. I accept your apology.

    152. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Iman+Azol · · Score: 1

      Liberals usually work incrementally.

      As a liberal, I can play this argument too: It starts with short-term tax cuts to stimulate spending after a recession. Then later on the short-term has become a decade and then permanent. And the cuts go deeper, and deeper. Then comes a deficit commission and Social Security and unemployment insurance is gone and you have a significant population of desperate unemployed people starving to death on the streets.

      I don't see what the problem is. Your position is that people are entitled to my goods and labor without my consent for their own benefit. That's called slavery. Don't promote the fallacy that I "benefit" from it too. Slaves were given medical care and housing. If someone less dedicated or capable "Starves to death" (I challenge you to find a statistically relevant number of cases, and further to demonstrate that such people can survive without a guardian making decisions for them in any society), I'm not clear on how I am morally culpable. You've a tautology that the state is entitled to whatever amount of my goods and labor it deems appropriate, and I am selfish to refuse. I offer a counter. I desire to perform anal sex on someone. Please provide me with a recipient.

    153. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by wavedeform · · Score: 1

      Who would be left to work factory jobs.../quote> I believe it's China.

    154. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 2

      >>Duh. I'm obviously quite aware of the small details as I've demonstrated mastery of the complicated ones. Had you any insight at all, you might have noticed that Hitler Blitzed straight through Poland and into the Russians.

      Ok, you've now completely demonstrated your total fucking ignorance.

      Hitler didn't "blitz straight through Poland into the Russians". They held joint parades after they divided up Poland between themselves.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi-Soviet_military_parade_in_Brze%C5%9B%C4%87

      But, hey, don't let facts get in the way of your crazy beliefs.

    155. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>When people start thinking that Nazis were anything other than a radical right-wing movement, our country is truly fucked.

      No. As soon as the radical right-wing starts thinking like Nazis, our country is truly fucked.

      The Tea Partiers are about the only significant force in American politics that still believe in a market economy. Nazis, Neocons, and Democrats do not.

    156. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Frankly I'm a little lazy and don't feel like googling the links but these are all well known cases...

      Until one side or the other is engaging in jewish cook-outs,

      OK maybe not Jewish but how is Muslim? Does that work? Cases in point the nutter in Florida who wanted to burn the Koran, the Islamic center in Kentucky that was burned down to prevent it from opening, the sudden outrage over the "victory" mosque in NYC (when in fact it is further than existing mosques from ground zero). Those all sound like they could fit in here. Oh and if you actually want people dead well then I point you towards the staggering civilian death tolls in Iraq and Afghanistan.

      declaring war on the world,

      Again I point you to Iraq, widely perceived outside of the US to be a war of imperialism and viewed as a fight against a religion.

      full outright theft from the populace,

      This one is rather recent, the tax cuts passed for those making more than 250k/year. Yeah they need that money to invest in uh, Brazil? None of that money will come back to those [not]working here. Basically they robbed the treasury of some of its income. Another would be the proposed cuts to social security and a raise in the retirement age (taking the money of our parents generation, depending on your age, and not giving it back to them as originally planned but spending it elsewhere).

      and leading a populace not to a fear of their rights disappearing, but fear for their very own lives (or fingernails),

      This is the easiest of them all to see, USA Patriot Act. A power grab that mostly stole rights from individuals. Take a look at the discussions about all the "security theater" in the airports or elsewhere and tell me that people have not given up some of their rights in exchange for feeling safe. It's a theme argued here time and time again.

      neither can be compared to the horrors the nazi's perpetrated on the world.

      I'll give you this one, nothing in the US compares to those crimes, now. But I fear we are heading that direction with the decided shift of American policies towards the extremes, anti-intellectualism, racism, homophobia, anti-secularism, and general intolerance of anybody who doesn't look, think, or sound exactly like them.

    157. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by ZFox · · Score: 1

      He must not have been union.

    158. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      You are confused with liberal. Progressive is the alternative to the Marxist idea of revolution to create a Communist society. Progressive ideals are attempting to bring communism with out the revolution.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    159. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm only 23, but throughout my entire life time the Republican party is the one slowly chiseling away at our freedoms and generalized regulation of the market allowing for corruption.

      I'm not saying the Democrats are awesome or anything, and I'm sure they have a history of doing the same, but I find the argument invalid on so many levels, namely hypocritical.

      Also, I frequent a couple of right wing forums, and one of the most entertaining things I often see is X person bitching about Y law that 'those democrats' created. Almost always the law is a local law, but regardless if it is or not 9 out of 10 times it turns out being a Republican politician who spearheaded the law. The whole slippery slope theory loses most credit when one looks at it from that angle.

    160. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just want to point out that this idea that tax cuts are supposed to be balanced with spending cuts actually means the rich get more and the rest of us get less. Government spending is We, the People spending on We, the People. Except military, which is most of spending but is not on the list of spending that gets cut.

      Best just to not cut taxes. The economy worked great until the Reagan tax cuts. We stopped maintaining and modernizing our infrastructure, for example. We started borrowing so much...

    161. Re:I have to deal with this all the time.... by pnuema · · Score: 1

      I asked because I looked, and could not find it. I call bullshit.

  13. Question: by alexhard · · Score: 1

    Is it possible to design net neutrality legislation that still allows ISPs to charge each other for peering agreements, as they have always done?

    --
    Infinite time means everything that can happen, will. You being you is absolutely incidental. You do not exist.
    1. Re:Question: by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      Is it possible? It's absolutely trivial: ban ISPs from billing anyone they do not have a direct connection to. That'd solve the issue of ISPs extorting content producers from the other side of the internet. It would allow content distribution companies like akamai who run direct connections into a lot of ISPs to continue to exist.

      Is that what we're going to get? Probably not.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    2. Re:Question: by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      Sure. The proposed rules allow for ISPs to charge by volume, not content. Ta-da! Problem solved.

    3. Re:Question: by Cidolfas · · Score: 1

      I don't see why not, as cutting off the link due to non-payment is different than going "Oh, this packet is from Level3's Netflix connection, so I'm going to block it!". At least, a good piece of legislation wouldn't have issues with it. As for what could get through congress...

      --
      I am become /dev/null, destroyer of data.
    4. Re:Question: by Oriumpor · · Score: 1

      Jeezus mod parent up, this is a legitimate question that needs to be covered in any Net Neutrality agreement. This is how it all fucking started, it's like everyone forgot about Mae West.

  14. This is what I get when I pressed "read more"? by __aavqan3009 · · Score: 1

    Really?

  15. Funny by seepho · · Score: 1

    I like how TFA calls the Democrats opposed to Net Neutrality "ConservaDems"; as if it had much of anything to do with being liberal or conservative, instead of how much money the telcos threw at them to vote on an issue that the American public at large doesn't understand.

  16. All BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is it possible that this is all bullcrap and there is nothing to see here?

  17. The Democrats don't help by commodore64_love · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Please note I'm quoting this from memory.
    The actual videos can be found on google.

    When the Democrats issue statements like, "We need a Fairness Doctrine for the internet. For example maybe you'll visit foxnews.com and a popup will ask if you want to read democrat.org too. We need to include that as part of net neutrality and other FCC regulations." Or "We need to pass a law to remove MSNBC and FOXnews from cable television." The latter came from a Congressman Kennedy who is a nobody, but the first came from one of the White House "czars" who directly advises the president and the FCC Chair. i.e. A powerful person.

    And then of course there's Obama himself who gave a college speech advising them not to read the internet news sites and only listen to WH press releases as "trustworthy" sources of information. (Please note I am Libertarian, so any comment about how I am a "Bush lover" or whatever would be pointless.)

    And the more-recent act where TRUtv was ordered by somebody in the White House to pull Governor Ventura's show about FEMA internment camps off the air. i.e. Censorship of a private channel. So if there's confusion by Republicans, it's because of what they are hearing coming out of the Congress and White House own administrators. The message they are sending sounds like anti-free speech rhetoric. Maybe they should stop doing that.

    --
    "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    1. Re:The Democrats don't help by Svartalf · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Mod up please...

      It should be noted that the Democrats actually have a completely differing idea of "Net Neutrality" than we do and it's much like the "Healthcare Reform" or "Immigration Reform" we're seeing carried out of late.

      In truth, we've not the foggiest what they do/don't have in mind on the subject in DC. They might be interested in doing what we have in OUR heads for the term/name "Net Neutrality"- or, based on the rhetoric used by the Democrats on the subject, it's just as likely what the Republicans are on about and against.

      Just because it uses our words doesn't mean that it's what we had in mind that they're doing. To the geek crowd, words still tend to have meaning. To the political bunch, for many, words have no meaning whatsoever.

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    2. Re:The Democrats don't help by mapkinase · · Score: 1

      I am not Obama fan, but this

      And then of course there's Obama himself who gave a college speech advising them not to read the internet news sites and only listen to WH press releases as "trustworthy" sources of information.

      I cannot believe. The context probably was much more narrow, namely not all kind of news, but news coming from WH press releases.

      --
      I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
    3. Re:The Democrats don't help by SteelKidney · · Score: 0

      It's worth pointing out that neither side is interested in the 'Net as it is now. One side wants appears to want to make sure that the internet is a massive profit center, regardless of the outcome. The other appears to be okay with the internet, so long as you can only read/access government approved content. The real question is why we're picking sides and flaming the other side. I first said this a few years back, and it's even more true now. We're told not to hate people because of race, religion, or gender, but we're expected to hate people because of political affiliation.

    4. Re:The Democrats don't help by alta · · Score: 2

      Amen, I've been on my own personal quest for the last year to educate 'the world' about the confusion here. Net Neutrality != Fairness Doctrine. That's the subject line for quite a few emails I've sent to Glen, Sean and Hannity's inbox (gets ruled to trash I'm sure!)

      I keep trying to explain that NN is a business issue with technical parts. It's not a social issue as they say. I can personally vouch for Beck, as I listen every day, that he has this confusion, deliberate or not. It usually goes like this:
      "Today, we're going to talk about Net Neutrality. This is where the socialist libs want to force us to put their content in our media"

      Now, with the statements you have above from the WH, where they are blending NN and FD... If these two things DO get put together in one bill, a bill with Fairness Doctrine and Net Neutrality rules, I'm going to swap sides be firmly against it.

      --
      Do not meddle in the affairs of sysadmins, for they are subtle, and quick to anger.
    5. Re:The Democrats don't help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Er, "mod up" because you would like utter bullshit to look legit?

    6. Re:The Democrats don't help by Nimey · · Score: 2

      You're arguing with a True Believer; facts aren't needed nor desired.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    7. Re:The Democrats don't help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea, except none of those things happened. There is no move for a fairness doctrine for the internet, or for publishing or broadcasting. And I don't know about TRUTv, except that 1) there are no internment camps, and a "somebody" has no power to force TRUtv to remove a show from the air. So I have no idea what you are saying. That "Democrats don't help" what?

    8. Re:The Democrats don't help by dachshund · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Normally I would dismiss your post, which seems full of crazy conspiracy theories that you're pulling from memory "but can be found on Google". However some bright sparks have seen fit to moderate your post as +5 Informative. So please, give me some citations. The only things I've been able to find on Google are completely unverifiable claims from conspiracy-theorist websites.

      But more fundamentally --- what is the implication of your post? That opposing Net Neutrality legislation is going to make it harder for governments to censor? Cause it seems to me that a small number of powerful telecoms dominating what people read is more or less a precondition for a modern totalitarian state.

    9. Re:The Democrats don't help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "We need a Fairness Doctrine for the internet" is another right-wing canard. "came from one of the White House "czars" who directly advises the president and the FCC Chair. i.e. A powerful person." sounds like it is from a list of negative things to say about the administation. We all know the right-wing has been sermonizing about the concept of Czars since President Obama took office. Despite the fact that former Presidents had staff members they called Czars. Here it is coupled with "A powerful person" for a reason.

      Then of course there is the second sentence without proof--but again very negative connotation that the President wants to force feed you his propaganda--no doubt a lie.

      So a pack of likes and propaganda gets modded to 5? No double checking?

    10. Re:The Democrats don't help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "And then of course there's Obama himself who gave a college speech advising them not to read the internet news sites and only listen to WH press releases as "trustworthy" sources of information."

      Citation please.

    11. Re:The Democrats don't help by LWATCDR · · Score: 0

      I would love to see the fairness doctrine back on TV and Radio. It is funny because it was the Dems that wanted to get ride of it. They thought that they media was in their back pocket so it was to their benefit to repeal it. They blew that one.

      Really I remember when it was in effect. Things where a lot more pleasant and frankly civil. But then I would also like to see lots of the regulations on TV and Radio comeback. For instance I do not think that cable companies should own networks or produce content.
      I think that networks should be limited to the number of stations they can "own" goodbye Clear Channel.

      Some regulation is good. The fairness doctrine maybe too far since we now have so many choices. But then we are also under threat of a few big companies owning all the sources.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    12. Re:The Democrats don't help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice, except that a Fairness Doctrine has nothing to do with net-neutrality.

    13. Re:The Democrats don't help by shellster_dude · · Score: 1

      While you are correct that Net Neutrality != Fairness Doctrine. Many conservatives are worried that the power exists to insert the Fairness Doctrine through Net Neutrality. If the government can regulate what and how an ISP manages traffic, with almost no/no congressional oversight, there is nothing to prevent them from implementing the Fairness Doctrine or anything else down the road. My biggest argument against Net Neutrality as it is currently being implemented is that it is being implemented not only without Congressional oversight, but actually against a bipartisan Congressional vote.

      Like healthcare and several other items, this administration is bringing this legislation in through the back door. The concept of Net Neutrality is not a bad one, per say, but it needs to be implemented via the correct path (through Congress with correct proceedures), or not at all, otherwise it can't be controlled, and you have a very valid slippery slope scenario.

    14. Re:The Democrats don't help by spiffmastercow · · Score: 2

      Please note I'm quoting this from memory. The actual videos can be found on google.

      When the Democrats issue statements like, "We need a Fairness Doctrine for the internet. For example maybe you'll visit foxnews.com and a popup will ask if you want to read democrat.org too. We need to include that as part of net neutrality and other FCC regulations." Or "We need to pass a law to remove MSNBC and FOXnews from cable television." The latter came from a Congressman Kennedy who is a nobody, but the first came from one of the White House "czars" who directly advises the president and the FCC Chair. i.e. A powerful person.

      And then of course there's Obama himself who gave a college speech advising them not to read the internet news sites and only listen to WH press releases as "trustworthy" sources of information. (Please note I am Libertarian, so any comment about how I am a "Bush lover" or whatever would be pointless.)

      And the more-recent act where TRUtv was ordered by somebody in the White House to pull Governor Ventura's show about FEMA internment camps off the air. i.e. Censorship of a private channel. So if there's confusion by Republicans, it's because of what they are hearing coming out of the Congress and White House own administrators. The message they are sending sounds like anti-free speech rhetoric. Maybe they should stop doing that.

      Citation please. Seriously, I've heard this from a ton of conservatives, especially the "pop up a link to the dems site when you visit fox news!" BS, and not a single one could actually corroborate this "fact", or even remember where they heard it, which makes me assume this is yet another piece of BS thrown all around Fox News.

    15. Re:The Democrats don't help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Both parties are out to strip our freedoms in any way they can get away with it. Playing into partisan politics is a way of keeping you blind to what one party is doing. Everybody, do us all a favor, vote for anybody but the D or R. Hell vote for a goldfish if you have to. We'll call him Bubbles.

    16. Re:The Democrats don't help by brit74 · · Score: 1

      Yes, I agree that we need some citations, please.

    17. Re:The Democrats don't help by chrb · · Score: 5, Informative

      "We need a Fairness Doctrine for the internet. For example maybe you'll visit foxnews.com and a popup will ask if you want to read democrat.org too. We need to include that as part of net neutrality and other FCC regulations."

      [citationneeded]. I can't find any record of a quote like this.

      "We need to pass a law to remove MSNBC and FOXnews from cable television." The latter came from a Congressman Kennedy who is a nobody

      I can find a Kennedy who has opinions on MSNBC and FOXnews, but he isn't a Congresman, and he does not appear to be calling for censorship. George Kennedy - former managing editor at the Missourian and professor emeritus at the Missouri School of Journalism. He says:

      "I’m not arguing that our traditional approach to journalism is inherently superior to the ideological model. After all, that model has served Great Britain and much of Europe pretty well for a long time. But it’s sure not what we’re used to, and confusing to many, even within the industry.

      For us consumers, the important thing to remember is this: Fox and MSNBC are playing by different rules than the broadcast networks or NPR. If you like your news straight up, you’ll prefer the latter. If you like it with a twist, you know where to look."

      There was a Senator Rockefeller who said:

      “There’s a little bug inside of me which wants to get the F.C.C. to say to Fox and to MSNBC, ‘Out. Off. End. Goodbye.’ It would be a big favor to political discourse; to our ability to do our work here in Congress; and to the American people, to be able to talk with each other and have some faith in their government and, more importantly, in their future.”

      A lamentation of ideologically driven news media - quite different from the claim that he is actively seeking laws to shutdown ideological news organizations.

      And then of course there's Obama himself who gave a college speech advising them not to read the internet news sites and only listen to WH press releases

      What he actually said:

      The class of 2010 is "coming of age in a 24/7 media environment that bombards us with all kinds of content and exposes us to all kinds of arguments, some of which don't always rank that high on the truth meter," the president said, earning an honorary doctorate of laws degree during the ceremony.

      "And with iPods and iPads; and Xboxes and PlayStations -- none of which I know how to work -- (laughter) -- information becomes a distraction, a diversion, a form of entertainment, rather than a tool of empowerment, rather than the means of emancipation. So all of this is not only putting pressure on you; it's putting new pressure on our country and on our democracy

      With so many voices clamoring for attention on blogs, and on cable, on talk radio, it can be difficult, at times, to sift through it all -- to know what to believe, to figure out who's telling the truth and who's not. Let's face it, even some of the craziest claims can quickly gain traction. I've had some experience in that regard,"

      Funny that you interpret it as an attack on freedom, when even FoxNews acknowledged that this bit of the speech was a reference to some false internet rumours: "Obama has endured some nasty rumors at the hands of the Internet. Blogs and comment pages continue to allege that the president has not been honest about his place of birth -- Hawaii -- or about his religion -- Christian."

      So if there's confusion by Republicans, it's because of what they are he

    18. Re:The Democrats don't help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and some people say commodore64_love raped and killed an intern.

    19. Re:The Democrats don't help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So if someone is spreading a lie about about you, you ask them politely to stop spreading the lie. They give you the finger say why don't you just try to stop stop me. You think that there is something wrong with going to court to prevent the further spread of the lie? The FEMA camps are nothing but libel/slander against the government. There is no foundation for the FEMA camps and to repeat the lie for financial gain is bordering on criminal. I've yet to see the White House make any claims that even come close to anything out of the libertarian/conservative/republican camp

    20. Re:The Democrats don't help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wz-i7qIYGCQ
      http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2009/may/05/chain-email/cass-sunstein-once-considered-fairnes-doctrine-sor/

    21. Re:The Democrats don't help by bkaul01 · · Score: 1

      I read his post not as implying actual conspiracy theories, but as saying that right-wing fear of Net Neutrality laws may be attributable, in part, to an overreaction to statements from Democrats that create a logical connection between Net Neutrality and the Fairness Doctrine. Net Neutrality is innocuous, if controversial from a "do we really want more bureaucratic regulations?" perspective, while the Fairness Doctrine is, from the perspective of the right, a dangerous attack on the First Amendment. He's right in noting that such logical ties, if made by the Democrats, would serve only to inflame opposition: if those connections were real (I don't believe they are), then the Republicans should oppose it! I don't know what his sources were or if his quotes were accurate, but the post was implying that the public opinion battle is not helped by extreme-left rhetoric; that doesn't mean that the extreme-left rhetoric is actually true.

    22. Re:The Democrats don't help by CyprusBlue113 · · Score: 1

      Question: What exactly is the FCC for if not to be an administration to manage communications, or do you expect congress to make every rule on everything? Like seat heights on airplanes, etc?

      There is no "back door" here.

      --
      a handful of selfish greedy people are no match for millions of selfish, greedy people -u4ya
    23. Re:The Democrats don't help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since you're hard of reading, and can't find the point to his post, which he bolded:

      if there's confusion by Republicans, it's because of what they are hearing coming out of the Congress and White House own administrators. The message they are sending sounds like anti-free speech rhetoric. Maybe they should stop doing that.

    24. Re:The Democrats don't help by CitizenCain · · Score: 1

      ...

      But more fundamentally --- what is the implication of your post? That opposing Net Neutrality legislation is going to make it harder for governments to censor? Cause it seems to me that a small number of powerful telecoms dominating what people read is more or less a precondition for a modern totalitarian state.

      Try looking at it from a different angle - which is to say: what real, existing problem is "Net Neutrality" legislation going to solve? (Or going to try to solve.)

      I can't come up with anything. What I can come up with is my personal experience... back on the 'net before any "regulation" or even the web, for that matter. Before we had to worry about that DMCA legislation and all the bullshit that came with it, or all the Clinton-era attempts to "save the children" from pornography or (heaven forbid) the evils of unmonitored internet discussions with fellow human beings. (The whole 13 years of age or older EULAs you see on internet discussion boards are a direct result of one of those "save the children" laws Clinton championed.)

      All I see is that every time the government has stepped in to "regulate" the internet to make it better/safer/whatever, they've ended up making it worse by handing more power over to large interest groups (like the RIAA/MPAA using DMCA take down notices to force practically any content they don't like off the net).

      So call me an evil, ignorant member of the American Right if it makes you feel better, but I can't help but notice this pattern, and can't help but be convinced that the next bit of internet regulation will fit the same pattern, no matter what a bunch of Potomac River Rats say. Granted, having internet access controlled by a handful of corporate monopolies is far from ideal... but how in the hell can you expect to improve that situation by consolidating that power even more into one government monopoly? (Particularly given the FCC's existing track record on "regulating" other communication mediums.)

    25. Re:The Democrats don't help by lukesneeringer · · Score: 1

      Look up "Cass Sunstein"; he's the one who made the most egregious comments.

      He later dialed them down as being politically inviable and almost certainly unconstitutional (right on both counts), but when people on the Left makes comments like this (and he's not the only offender), it definitely gives credence to the concerns of those on the Right.

    26. Re:The Democrats don't help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was a C64. He got that nick for a reason.

    27. Re:The Democrats don't help by shellster_dude · · Score: 1

      Perhaps the real question is, "What isn't the FCC for?" It's a giant government regulatory agency with no clearly defined scope and no explicit boundaries. That makes it scary and unmanageable in my book.

      While you might be right that the FCC shouldn't need Congress to codify all their rules, Congress should certainly be able to overrule them. Otherwise the people have absolutely no control over what this agency does.

    28. Re:The Democrats don't help by hrvatska · · Score: 1

      All of this seems to be made up. Can you cite reliable sources, please?

    29. Re:The Democrats don't help by CyprusBlue113 · · Score: 1

      Do you have any idea what you are talking about at this point? What you just said made absolutely no sense.

      Congress has given the agency explicit mandate by its creation, and absolutely may override, note I said congress may override, not individual congressmen.

      --
      a handful of selfish greedy people are no match for millions of selfish, greedy people -u4ya
    30. Re:The Democrats don't help by dachshund · · Score: 1

      So call me an evil, ignorant member of the American Right if it makes you feel better, but I can't help but notice this pattern, and can't help but be convinced that the next bit of internet regulation will fit the same pattern, no matter what a bunch of Potomac River Rats say. Granted, having internet access controlled by a handful of corporate monopolies is far from ideal... but how in the hell can you expect to improve that situation by consolidating that power even more into one government monopoly? (Particularly given the FCC's existing track record on "regulating" other communication mediums.)

      Laws like the ones you're referring to have always passed, and always will pass, with the full consent of the Right Wing and the Left as they're represented in Congress. And when push comes to shove, plenty more laws will be passed --- don't kid yourself that by killing Net Neutrality and handing control of the 'net over to a consortium of large ISPs you're going to do the slightest bit to stop the next CHIPA or COPA or what have you.

      The thing about Net Neutrality legislation is that it really has nothing to do with any of this stuff. Net Neutrality is /not/ about whether you can send encrypted data or child porn. It's about whether incumbent, monopoly ISPs can provide preferential treatment to services that pay them, and route everyone else's traffic to /dev/null. The issues here aren't about what the hell's in the packets, although theoretically Net Neutrality legislation /might/ require the ISPs to act like a common carrier --- the issues here are about whether the packets arrive and how much it's going to cost you.

      If you can convince me in some /concrete/ way that this bill is actually a stalking horse for some secret plan to make it easier to censor the net, then I'd like to hear it. But 'a bunch of Democrats with varying degrees of proximity to the administration said things that might be misconstrued to indicate a desire to implement censorship' is not the same as an argument. It's weak fucking tea. Trust me, when both parties work together to implement 'net censorship they'll be quite clear about it, and it won't have anything to do with what packets get delivered with what latency.

    31. Re:The Democrats don't help by dachshund · · Score: 1

      He later dialed them down as being politically inviable and almost certainly unconstitutional (right on both counts), but when people on the Left makes comments like this (and he's not the only offender), it definitely gives credence to the concerns of those on the Right.

      And if Cass Sunstein was the entire Democratic party, and if there was no Republican party, and if he'd even advocated wholesale censorship, and there were no Supreme Court, and the Democrats could maintain majority rule of both houses and the presidency forever, and if.......

      Seriously, do you really want to play this game? In five minutes with Google I can find quotes from far more influential people on the Right --- many of them actually elected to the United States Congress! --- that could lead me to believe that the Right is planning to secede from the Union while eliminating the civil rights act and removing the right to a Jury trial and the right of Americans to select their own President, and that's before I get into the crazy fun things they want to do to free speech on the Internet (bye bye Wikileaks).

      But I mostly don't choose to believe these things because I realize that they're fringe views and furthermore, just because some people on the Right say crazy things, that does not mean that every piece of legislation supported by someone who is on the 'Right' is a stalking horse for these nutty points of view. Obviously if I could provide some strong evidence that a particular piece of legislation /is/ a stalking horse, that'd be different. But this ain't that.

    32. Re:The Democrats don't help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems to me that a small number of powerful telecoms paying people to post comments and mod up each others' comments etc is a precondition as well.

  18. America's Heart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the mid-west, the Heartland, we think Net Neutrality is about not having to pay separate/extra for content depending on it's protocol. We think the Big Media companies are trying to turn the internet into television... every channel for a different price, with shitty bundles to ensure you pay for something you'll never use, etc. This is not in the spirit of the "traditional" internet, where we paid the ISP simply for the privilege of consuming non-persecuted bits.

    We in the Heartland wonder if it's something in the coastal waters that makes you Righties and Lefties so disgustingly greedy, and bat shit insane.

    1. Re:America's Heart by sabs · · Score: 0

      I'm still trying to figure out why the Heartland votes predominantly Republican,
      When Republicans have been literally shitting on Small Farmers for the last 100 years.

  19. Not arguing about Net Neutrality, but Reality by SuperKendall · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There were many people in the previous Slashdot thread about Network Neutrality, that complained that they supported the noble goal of "Network Neutrality", but that what the FCC was passing was not "the network neutrality they supported".

    So the disconnect is that many people (NOT just Republicans) are warning you about the Network Neutrality you are about to get, not about the fantasy Network Neutrality the Daily Kos wishes to be. The Daily Kos claims it is "lies" because what is being said does not match the definition that the Kos holds for network neutrality - when in reality NONE of us have seen the regulation recently passed - I still cannot find the exact wording, isn't that rather a bad sign that we are not allowed to see what they pass before they pass it?

    The Network Neutrality you are about to get was crafted mostly from feedback my media companies and telcos, and large companies like Amazon and Google. Worried about too much corporate control over the internet now? It doesn't get any better when you put the power of regulations into the hands of a small number of companies that have the resources to lobby the FCC on issues.

    And all this to stop what EXISTING problem? There's a lot of danger in creating open-ended rules to solve problems that are only imagined, and do not exist. Have we learned nothing from handing over a lot of power to government organizations like the TSA that control to some degree how we travel now? Why would you want similar control over ISP network management on behalf of the FCC?

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Not arguing about Net Neutrality, but Reality by Svartalf · · Score: 2

      Heh... And another post that needs modding up on this.

      In short, we've little idea what they're on about doing in DC. Just because it uses OUR terms for things or what the Daily KOS thinks should be, doesn't mean that's what they're about to do.

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    2. Re:Not arguing about Net Neutrality, but Reality by commodore64_love · · Score: 4, Informative

      fcc.gov has the NN document published online (and note it has already passed). In brief it has 3 major rules which require ISPs to be completely-open about what fees the customer will charge, forbid Comcast and ISPs from blocking websites, and forbids them from discriminating against websites (i.e. netflix.com is slower than comcast.com).

      It also does Not regulate the Wireless ISPs because the FCC believes there is enough competition that the market will take care of any problems (i.e. customers will quit the ISP if it blocks/slows access to netflix.com and switch to somebody else).

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    3. Re:Not arguing about Net Neutrality, but Reality by pinkj · · Score: 1

      Mod up! The idea of corporations and telcos creating the problem for their own favour is a very strong idea. They are not trying to FIX anything!

    4. Re:Not arguing about Net Neutrality, but Reality by fermion · · Score: 1
      In fact all sides are complaining about some fantasy. The right lives in an 18 century fantasy world created by Adam Smith. Workers create product, consumers buy product, all in a free controlled by no one, not even managers. In this 18th century models, firms do not exist governments do not exist, labor unions do no exist, because the works and consumers magically communicate. It is a magically delicious idea. Combine this with the extremely narcissistic idea that 'pursuit of profit' is equivalent to 'fundamental entitlement to profit'. In fact the free market does not exist and has never existed anywhere

      Arguable the left lives in the 19th century ideals of Marxism, which is a reaction to the cruelties of the free market. In this fantasy there exists fair minded men who can control the markets to insure that everyone can get what they need to live. The government can innovate to provide increasing levels of confort, or least maintain a standard of living for an increasing population. Of course no such fair men, or women, exist. Those in control will always keep a bit for themselves at the expense of the governed.

      If we are honest, the fantasy of the controlled market is the basis for all firms, a concept not fully contemplated by Smith. Marxism lives in every multinational corporation. The myth of the free market is used by these Marxist firms to expand Marxism into the general market place through the destruction of the free market, which, according to smith, neither requires firms nor governmenets.

      So yes, network neutrality is not what many people think. It does allow the marxist corporations to extend those ideas into the free market. But not having network neutrality is even worse as it allows inefficient firms to prosper by providing avenues to profit outside of the open marketplace. If comcast, to take an example of a firm that cannot survive in an open market and does not respond to consumer needs, is allowed to block video packets, they will be allowed to make a profit that is not based on the free market, but based on the controlled economy of cable television. They will be allowed to exist even though they provide an inefficient product. The one useful ideal of the free market, that firms be allowed to fail, is the one ideal that the right does not seem to want to validate. It is ok to let a child starve, but god help us if a firm does not report it's entitled quarterly profit.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    5. Re:Not arguing about Net Neutrality, but Reality by Kohath · · Score: 1

      Exactly. There's not a specific, long-term limited authority being asserted. It's just general authority. They'll expand it and really start bullying people in the future.

      Bullying people is what government power is all about.

      Limbaugh is right in general, though he may be wrong on the specifics -- for now. The government will eventually start bullying people based on the content of their message. It will be unconstitutional, of course. So the courts will make them stop after 10 or 20 years of oppressing viewpoints for political gain.

    6. Re:Not arguing about Net Neutrality, but Reality by slapout · · Score: 1

      "isn't that rather a bad sign that we are not allowed to see what they pass before they pass it?"

      I think it's a bad sign that they don't even read it before they pass it.

      --
      Coder's Stone: The programming language quick ref for iPad
    7. Re:Not arguing about Net Neutrality, but Reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you want an example of a pre-existing problem Net Neutrality is supposed to solve, you merely have to look at Comcast.

    8. Re:Not arguing about Net Neutrality, but Reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only problem with quitting the wireless ISPs which block or slow access is that most people in the US have 2 years commitments because otherwise the phone they want goes from $39 to $500 (Most people don't even realize that most account maintenance automatically ups them to an additional 2 years).

      So, the wireless ISPs have plenty of time to synchronize policies with each other, so when the 2+ years is up there's no reason to for consumers to bail from one bad wireless carrier to just another bad experience and the company revenue stays relatively consistent.

    9. Re:Not arguing about Net Neutrality, but Reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The real reason..... The liberals keep their porn access.........

    10. Re:Not arguing about Net Neutrality, but Reality by sounds · · Score: 1

      Agreed, SuperKendall.

      My view is this: With all of the real problems we have, can't we just agree to keep an eye on the internet and solve the problems that are killing people for now?

      Part two: All older forms of media are highly regulated by the government, and they're almost completely corrupt. Does nobody see the problem with jumping the gun to regulate the internet? Government rules will just accelerate the corruption of the internet, which is certainly the hidden agenda here.

  20. The Logic of Net Neutrality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Logic of Net Neutrality: Obviously, to keep the internet open we must regulate it heavily.

    1. Re:The Logic of Net Neutrality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Logic of Net Neutrality: Obviously, to keep the internet open we must regulate it heavily.

      In right wing speak the word "heavily" must always accompany "regulate", just as currently any policy by the Obama administration must be prefixed with "job killing". Boiler plate stock phrases is what substitutes for thought on the right.

      Carry on my dogmatic friend, but don't drop your talking point cards or you will be lost.

    2. Re:The Logic of Net Neutrality by jedidiah · · Score: 3, Informative

      No. The regulation need not be heavy. The idea that it is, is just mindless right wing demagogery.

      A minimal amount of regulation is required in order to prevent Comcast from screwing around with your Netflix or Walmart from screwing around with your Amazon orders.

      Imagine if your HOA could tax Amazon shipments out of existence?

      What people don't understand is that their connection to the outside world is controlled by a corporation that would set up a "company store" if they could.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    3. Re:The Logic of Net Neutrality by Freddybear · · Score: 1

      Since when has any American government bureaucrat settled for "a minimal amount of regulation"?

    4. Re:The Logic of Net Neutrality by Yadyn · · Score: 1

      Since when has any American government bureaucrat settled for "a minimal amount of regulation"?

      Exactly. Every time we give them an inch they take a mile.

  21. American Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, that encompasses both major parties. The US has no idea what a left wing party looks like, and you're getting fucked because of it. "Socialist" Europe doesn't have these problems.

    1. Re:American Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, that encompasses both major parties. The US has no idea what a left wing party looks like, and you're getting fucked because of it. "Socialist" Europe doesn't have these problems.

      Amen to that! We have in essence moderate Republican President today (demonstrably to the right of Richard Nixon) with a radical right party foaming at the mouth about him being a "socialist" (which to the right seems to mean he is secretly plotting to install Soviet style Communism - I have actually been told this by a Tea Party sympathizer).

      By the standards of the right every single industrialized country in the world is "socialist" - and many of them are doing better than they U.S. in most every social and economic measure. Yet we see (presumably somewhat educated) posters here asserting that "socialism always fails". Only in the parallel universe of the right.

    2. Re:American Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      america and europe are both fucked, with some overlap and some differences. yet, with out a doubt, europe will burn first.

  22. Such hypocrisy by the+computer+guy+nex · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Since the opposing side is so badly misinformed, those of us who want the internet to remain open to innovation and freedom of expression have to help educate them before the debate can really be held"

    You blame the 'right' for being ignorant on your view of net neutrality without understanding theirs. You could have made your point without being blatantly offensive also.

    As a conservative, freedom of expression means freedom from government intervention into my everyday life. I do not need government regulation on what TV I choose to watch, what food I wish to eat, and how I wish to use the Internet.

    The answer to every problem is *not* more laws and regulation. This should be an absolute last resort, and personally I do not believe we are there yet.

    1. Re:Such hypocrisy by characterZer0 · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      When will you believe we are ready for some simple regulation prohibiting ISPs from discriminating against your IP traffic based on destination or content?

      When your ISP demands more money from a website that you subscribe to, and that site raises its rates a month later?

      When your ISP intercepts your DNS requests and returns incorrect responses?

      When your ISP throttles your encrypted traffic?

      When your ISP demands more money from you so your traffic is not discriminated against?

      Where is the line?

      --
      Go green: turn off your refrigerator.
    2. Re:Such hypocrisy by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 2

      and how I wish to use the Internet

      If you somehow think that a laissez-faire telco oligopoly would let you use the Internet in the way you wish, I've got a bridge to sell you in New York.

    3. Re:Such hypocrisy by etymxris · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How does net neutrality interfere with how you wish to use the Internet? Net neutrality "restricts freedom" in the exact same way that abolishing slavery "restricts freedom". In the first case ISPs are limited from restricting your freedom. In the second case replace "ISP" with "slave owner".

    4. Re:Such hypocrisy by preaction · · Score: 1

      Or better, when the major backbone providers catch on and decide they should be getting a slice of the pie? They control the pipes, and oligopolies are doing so well for consumers in the telephone and television markets.

    5. Re:Such hypocrisy by jeff4747 · · Score: 2

      Congratulations on being the poster child for what TFA was complaining about.

    6. Re:Such hypocrisy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about none of the above.

      That's why there is CHOICE and a free market system. If the ISP does something you don't like, choose a different one that isn't doing what you don't like. If there no longer exists one that fits that bill, you are free to start your own! That is, unless and until there are laws that restrict your freedoms in that area. That's why the government should stay out of it: so that variations can continue to exist. Once the laws start narrowing down what is possible, you LOSE that freedom.

    7. Re:Such hypocrisy by ftobin · · Score: 1

      The answer to every problem is *not* more laws and regulation. This should be an absolute last resort, and personally I do not believe we are there yet.

      It can be useful to have laws that prevent other non-governmental entities from exercising power that can be de-facto laws.

      If an entity has enough power to preventing me from behaving a certain way (let's deem it moral for now), it doesn't really matter if it's government or a corporation stopping me -- I'd like to prevent both.

      The ways to restrain corporations are through either laws or competition, the latter of which may 1) work too slowly or 2) be almost non-existent, as it appears to be in the telecom industry.

    8. Re:Such hypocrisy by jedidiah · · Score: 4, Insightful

      We understand "their view perfectly well". It's a sort of pseudo-libertarianism with some distracting demogogery for the proles thrown in to distract them from what's really going on.

      Corporations and rich people should be free to take advantage of the powerless.

      That has always been Republican dogma.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    9. Re:Such hypocrisy by characterZer0 · · Score: 1

      Option 1:

      Very strict regulation on price and service for building and operating the last mile to a data center. Allow any ISP to provide your service by picking up your connection at the data center.

      Option 2:

      Let anybody put up wires anywhere. Add an organization find out and deal with when one company "accidentally" cuts another company's wire.

      Option 3:

      Allocate enough spectrum for many wireless ISPs to operate in an area.

      Option 4 (current):

      Monopoly or oligopoly with price fixing.

      Take your pick.

      --
      Go green: turn off your refrigerator.
    10. Re:Such hypocrisy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The exact same argument is applied effortlessly to pro net neutrality, only replace the government with the interests of the media providers and ISPs.

      Laws saying 'you cant discriminate based on traffic content' is not a takeover in any way, nor does it take choice out of your hands. The essence of net neutrality is the complete opposite of that.

      Conservatives spout off the 'more regulation is not the answer' bullshit all day long, and never address how the private industry sticks their corporate cocks up the ass of everyone and abuse their power without fail. Conservatives live in a non existent fantasy world where 'private businesses' look out for their customers, and everything is perfect even when there are no legal obligations to require it.

    11. Re:Such hypocrisy by noidentity · · Score: 1

      Yep. The whole summary reeks of "those are the bad guys. We're the good guys, and you should think like us because we are correct. If you scrutinize anything we say, we'll brand you the bad guys and ignore you."

    12. Re:Such hypocrisy by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      I do not need government regulation on what TV I choose to watch, what food I wish to eat, and how I wish to use the Internet.

      So your happy with the companies doing it instead of the government? Make no mistake, it will happen one way or the other.

      You've got a choice between corporate masters and government masters, and the line between those is getting ever thinner. The freedom you think you would have if the government were stripped down is a lie constructed by corporations for their own benefit. The government is only a hair better since hypothetically you still have a say, however you're also fighting against the fearful, under-educated, masses.

      --
      ~X~
    13. Re:Such hypocrisy by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      As a conservative, freedom of expression means freedom from government intervention into my everyday life. I do not need government regulation on what TV I choose to watch, what food I wish to eat, and how I wish to use the Internet.

      Yet for some reason the political orientatoin that purportedly supports non-intervention is the same one that wants to tell you what you can and can't do in bed.

      The answer to every problem is *not* more laws and regulation. This should be an absolute last resort, and personally I do not believe we are there yet.

      Hopefully you're aware that that is a political ideology, not an established fact.

      I haven't exactly noticed an exodus of conservatives to such ungoverned paradises as Somalia and Afghanistan.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    14. Re:Such hypocrisy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      TFA was complaining about rational thinking?

    15. Re:Such hypocrisy by Cidolfas · · Score: 2

      I never understood why the conservative position was that government regulation is a last resort in times where corporate or ogliarchical regulation is in full effect. The free market is only expressed as a lack of government interference when you happen to already be in control, or allied with those who are.

      I understand the sentiment of not wanting government interference into daily life very well. What I don't understand is why the conservative voice seems to think that the government is the only source of tyranny we have. Corporations exert a huge influence on how we're allowed to live, as do religious organizations to a lesser level. I don't want any of them controlling me.

      Now, I absolutely understand the conservative point about not letting any of those groups mix. I'm an ardent believer of what Adam Smith wrote on that topic when he first proposed to the British nobility that capitalism and the merchant class should be allowed to exist unpetrubed. But what does the conservative voice suggest as an alternative?

      --
      I am become /dev/null, destroyer of data.
    16. Re:Such hypocrisy by asdfghjklqwertyuiop · · Score: 1

      The answer to every problem is *not* more laws and regulation.

      You're right. And let's repeal those laws that give the phone company and cable company special rights that the rest of us do not have and let anyone who wants to run cables under the streets and lawns do so.

    17. Re:Such hypocrisy by haapi · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Insightful my a$$.

      So, it is OK with your conservative values if *corporations* restrict your access to internet content? To take your "views" to a logical extreme, it is OK with you if, as a Comcast subscriber, you only have access to content made available by NBC even though you are paying for flat-rate or volume internet access? Oh, you will play your "free market" card and switch? To what? Maybe the single other monopoly that can provide you broadband?

      The 'Net is pretty much neutral now. There is a place for government regulation to keep it that way.

      --
      Well, apparently, you only have to fool the majority of people for a little while.
    18. Re:Such hypocrisy by Nimey · · Score: 1

      Right, you'd rather an unaccountable corporation make those decisions instead.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    19. Re:Such hypocrisy by wickerprints · · Score: 1

      You may want to look at the history of the telecommunications industry up to the breakup of "Ma Bell" in 1984. Time and time again, we have seen that corporations cannot be entrusted to put the public's interest foremost, and monopolies have occurred in a variety of American industries. You SAY you don't need government regulation on what TV you choose to watch, or what food you wish to eat, but in fact, if you did not have any regulations, you would most certainly be in a much worse position. Totally "free-market" approaches DO NOT WORK. History has proven this so many times that all you have to do is EDUCATE YOURSELF by opening a textbook.

      I don't want the government to decide what I want to eat or watch or read, either. Nobody does. I loathe bureaucracy and government waste. On the other hand, the abuses of corporate power already have an impact on how much I pay for certain goods and services, and the very range of choices I have in those products I want to buy. The problem with your notion of regulation as a last resort is that you fail to distinguish effective regulation versus ineffective regulation--you just lump them together as if ANY regulation must be intrinsically harmful. By the time you want something done to fix the problem, it's already too late. It's typical right-wing thinking that you alone can go up against massive corporations who are far more well-funded than you are and win. It's also something of a mantra among conservatives that a totally free market is the optimal economic approach. Look at what the investment banks did with your money due to the lack of regulatory control just in the past few years.

      And if you didn't have an entity that had the power to enforce laws restricting what you could not eat, you would have been poisoned by now. The USDA and FDA--in theory, at least--provide necessary consumer protections so that you know what is in your food. Dairy producers can't put melamine in their milk to simulate higher protein content, because that would cause kidney failure in the long run. Without a law to prevent that, good luck trying to figure out which brand of milk to buy before millions of people nationwide start dying. It's also those same regulations that allow us to seek legal recourse when, say, your kid dies from eating a hamburger tainted with E. coli O157:H7. Are you really sure you want the government to keep out of your business of what you want to eat? Then you're going to need a biochemical laboratory with a full range of analytical equipment to test all your food, and know how to use it, if you want to not get sick, or we'll all have to revert to an agrarian lifestyle and grow our own food.

    20. Re:Such hypocrisy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh... laissez-faire? You must be kidding.

      Telcos and even cable companies operate under a significant degree of both regulation and state mandated privileges. These include government protected monopolies in operating areas and how competition arises and is conducted. Also heavily regulated are those options that are becoming viable including over-the-air and power line. How is this even vaguely laissez-faire? Corporatism, mercantilism, and other mixed economic systems are not laissez-faire, a system under which there are no arbitrarily favored players.

      As a member of neither the American Left or Right, I'll tell you there are other reasons to avoid Net Neutrality and they have little to do with ignorance, but with history. Your so called 'laissez-faire telco oligopoly' wouldn't/couldn't exist without our good Government, in the name of fairness and public interest, creating the conditions under which it emerged and was protected. As soon as you empower individuals to dictate the course of events, disconnected from any genuine reality such as having to maintain willing customers, you will have allowed the very kinds of abuses you set out to avoid to flourish unchecked. Its

      I'll take laissez-faire any day over that.

    21. Re:Such hypocrisy by khallow · · Score: 1

      How does net neutrality interfere with how you wish to use the Internet?

      It interferes with the service, that the ISP I chose, provides. Sure, the ISP can use that power to hinder access to rivals and cripple my service, but it can also use it to provide better service by differentiating between important and less important applications and locations. If I'm trading stocks or accessing a job site, I probably would prefer better latency and throughput than if I'm accessing slashdot. Selective degradation of service can be useful in that it provides better access to important services and sites by degrading access to other services and sites that I deem less important (or that I don't even notice have been degraded).

      Net neutrality means that all services no matter how important or not get served with the same efficiency. The ads that are delivered to me have the same efficiency as the information I want.

      Here, I see two big problems. First, there's a huge information advantage of the ISP over the customer. The customer typically doesn't know when the ISP is degrading delivery of content. That can be obviously abused, and it is reasonable to assume that it will be unless the information advantage is leveled in some way. Even with the presence of net neutrality laws, this issue will have to be addressed.

      The second problem is the limited competition among ISPs. With a flexible and quick means to switch to a number of other ISPs, that's another means for dealing with ISPs that degrade or block service. It also works for any other service flaw that might be present. In its absence, net neutrality (and indeed a good deal of regulation) is a kludge.

    22. Re:Such hypocrisy by jimrthy · · Score: 1

      Corporations are a partnership between the government and the individuals who "own" them. They are a legal fiction. They don't have any place in a free market.

      Most conservatives don't understand that, but it's a vitally important point.

    23. Re:Such hypocrisy by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      No it does not. QOS is not going to be impacted. Only they must use the same QOS for all VOIP, not just a good one for the comcast brand and shit for vonage.

    24. Re:Such hypocrisy by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      You are a goddamn moron. Almost no one has more than two ISPs available, and a good portion of the country has just one.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    25. Re:Such hypocrisy by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      We understand "their view perfectly well". It's a sort of pseudo-libertarianism with some distracting demogogery for the proles thrown in to distract them from what's really going on.

      Corporations and rich people should be free to take advantage of the powerless.

      That has always been Republican dogma.

      Not always, but you would have to look to the beginning of the 1900's to find it.

    26. Re:Such hypocrisy by Sloppy · · Score: 1

      As a conservative, freedom of expression means freedom from government intervention into my everyday life. I do not need government regulation on what TV I choose to watch, what food I wish to eat, and how I wish to use the Internet.

      The answer to every problem is *not* more laws and regulation. This should be an absolute last resort, and personally I do not believe we are there yet.

      So you think that the limited liability protection (i.e. unaccountability to market forces) that society has (though government) given to the corporations that provide these things, the easements phone and cable companies receive to run wires through private property, the monopoly granted by the FCC so that only particular parties are allowed to use certain parts of the radio spectrum, the existing regulations for telecommunications services and information services, copyright laws, the existing truth-in-advertising laws, he existing campaign finance laws, and a shitload of other things that I can't even imagine much less describe .. these laws and uses of government power have happened prematurely? The time has not yet come for us to abandon a free market approach to liability, a free market approach to securing rights to run cabling, and a free market approach to radio broadcasting, a free marker approach to publishing, and so on?

      Fair enough! It can be a consistent and logical position. But you're a few centuries behind the current debate.

      Nobody is suggesting getting government involved in these things; they are suggesting changing government's already neck-deep involvement. You already watch TV, eat food, and use the internet in a manner that is heavily shaped by government. The current debate is about altering the tit-for-tat arrangement, whereby people have already used government to give up certain freedoms for the public good. Some people think altering it may make things better, and some think it may be worse. None of them are pretending that there aren't already tens of thousands of pages of laws in play, though.

      If your approach is to repeal all the existing laws, to go back to before FCC regulation, before the granting of corporate charters, etc, go ahead and describe your vision. I think wireless is likely to suck under your system, but I've never been a big fan of wireless anyway, and maybe you know something I don't. I will hear you out. You know, maybe having wireless suck more is worth it to protect our freedom. Maybe. I'll listen.

      If your approach is that the FCC just happens to be exactly perfect as of today, that the conditions under which corporate charters are granted happens to be exactly perfect, and that government interference with private property rights happens to have the exactly perfect balance -- that generations of politicians were elected by a perfect system to represent the interests of perfectly wise and informed voters, used a perfect process to enact perfect legislation that is founded upon just the right principles rather than compromises or corruption, and resulted in just the the right public policies -- then I don't believe it. This is the first time I have ever heard anyone suggest the government got everything right.

      But nevertheless, if that's your position, then it's pretty silly to refer to yourself as a conservative, don't you think? How many commies wrote all the laws that you're thumbing like a bible? ;-)

      Once, just once, I want to see a so-called conservative, who always just happens to be arguing against some particular regulation, also to simultaneously argue for the repeal of some weird-ass perk that the special interests have obtained at the public's expense via government expansion. Please, with your "let them use their network however they want" proposal, also include a proposal that they have to negotiate with me to get rights to run cables through my yard or beam si

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    27. Re:Such hypocrisy by khallow · · Score: 1

      No it does not. QOS is not going to be impacted. Only they must use the same QOS for all VOIP, not just a good one for the comcast brand and shit for vonage.

      I explained why QOS was going to be impacted.

    28. Re:Such hypocrisy by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1

      You're putting the cart before the horse. Here's a deal: FIRST, you get the system completely changed over to your pie-in-the-sky libertarian telco fantasy. (Good luck with that.)

      AFTER that has been accomplished, and only after, then we can talk about leaving them unregulated. Until, then, go back to reading your Ayn Rand novels.

    29. Re:Such hypocrisy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, yes. Any company that sells something by definition "restricts" your access to what they produce, since they don't give it to you if you don't give them money. And shockingly, they don't have to produce anything at all! McDonald's, for example, restricts our access to McRib sandwiches.

      If you don't like a service, don't pay for it. No one is threatening you with fines or imprisonment if you don't buy cable TV or don't subscribe to broadband Internet. Remember when cell phones were really expensive and charged fees for long distance and roaming? Few people had them. If Internet providers want to turn the product into crap, they'll lose subscribers in droves. If Windstream wants to charge me $50 a month (the rate here) and only let me access NBC-run sites and block me from PSN, you know what I'll do? Stop using the Internet at home. There are plenty of other things I can do with my time and the $600 per year I spend on them.

    30. Re:Such hypocrisy by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      TFA was complaining about right-wingers who will believe whatever bull Limbaugh, et al. shovel every day.

      For example, the bull about "Net Neutrality" harming freedom of expression.

      But lies sell very, very well among their viewers/listeners, so they'll keep doing it. And since those same people will refuse to believe anything that contradicts their radio/TV idols, it's not like there's gonna be any pressure to change the situation.

    31. Re:Such hypocrisy by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      And he responded explaining why you were wrong.

      And here we are now.

    32. Re:Such hypocrisy by khallow · · Score: 1

      And he responded explaining why you were wrong.

      No, he didn't. He explained how selective degrading of service could be used against the customer.

    33. Re:Such hypocrisy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no such thing such as 'effective regulation' by the government. Surely you do not want me to list the massive amount of ineptitude that the government has done. History has proven this so many times that all you have to do is EDUCATE YOURSELF by opening a textbook.

    34. Re:Such hypocrisy by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      You do realize that the previous posts are still there, right?

      Your claim: Net Neutrality means QOS basically no longer works because ads and critical content must be given same priority.

      His response: No, QOS will still work. What will change is ISPs won't be able to assign different QOS settings for the same service offered by different companies.

      And, once again, here we are now.

    35. Re:Such hypocrisy by khallow · · Score: 1

      His claim is based on the assumption that ISPs currently would comply with net neutrality. I don't think that's warranted. I reread my post and the post doesn't claim that QOS no longer works, but rather that you lose a means to improve QOS.

    36. Re:Such hypocrisy by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      How, exactly, did you come to the conclusion that he was talking about current practice when his post says "QOS is not going to be impacted"?

      Most of us would consider "going to be" to indicate future tense. I'm curious how you interpreted it.

    37. Re:Such hypocrisy by khallow · · Score: 1

      Most of us would consider "going to be" to indicate future tense. I'm curious how you interpreted it.

      The tense is irrelevant to the discussion (else I could point out the same for you when you claim "Net Neutrality means QOS basically no longer works"). A correct argument would have been to note that h4rr4r did not say or imply what I claimed he said. I withdraw that claim.

      What still bugs me about this thread is the bland assertion that QOS won't be affected even after I showed an avenue by which QOS can be affected. I'd like to see what market innovations come about first rather than support net neutrality unconditionally.

  23. Grab Bag by AlleyTrotte · · Score: 1

    So its OK that the large ISP's no longer have to rent bandwidth to the smaller ones Mom and Pop stores all over again The small local ISPs must carry the large ISPs bandwidth to the home without benefiting from owning ABC CBS & NBC any government action on the internet is a grab for control The FCC was founded to assign frequencies to different media nothing else...... john

  24. Misinformation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    One of the problems is that techies think that the debate over net neutrality has anything to do with what they THINK net neutrality is. One could say that the techies are being useful idiots for promoting a government regulation of the internet, which they naively think they're protecting.

  25. Mod Parent Up by ideonexus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This has been the most infuriating aspect of this debate for me. Every time I'm challenged by people who listen to Limbaugh on the subject of Net Neutrality, they think it's all about keeping porn off the Internet and allowing the Government to censor websites. So yes, my opponents are horribly misinformed on this issue thanks to that bombastic blowhard.

    --
    i ~ Celebrating Science, Cyberspace, Speculation
    1. Re:Mod Parent Up by ScentCone · · Score: 1, Insightful

      my opponents are horribly misinformed on this issue thanks to that bombastic blowhard

      Sure, other than the part where people in the current administration and congress actually are talking about Fairness Doctrine-esque riders on this legislation. Or when people working at the FCC expressly mention giving though to the FD for broadcase and web content. It's vocal, and repeated condemnation of those notions that keep them OUT of the legislation, despite the liberal urge to have them enacted.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    2. Re:Mod Parent Up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cite, or are you just recycling Fox talking points?

    3. Re:Mod Parent Up by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      [Citation Needed]

    4. Re:Mod Parent Up by ScentCone · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Cite

      Obama's regulatory czar, Cass Sunstein, expressly called for a net-oriented "fairness doctrine" that would require web sites posting opinions to link to opposing opinions. He was, of course, derided by the right for this, and he's backed away, speaking now in more vague terms about it, to avoid being directly quotable. He knows it's offensive on the face of it. On the other hand...

      Obama's "diversity czar" at the FCC has (along with even-handed, thoughtful gems like, "White people need to be forced to step down so someone else can have power" and his gushing praise for Hugo Chavez's handling - read: nationalization and government programming - of media in Venezuela) said that he finds the Fairness Doctrine, as it was used previously, to have gone not nearly far enough in having hard and fast rules about the content of communication.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    5. Re:Mod Parent Up by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Several people on this thread have already done so, multiple times.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    6. Re:Mod Parent Up by MightyMartian · · Score: 2

      I'm thinking you don't know what a citation is.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    7. Re:Mod Parent Up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [Citation needed]

    8. Re:Mod Parent Up by deapbluesea · · Score: 1
      --
      Government is not reason; it is not eloquent; it is force. Like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master.
    9. Re:Mod Parent Up by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

      So the top result is World Net Daily, who cite a book called Shut Up, America!: The End of Free Speech as their source. This book is written by Brad O'Leary, and published by... wait for it... WND Books.

      The second result cites the World Net Daily story as their source, but they claim to have done some extra work to verify it, by reading Sunstein's book Republic.com. I'm not about to go and check whether the quotes are accurate, but reportedly Sunstein later changed his mind—a concept that many people in the politisphere don't seem to understand.

    10. Re:Mod Parent Up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This has been the most infuriating aspect of this debate for me. Every time I'm challenged by people who listen to Limbaugh on the subject of Net Neutrality, they think it's all about keeping porn off the Internet and allowing the Government to censor websites. So yes, my opponents are horribly misinformed on this issue thanks to that bombastic blowhard.

      Really? The only people I run into who even know what net neutrality is and that it is being debated are computer geeks like us. The average joe I run into hasn't even heard of it before.

    11. Re:Mod Parent Up by deapbluesea · · Score: 1

      Indeed, Beck's tirades about net neutrality rely heavily (and mistakenly) on OMB official Cass Sunstein's 2002 book, which discussed the idea of using government regulation to require websites to link to opposing viewpoints. But Sunstein renounced this proposal years ago, calling it a "bad idea" and "unconstitutional."

      http://mediamatters.org/blog/201012080028

      Here, a nice juicy bone for you instead (it says Glenn Beck is misinformed, so once you've stopped salivating over that, read the rest where it says that Cass Sunstein called for a fairness doctrine in his 2002 book). In fact, the reportage is correct, it simply leaves out Sunstein's renouncement of his own idea. In other words, it's spin, much like MSNBC is spin in a different direction. This doesn't negate the fact that the idea is out there. If you look at what Rush is complaining about (I'm not a Rush listener BTW), he's concerned that someone might want to do what Mr. Sunstein has proposed using the FCC as the tool to get it done.

      Not one week ago, /. was nearly apoplectic over the fact that the FCC rule-making didn't provide net neutrality "like we wanted". Now we're gasping about those nutty right wingers who've said that net neutrality is simply a political tool to gain regulatory power and that it might not be what advocates really want. Is it so hard to see that we're not getting what we want from the FCC rulemaking, and that this is one of those things better left alone? At a bare minimum, it should fall on Congress to pass a law to regulate this rather than the FCC just deciding they want to. As almost every article linked in this discussion says, neutrality and fairness are not the same thing. The reason they are not the same is that public airwaves /= internet connectivity, ergo, not the FCC's bailiwick.

      --
      Government is not reason; it is not eloquent; it is force. Like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master.
    12. Re:Mod Parent Up by cforciea · · Score: 2

      Yes, some dude barely related to the whole issue made a later renounced claim nearly a decade ago that we should regulate the internet in some way that you and I agree is bad. The problem isn't even that Beck and Limbaugh are citing the slippery slope like you are (although I think that is asinine for a different set of reasons). The problem is that they are trying to pull a bait and switch and claim that Net Neutrality IS the idea Sunstein talked about in 2002, which is an outright lie. It doesn't matter if they are trying to get what they think is best for our country; it should be a problem for any of their viewers/listeners that they are willing to lie, cheat, and steal to get there.

  26. Informing the Right by Tyler+Durden · · Score: 1, Troll

    Since the opposing side is so badly misinformed, those of us who want the internet to remain open to innovation and freedom of expression have to help educate them before the debate can really be held.

    The talking heads of the American right these days have no interest in being informed. At best they are only capable of using facts like a drunk uses a light post - for support rather than illumination.

    --
    Happy people make bad consumers.
  27. ISP monopolies are the real problem! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The introduction to this topic is as out of touch with reality as all of the coverage of this topic.

    - Govt has too much regulation which allowed the ISPs to become "monopolies".
    - Instead of removing the regulation to allow competition so the consumer can choose with their wallet.
    - Lets have more govt regulation to prevent the ISPs from acting like monopolies.

    I want net neutrality, but I want it because I have a choice in ISPs not because big brother allows me to have it.

    1. Re:ISP monopolies are the real problem! by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      No. The real problem is that broadband internet requires considerable physical infastructure and someone has to build and own that.

      The moment you start talking about "competition", the ownership of infastructure is going to come up and all of the same basic philosophical differences we have now about "ownership" will come up again. It's ultimately the same argument. It doesn't matter if you frame it as wholesale access to the physical pipe or retail access to the physical pipe.

      Either way "the right" will view the physical infastructure as something that grants the owner the right to exclude and destroy competitors with.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    2. Re:ISP monopolies are the real problem! by Oriumpor · · Score: 1

      I wrote a letter to my congressman saying as much.

      It's still a last mile problem. How many people have more than a Duopoly to choose from?

      Does it really cost $70 a month to service my traffic?

      I know it doesn't. The cable infrastructure I'm running over hasn't been upgraded in several decades, how bout you? When is the last time you saw a truck pulling new infrastructure in your neighborhood?

    3. Re:ISP monopolies are the real problem! by jd · · Score: 2

      You will never have a choice in ISP, whether you have regulation or deregulation. Do you have a real choice of telephone company? Chances are, no. You will have a choice of what sticker is on the bill, but the wires will be the same, the junction boxes will be the same, the trunk lines will be the same and the digital exchanges will be the same.

      Do you have a real choice of cable company? Odds are, no. Video on demand will be outsourced to the same third-party vendors, the cables will be the same, the digital boxes will be the same, the codec will be the same, the channels provided (in total) will be the same, the backbone will be the same and the packages will be practically the same.

      Let's say we had the days of the dial-in modem back, where mom-and-pop shops ran their own mini-ISPs. Were they different? In name, yes. But they used the same backbone, they used the same copper lines, they used the same modem protocol, they offered the same range of speeds. All you could choose was the veneer, the bundle was the same.

      What will happen with further Internet deregulation? The same. Very few people can afford to install new fibre in the kind of quantity needed to seriously alter the ther 1 traffic flow. Certainly no potential ISP near you can. Only slightly more could afford to be tier 2. Odds are highly against anyone entering those markets. And since it is those markets that are affected by network neutrality laws (local ISPs are of no significance here, since their sphere of influence is insignificant), the argument about deregulation increasing choice is worthless. You won't see a single new tier 1 provider from deregulation and because those are the people who make the difference between a bunch of LANs and the Internet, they are the people who matter.

      Like it or not, individuals are simply not important in the grand scheme of things. They never have been, they never will be. Freedom to choose between veneers is not freedom, it is an illusion of freedom. Freedom of an imaginary choice is a good way to pacify the fools - bread and circuces. Real freedom is actually quite rare and is best part of a balanced breakfast.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  28. er... by argStyopa · · Score: 0

    ...to quote an article on DailyKos regarding what the "Right" thinks, aren't you the teensiest bit concerned that might be a strawman?

    One doesn't have to be a glassy-eyed rightwinger to be suspicious of anything George Soros supports (does he support Net Neutrality? I didn't get my latest issue of "Vast Right Wing Conspiracy Weekly" to see what I'm supposed to think) as being somehow deeply partisan.

    --
    -Styopa
  29. Not a surprise by Tridus · · Score: 5, Informative
    --
    -- "So they told me that using the download page to download something was not something they anticipated." - Bill Gates
    1. Re:Not a surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please don't quote a study that has been debunked!!!
      Watch this:
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O8KHOgyYyHQ

    2. Re:Not a surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the rest including the 80% of which appear to be left wing radicals are just uninformed sheep to the political slaughter. Welcome to the Soros Nanny state. Like Mou said, you will always have a use to the Democrat state as slave labor or fertilizer.

    3. Re:Not a surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *Sigh*

      Do we have to throw around that horribly biased study again as if its truth? Look, watch this and you'll understand why that study is not worth the paper its written on:

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O8KHOgyYyHQ - Warning long, because its detailed.

    4. Re:Not a surprise by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>Fox "News" viewers are the most misinformed people when it comes to pretty much everything, so it's hardly surprising that they have no fucking clue what they're talking about on this either.

      If by misinformed, you mean, "Disagree with how the pollsters think reality works" then sure.

      That study, and the earlier Iraq issues study, were both horribly done and quite unprofessional.

    5. Re:Not a surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That report is a shocker... Ask Fox News viewers if they agree with left-wing groups' facts and conclusions and they don't. Amazing. I would have never guessed.

    6. Re:Not a surprise by tophermeyer · · Score: 0

      Bro, did you read the full report? Here's a direct quote:

      This suggests that misinformation cannot simply be attributed to news sources, but are part of the larger information environment that includes statements by candidates, political ads and so on.

      Furthermore, those who had greater exposure to news sources were generally better informed. In the great majority of cases, those with higher levels of exposure to news sources had lower levels of misinformation.

      There were however a number of cases where greater exposure to a news source increased misinformation on a specific issue.

      Yahoo reported a "finding" completely out of context, and without the authors very specific qualifications that no single media source is all that trustworthy. Here's another...

      Consumers of all sources of media evidenced substantial misinformation, suggesting that false or misleading information is widespread in the general information environment, just as voters say they perceive it to be.

      Fox News was found to be the single greatest spreader of misinformation than any other single mainstream media source, yes. But the authors were pretty specific that the issue was not with Fox News directly, but with the concept of general reliance on a single media outlet. My personal read on this is that the level of misinformation spread by all mainstream news sources is staggering.

      Please come down off your high horse. Misinformation is everywhere. Fox might be the single greatest source of it, but all the big boys are doing it.

      In the future, before casually dismissing a political group based on a very limited set of select information, I would suggest you RTF report rather than simply parroting the biased and misleading reporting you find from a single news source.

    7. Re:Not a surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    8. Re:Not a surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tridus, try to keep up. That study was found to be seriously flawed.

      http://www.verumserum.com/?p=19990

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O8KHOgyYyHQ

    9. Re:Not a surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Study claiming Fox News viewers are the most misinformed turns out to be a very poor study.
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O8KHOgyYyHQ&feature=player_embedded

    10. Re:Not a surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speaking of misinformed, if you had read the actual research report, you would have realized what a shaky claim that is, as acknowledged in the report itself. The media, always looking for a juicy bit of news, picked up on the key phrases "fox news" and "misinformed" and ran with it.

  30. digging into the slashdot archives by wan9xu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    i found two pieces of the puzzle:

    one, foxnews make you more misinformed.
    http://news.slashdot.org/story/10/12/16/1615218/Survey-Shows-That-Fox-News-Makes-You-Less-Informed?from=rss

    two, given truth, the misinformed believe the lies more.
    http://idle.slashdot.org/story/10/07/14/1235220/Given-Truth-the-Misinformed-Believe-Lies-More

    1. Re:digging into the slashdot archives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you should read more than the headline.

      http://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1913322&cid=34578776

  31. The real price. by redemtionboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I definitely lean net neutrality and see the benefits of it. BUT, part of the argument for government protecting net neutrality is assuming the worst of a situation without government intervention and expecting only the best from it's involvement. Given the FCC's past behavior with other mediums, I'm not so sure that government involvement is going to give us that "free and open" internet we expect it will be once there is government oversight. Most government programs never accomplish what they promise to do and often come with significant negative consequences.

    1. Re:The real price. by medv4380 · · Score: 1

      Could you give an actual example of what FCC behavior you're upset with. Broad generalities do not help your argument.

    2. Re:The real price. by SydShamino · · Score: 1

      Most government programs never accomplish what they promise to do and often come with significant negative consequences.

      Most corporate assurances never accomplish what they promise and often come with significant negative consequences, too.

      --
      It doesn't hurt to be nice.
    3. Re:The real price. by redemtionboy · · Score: 1

      Typically issues with overreaching censorship, content protection over-enforcement (http://www.connectedhomemag.com/HomeTheater/Articles/Index.cfm?ArticleID=40901), forcing government ability to wiretap or monitor, build-out requirements, but most of all, they get shaped like any other government organization (http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20101220/22311012351/as-expected-fcc-approving-net-neutrality-rules-that-att-wants.shtml) If you expect things to get easier for enemies of the RIAA and MPAA, aka the consumer, with government regulation on the internet, then you can guess again. If given the authority to control net neutrality, it won't be long before that grasp is extended to "protect businesses and artists."

    4. Re:The real price. by Tenebrousedge · · Score: 1

      We're not asking for government oversight, we're asking for the right to sue the shit out of Comcast when we determine they are slowing or blocking traffic based on end-point. I don't see much of a difference between the FCC taking action and a class-action suit, but the former will probably be cheaper.

      --
      Those who advocate genocide deserve every protection afforded by law, and none afforded by common human decency.
    5. Re:The real price. by redemtionboy · · Score: 1

      The FCC sells of public property to corporations and establishes monopolies, so how does that make the FCC a valid entity to stop corporate monopolization? That is what they were intended to do. You effectively have the 1st Amendment Brigade running the internet, like you do on TV and Radio. Which is why Howard Stern is on XM. Except there isn't an alternative to the FCC mandated internet. Then the FCC is all you need to shut down Wikileaks.

  32. Re:Quick help everyone's Misinformed! by DarkNemesis618 · · Score: 1

    The problem is that in a lot of areas, Comcast holds a monopoly for broadband internet. You're often given the choice between Comcast Internet or Dialup. You don't have the option to speak with your wallet as i'd hardly consider dialup to be a true alternative to cable.

    --
    What's the matter, James? No glib remark? No pithy comeback?
  33. technical vs political solutions by spikenerd · · Score: 2

    There are two ways to stop deep packet inspection: The technical way (encryption) and the political way (net neutrality). What baffles me is why all the geeks have given up on the technical solution and are now pushing for a political solution. The best argument I've yet heard for giving up on the technical solution is that politicians *might* ban encryption, and the best argument I've heard for pursuing the political solution is that we *might* get lucky with a law based on principle instead of one that guarantees that ISPs and governments can do deep packet inspection for "legitimate" reasons. Can someone please enlighten me as to why we continue to give up on the technical solution?

    1. Re:technical vs political solutions by jpate · · Score: 1

      Is there there a way to stop ISPs from throttling all encrypted traffic?

      What if the sites I want to visit don't offer encryption? I might ask the site webmaster to offer encryption, but they could easily respond by telling me to pressure my ISP to sign a deal with the website. This is exactly what happens with small sports networks: if you're in a part of the US that doesn't get the Big Ten network, you can ask them for access to an online stream for their big ticket games (men's basketball and football), and they'll tell you they won't do that, and you should call your cable provider and get them to put the Big Ten network on basic cable paying the Big Ten network such-and-such per subscriber. Meanwhile, the Big Ten network has the technology; I live in the UK right now, where there is not a chance of getting the Big Ten network on basic cable, and they're happy to sell me an online streaming subscription.

    2. Re:technical vs political solutions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There _isn't_ a technical solution!

      What are you going to do when you are offered 1MBps Internet service + 100MBps CablePlus service ( * certain restrictions apply ) for $15/month, or true 100MBps Internet service for $200?

      The average consumer is going to choose the former, and the economies of scale that enabled the Internet as we know it are going to be lost.

    3. Re:technical vs political solutions by medv4380 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Encryption does not stop them from throttling my packets based on a destination. Like say Comcast customers to NetFlix customers.

    4. Re:technical vs political solutions by MonChrMe · · Score: 1

      Encryption doesn't help with NN.

      The problem is that NN is about preventing the selective degradation of service based on a packets origin or destination. This information has to be available to the network providers in an unencrypted form in the packet headers or the content will never get to where it's going.

      Encryption bypasses something else - QOS filtering, which is based on protocol and is intended to prioritise realtime traffic such as VOIP calls. Using encryption to bypass that is actually counterproductive, as ISP's can (and probably will) simply dump encrypted traffic into the 'bulk' (lowest priority) bracket when it becomes to heavy in order to keep things moving for known realtime trade.

    5. Re:technical vs political solutions by pseudochaos · · Score: 0

      Encrypted traffic can be deprioritized at the ISP level, just like any other traffic.

      --
      "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." - Aristotle
    6. Re:technical vs political solutions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pretty simple, really. A technical solution might actually have a better than even chance of working effectively, thereby making it a threat to the powers that be. A political solution is dependent upon the dog and pony show that the powers that be are manipulating behind the scenes, ala lobbyist groups, which respond to whomever has the largest funding sources.

      Technical types aren't too eager to be lined up before a firing squad, either metaphorical, or actual.
      With political types, the action is largely irrelevant, either way.

      Clearer, now?

    7. Re:technical vs political solutions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are also already companies offering solutions to identify the general type of traffic even if encrypted based on packet size and frequency.

      Encrypted or not, a VoIP session looks different from a 2-way video chat looks different from a netflix stream looks different from IRC chat.

    8. Re:technical vs political solutions by swb · · Score: 1

      As others have pointed out, discrimination on origin isn't changed by encryption. The other problem is that many of the devices/services people want to use don't offer encryption -- I can't "enable" encryption watching Netflix streaming from my Tivo, and most high traffic services wouldn't offer it anyway due to the added cost and complexity.

      I suspect there is some open source zealot going to beat me up for not using Linux to watch movies downloaded as torrents, where I can control every line of source code and configuration, but while *I* may have that technical ability, most people don't and even if you do, it means a pretty severe quality degradation overall (ie, selection, convenience, portability, etc).

    9. Re:technical vs political solutions by ThatMegathronDude · · Score: 1

      When was the last time a technical solution completely solved a social problem?

    10. Re:technical vs political solutions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is the problem really deep packet inspection? I thought the problem was filtering the speed (or censoring completely) packets from people who don't pay an additional fee? If I'm the ISP between Alice and Bob and Bob hasn't kicked some $$$ my direction, it won't matter if he has encrypted his packets if I simply route them to /dev/null does it?

    11. Re:technical vs political solutions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For that, we need onion routing, like Tor. There's still a technical solution - and in the long term, it's more reliable than a political solution could be.

    12. Re:technical vs political solutions by toddestan · · Score: 1

      That's still based upon the assumption that the ISPs will not throttle traffic if they cannot tell what it is. They could easily decide to throttle all encrypted traffic, except perhaps that which is going to an "approved" endpoint like a major bank. In which case you're back where you started.

  34. Re:Quick help everyone's Misinformed! by etymxris · · Score: 1

    OK, so the only high speed providers in your town are Verizon DSL and Comcast cable. Both have made a business decision to block Fox News. Now what do you do? Go back to dial up? Move to another locality?

  35. The internet is NOT FREE. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The internet infrastructure is a costly adventure and it is reasonable to expect it to be based on usage. I suppose you could argue that it should be FREE under a NAZI SOCIALIST model but that is not sustainable without huge infusions of cash from taxpayers and corporations which, by the way, is simply another way of redistributing wealth. Which is also unsustainable.

  36. agree in principle....but. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I tend to frown on any new governmental authority, and while i agree with the general premise of net neutrality, I disagree with the FCC or any governmental entity implementing it. A much better solution would be to eliminate the government sanctioned monopolies that the current ISP's and cable companies currently have. Having more competitors in the marketplace would make companies like Comcast too fearful of losing market share to raise their rates.

  37. Of course I disagree by chronoss2010 · · Score: 0

    lol just had to say it....but your right in fact ....The truth is 'social engineering' seems to be more about cultivist acts of propaganda then it does about the facts. IF people wanted just facts....the catholic church would just evaporate. One thing i see is the two polars. FEAR and HOPE. they use there religion for hope and give you FEAR of misinformed facts, twisted to there ends , that as we all know the ends never justifies the means.... funny how all these nazi sympathizers are gaining power You have the bush family for years , the current POPE.....and "conservatism" that is anything but conservative.

  38. wow. 'nazi socialist' ... by unity100 · · Score: 2, Informative

    moron. talking about things which you dont know zit about.

    nasdap was socialist only in name, in order to be able to get votes in the elections from the socialist segment of the society. they had no similarity with anything socialist apart from the wordage in their name. in fact, left was their biggest enemy, even more than the jews.

    you are the perfect example of the moron that right likes to manipulate successfully. bask in your morondom.

    1. Re:wow. 'nazi socialist' ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    2. Re:wow. 'nazi socialist' ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nazis were authoritarian and did not embrace individual liberty or free markets. In today's terms, they were on the left.

    3. Re:wow. 'nazi socialist' ... by fnj · · Score: 1

      In your haste to call other people morons, you have revealed your own ignorance.

      1) It was NSDAP, not "nasdap."

      2) The NSDAP 25 Point Program was formulated by Anton Drexler and Adolf Hitler in 1920 and remained the policy of the Party.

      Point 7. We demand that the state be charged first with providing the opportunity for a livelihood and way of life for the citizens.
      Point 11. Abolition of unearned (work and labour) incomes. Breaking of debt (interest)-slavery.
      Point 12. In consideration of the monstrous sacrifice in property and blood that each war demands of the people, personal enrichment through a war must be designated as a crime against the people. Therefore we demand the total confiscation of all war profits.
      Point 13. We demand the nationalisation of all (previous) associated industries (trusts).
      Point 14. We demand a division of profits of all heavy industries.
      Point 15. We demand an expansion on a large scale of old age welfare.
      Point 16. We demand the creation of a healthy middle class and its conservation, immediate communalization of the great warehouses ...
      Point 17. We demand a land reform suitable to our needs, provision of a law for the free expropriation of land for the purposes of public utility, abolition of taxes on land and prevention of all speculation in land.
      Point 20. The State is to be responsible for a fundamental reconstruction of our whole national education program, to enable every capable and industrious German to obtain higher education and subsequently introduction into leading positions.
      Point 21. The State is to care for the elevating national health by protecting the mother and child, by outlawing child-labor ...

      Those points draw on some key Socialist ideals. Now, the National Socialist German Workers' Party was no more the pure embodiment of socialism than was the Communist Party of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. But both were undeniably strongly influenced by socialist ideas, and went well beyond simple lip service in name only. To suggest otherwise in the case of one is to get bogged down in pre-conceived false political categorizations.

    4. Re:wow. 'nazi socialist' ... by unity100 · · Score: 1

      wow. so, 'non free market' becomes authoritarian, and left ?

      its interesting to see that fox news is redefining all the political terms of the past 200 years.

      so, fascists, which are considered the right of right, in political science, are now left, because, well, because of bullshit, really ...

      again, dont talk about stuff you do not know.

    5. Re:wow. 'nazi socialist' ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To suggest otherwise in the case of one is to get bogged down in pre-conceived false political categorizations.

      This, a thousand times. Supporting a few right-wing nationalistic/jingoistic principles doesn't make Nazis right-wing any more than supporting medicare and social security makes Republicans left-wing.

    6. Re:wow. 'nazi socialist' ... by unity100 · · Score: 1

      In your haste to call other people morons, you have revealed your own ignorance. 1) It was NSDAP, not "nasdap."

      so ?

      Those points draw on some key Socialist ideals. Now, the National Socialist German Workers' Party was no more the pure embodiment of socialism than was the Communist Party of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. But both were undeniably strongly influenced by socialist ideas, and went well beyond simple lip service in name only. To suggest otherwise in the case of one is to get bogged down in pre-conceived false political categorizations.

      apparently you havent read and understood what you have replied to :

      nasdap was socialist only in name, in order to be able to get votes in the elections from the socialist segment of the society. they had no similarity with anything socialist apart from the wordage in their name.

      you are just like the fools in germany who voted for nazi party, thinking that they had socialist inclinations, just because it is advertised as such. even after 60 years ignorance of history can fool people about truth. all the referenced items in your list, were for RIGHT purposes, fascism. and even so, there are only few items in the list you referenced which actually came true. lets break it down :

      Point 7. We demand that the state be charged first with providing the opportunity for a livelihood and way of life for the citizens. Point 11. Abolition of unearned (work and labour) incomes. Breaking of debt (interest)-slavery.

      didnt happen, except in areas in which people were conscripted, or put into work for military purposes or fascist means.

      Point 12. In consideration of the monstrous sacrifice in property and blood that each war demands of the people, personal enrichment through a war must be designated as a crime against the people. Therefore we demand the total confiscation of all war profits. Point 13. We demand the nationalisation of all (previous) associated industries (trusts). Point 14. We demand a division of profits of all heavy industries.

      leave aside not happening, german government was still awarding private contracts to private corporations/parties even at the waning days of war, with scarce resources. even full mobilization didnt happen, and private sector was in charge of the production. german industry never went close to full capacity, even when it was desperately needed, and could turn the tide of war. a lot of the prominent german companies today, became richer then, and unfortunately only some have been charged with war crimes and profiteering.

      Point 15. We demand an expansion on a large scale of old age welfare. Point 16. We demand the creation of a healthy middle class and its conservation, immediate communalization of the great warehouses ... Point 17. We demand a land reform suitable to our needs, provision of a law for the free expropriation of land for the purposes of public utility, abolition of taxes on land and prevention of all speculation in land.

      none of these came near fruition except where the people were put to work for FASCIST purposes, military or otherwise.

      Point 20. The State is to be responsible for a fundamental reconstruction of our whole national education program, to enable every capable and industrious German to obtain higher education and subsequently introduction into leading positions. Point 21. The State is to care for the elevating national health by protecting the mother and child, by outlawing child-labor ...

      for the purposes of fascist right wing reengineering of society. hitlerjugend is the result of this. as for 'outlawing child labor', i would refer you to child soldiers in the waning days of war.

      the only people in the world who are able to come up and claim that nazi party was 'socialist', despite the political science, globally, has been showing them as the right of right, the perfect example of fascism, are american right.

      that is why i am calling you morons.

    7. Re:wow. 'nazi socialist' ... by fnj · · Score: 1

      Yes, and the terms left wing and right wing have become of little value. In fact, their use only obscures the real issues, which are much more complex than a simple one-axis descriptor can hope to deal with.

    8. Re:wow. 'nazi socialist' ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Another idiot who thinks that there is only one kind of "socialism". The NSDAP was indeed a socialist party - it just so happened to be an anti-Marxist socialist party. There were/are lots of forms of socialism that aren't Marxist. Karl Mark spent a good deal of time arguing against them; he/you may think that these "other socialisms" aren't "real socialism" or as Marx put it "scientific socialism" but that's because Marx/you are idiots.

    9. Re:wow. 'nazi socialist' ... by fnj · · Score: 1

      Way to miss the point. No one is talking about good and evil, success or failure, or anything of the like; just politico-historical accuracy.

      FACT: the NSDAP embraced significant socialist ideals in its official policy. Denying this just makes you appear ignorant.

    10. Re:wow. 'nazi socialist' ... by unity100 · · Score: 0

      you are the one 'missing' the point. nazi party just put in whatever it thought would garner them votes enough to get into power without a coalition, regardless of origin. that is why they had socialist in their party name. not only that, but they had the habit of doing/saying whatever that would give them more power. had they been on the face of the planet as they were, today, you would see that they would be incorporating a lot of things ranging from 'free market' to 'social media' in their manifestos, and none of them would come to fruition.

      nazi party had the habit of LYING. they would talk about peace with p.ms of foreign countries in the airport, and after sending them with a smile in their face, they would return to sending in-party memos to each other discussing how gullible the leaders of the democratic were, and how easy was it to deceive them, and what method should be used next. hitler was on top of the list that had that fun habit.

      the fact that you are gullible as to fool into the same kind of misinformation and deceit after 60 years, tells millions about your gullibility. no wonder fox has been able to shape a lot of you morons into thinking that nazi party was socialist, whereas the political sciences in ANY part of the world has been saying they were the perfect example of a right wing fascist party from the start to its end.

      maybe its because you see the world from that narrow moronic ayn rand window, which equates 'free market' with liberty, and anything that is not, with 'authoritarianism'. that is not as such. authoritarianism and free markets are irrelevant, and 'free market' is not freedom, or liberty. its just an economic approach, feudalistic too.

      all the bullshit you are talking, are stuff invented in right wing america, for propagation of their own private interests. what makes one a moron, is falling for such deceit, and believing their shillery, flying in the face of political sciences.

      nazi party is the apex example of fascism. fascism, is defined as an extreme right wing ideology, that goes hand in hand with private property and established corporate conglomerates.

    11. Re:wow. 'nazi socialist' ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the notion that a centralized totalitarian police state which engaged in mass murder (hitler's nazi germany) is on the complete opposite portion of the political spectrum from another centralized totalitarian police state which engaged in mass murder (stalin's communist russia) is probably a good indicator of the accuracy of such a spectrum.

    12. Re:wow. 'nazi socialist' ... by unity100 · · Score: 1

      lack of knowledge of history keeps people gullible. mark these words.

      stalin's communist russia was only communist in name, just like how nazi party's germany was 'socialist' in name. both were dictatorships. the only difference was that, in soviet russia, there was some degree of democratic process, in which party members could elect party officials in each increasing level. what turned it into fascism was that as the party official level went up, there was more influence of the established members in regard to what happens. (no different than current united states high level administration/senate).

      still they are both ends of the totalitarianism spectrum, in a CERTAIN dimension. fascist nazi party was the epitome of corporate supported repressive right wing, stalin russia was the example of communally owned dictatorship. in the choice of repressiveness, they were the same, in the basis of ideology they were exploiting, they were opposite ends.

      that makes american right far more moron than they actually appear to be, because the dimension they are trying to equate nazis with socialism is the dimension that the extreme examples in the above excerpt are only separated by that dimension.

  39. Same old song and dance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's no different than any of the extreme right's strategies. Don't like something? Make up shit so far out that nobody could possibly believe it. It doesn't matter what the facts are if you're loud enough and repeat it often enough the truth gets drowned out in the noise. The Obama birth certificate thing, climate gate, end of life counseling = death panels. I'm no fan of any political slant, but seriously the right wing nut-jobs need to realize that just because you're afraid that something is true or you want to believe something is true does not make it true. The last time I heard this kind of ridiculous bullshit was when I was in high school and it was from the adolescent 'anarchists' desperate to rebel against anything to make themselves appear meaningful. It's truly sad to see that it passes for news in the US now. It's even worse that everyone is willing to accept it and go about their business. No wonder it only changes in one direction.

  40. Nope, business in both cases by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Net Neutrality is the government taking over the Internet, while a lack of Net Neutrality is big business taking over the Internet.

    This is incorrect. If we have learned anything over the past several years, regulations passed generally favor companies the strongly lobby the government in that field - the health care bill was a boon for insurance companies and drug manufacturers (the drug manufactures were the first to be placated with assurances many prices would not be lowered much).

    Similarly, the FCC network "neutrality" regulation just passed would seem to be informed by large companies like Google and Amazon, in conjunction with ISP and telco feedback. I said "seem" because the public has not been allowed to see the regulation to date, at least not before passage (and I cannot find the exact wording still).

    So your choice is really between letting the market dictate what happens to the internet, or a small handful of companies. Which do you prefer? Because realistically those ARE your choices. If you are fine with AT&T, Google and Amazon control the internet then by all means, Network Neutrality ho! Otherwise if you'd like to see the internet kept open, don't impose controls over how it can be run.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Nope, business in both cases by orgelspieler · · Score: 1

      If you are fine with AT&T, Google and Amazon control the internet then by all means, Network Neutrality ho!

      Better those guys than the asshats at Comcast.

    2. Re:Nope, business in both cases by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      Comcast is in on it too, along with all the other large ISP's. You don't think Comcast has lobbyists?

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  41. Partisanship by MikeD83 · · Score: 0

    The headline, summary and included link for this story is disgusting. I don't want to see foaming at the mouth liberal slanted stories masquerading as "news for nerds."

    The Republicans have been injected with Libertarian blood via the Tea Party movement. Their position on net neutrality is simple: federal government stay out of the internet. They may say whatever it takes to make that happen. The Democrats often use whatever "means to the end," to get the job done (think health care reform.) The Republicans are using this tool to paint doomsday scenarios on what could happen if the federal government were to get involved in regulating the internet (think housing market.)

    1. Re:Partisanship by PunditGuy · · Score: 1

      If you think that the lesson of the housing crash is that the government should have left private industry to its own devices, there's absolutely no hope for you whatsoever.

      I still don't understand how saying "you can't discriminate" is the same as a government takeover. Under that logic, every damn lunch counter in the southern U.S. must be the property of the feds.

    2. Re:Partisanship by night_flyer · · Score: 1

      Freddie and Fannie (gov't insurers), and Gov't threats of more regulation pushed banks to make loans to people who couldn't afford a home is what caused the housing crash.

      Yes banks got greedy in the end, because, hey, the gov't is going to back the loan... thanks for proving his point.

      --


      Thanks to file sharing, I purchase more CDs
      Thanks to the RIAA, I buy them used...
    3. Re:Partisanship by PunditGuy · · Score: 1

      Freddie and Fannie were laggers in the subprime market. The regulation that I think you're referring to said that banks could not use different loan criteria based on where the customer lives -- so if you made the business decision to offer NINJA loans in the suburbs, you had to offer them in the inner city as well. Nobody forced any bank to issue any NINJA loan.

      I'd be more likely to believe the fiction that the poor financial institutions were helpless in the face of big government if it weren't for the loan derivatives that were the real cause of the crisis. Wall Street gambled, abetted by the ratings agencies, and left taxpayers on the hook when the scheme ran out of steam.

  42. yeah, "right" by Black+Parrot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "The right" is against NN for the same reason "the right" rejects global warming: the rich and powerful don't want it.

    We've got an enormous problem with political ignorance and naivety in this country. The Republicans want to run the country in whatever way helps the rich get richer quicker. (If you don't accept that premise, go back and look at whose interests they consistently looked after when they held the White House and both houses of Congress, vs. whose interests they occasionally threw a bone to. By the time of the 2006 elections the leaders of various socially conservative movements were complaining that they were bringing in a lot of votes and not getting much of anything in return.)

    But there's a problem if you want to run a republic for the benefit of the rich: there aren't enough of them to win elections. So you have to find ways to get people to vote against their own best interests. But any decent politician knows that if they can make your knee jerk, they can make your finger twitch in the voting booth. So Republican politicians have offered the country things like the Southern Strategy, and the new Southwestern Strategy that they've been rolling out for the last ~5 years, and of course their association with the religious right. I.e., appeal to people's worst instincts rather than their best.

    But now, due to the aforementioned political ignorance and naivety, people think that whatever the Republican politicians want is an inherently conservative position. So we get idiotic ideas such as that global warming and net neutrality are leftist ideologies. People in this country need to wake up and smell the bullshit before they've been fucked beyond the point of no return.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    1. Re:yeah, "right" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People with different opinions are ignorant. Got it. Very "insightful", mods.

    2. Re:yeah, "right" by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      People with different opinions are ignorant. Got it. Very "insightful", mods.

      No, people who think USAian politics is about "conservative vs. liberal" rather than "rich vs. everyone else" are ignorant.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    3. Re:yeah, "right" by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>"The right" is against NN for the same reason "the right" rejects global warming: the rich and powerful don't want it.

      No, not at all. Not in the slightest.

      The "right" is against NN because they are paranoid of increased government powers. The power to regulate is the power to destroy, and all that.

      They don't want global warming because 1) They don't believe in it, and 2) Because their electrical bills will double or triple under most of the idiotic policies our benevolent overlords have come up with for regulating CO2 emissions.

      The only issue where the rank and file Republicans fought for rights for "the rich" was during the recent tax rate struggle, and that was mainly for the reason that they're against tax increases at all.

      Personally, I disagree with both 'the left' and 'the right' on all three of these issues, so I don't know what kind of comforting label I can choose for myself, but don't show your ignorance by misrepresenting the stances of others.

    4. Re:yeah, "right" by yoshi_mon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The "right" is against NN because they are paranoid of increased government powers.

      Wow you have been brainwashed.

      Ok, if that were even close to the case where was 'the right' during the 8 years of HUGE power grabs during W's years? Oh they were busy telling anyone that if they disagreed with such measures that they were un-American and whatnot.

      But seriously, if you have even the slightest bit of integrity you will apologize to everyone who had to read that and offer up something better.

      --

      Really, I know what I'm doing...Ohhhh, look at the shiny buttons!
    5. Re:yeah, "right" by Saint+Dharma · · Score: 2

      "The right" is against NN for the same reason "the right" rejects global warming: the rich and powerful don't want it.

      We've got an enormous problem with political ignorance and naivety in this country. The Republicans want to run the country in whatever way helps the rich get richer quicker. (If you don't accept that premise, go back and look at whose interests they consistently looked after when they held the White House and both houses of Congress, vs. whose interests they occasionally threw a bone to. By the time of the 2006 elections the leaders of various socially conservative movements were complaining that they were bringing in a lot of votes and not getting much of anything in return.)

      But now, due to the aforementioned political ignorance and naivety, people think that whatever the Republican politicians want is an inherently conservative position. So we get idiotic ideas such as that global warming and net neutrality are leftist ideologies. People in this country need to wake up and smell the bullshit before they've been fucked beyond the point of no return.

      I hate to say this, friend, but we are already fucked beyond the point of no return. Look at how easily the masses were manipulated by the Tea Party rhetoric that was bought and paid for by Corporatists who despised everything the Democrats and progressives stood for. Now they run the House and have a large chunk of the Senate at their whims, and they are promising more of the same in 2012. Personally, we are so fucked that it's going to take nothing more than pure Anarchy to bring us back.

    6. Re:yeah, "right" by swillden · · Score: 1

      The "right" is against NN because they are paranoid of increased government powers.

      Wow you have been brainwashed.

      Ok, if that were even close to the case where was 'the right' during the 8 years of HUGE power grabs during W's years? Oh they were busy telling anyone that if they disagreed with such measures that they were un-American and whatnot.

      The right is very happy to increase government power when it's to implement their agenda. That agenda, however, isn't as simple as "make the rich richer", in fact that's not really part of it at all, except insofar as both major parties are entirely too motivated by corporate donations. No, the Republican "ideology", if you want to call it that, is a set of disconnected notions around moral values (abortion bad, homosexuality bad, Islam bad, Christianity good), fear-driven protectionism (fear of terrorists, fear of immigrants, fear of drug addicts, fear of criminals), economic freedom (my stuff is mine, fear of taxes) and patriotic emotion. The main reason these ideas are very disconnected and occasionally self-inconsistent is because they come from different people. Sub-groups within the Republican party champion various of these issues.

      I know you're going to say I've been duped by the cover issues used to hide the real agenda, but I haven't. You're making invalid assumptions of unified purpose -- and a large body like the Republican party simply cannot have a unified purpose. There are definitely some people who use the party to push their personal wealth-making agenda, but they're exploiting an opportunity, not setting party goals. The same thing happens in the Democrats, actually, though the exploiters tend to come from somewhat different segments of industry (sometimes).

      Getting back to your "question", one thing the vast majority of Republicans actually do agree on is that big government is bad -- in theory. In practice, they're willing to accept it as long as it appears to helping whatever is personally important to them. During most of Dubya's years, "fighting terrorism" was an agenda item that united nearly all Republicans and a huge portion of Democrats as well, so massively expanding the federal government in the name of that goal was okay. The Medicare expansion was more controversial, but Bush did it during the time when Republicans were rallying behind him, and complaints were silenced with "Well, we need to give the Democrats something so that they won't oppose The War", not to mention the fact that a huge part of the active party membership is graying, and poor enough that they'll benefit.

      So, no it's not all about "riches for the rich". It's not really about that at all. Democrats are the people who think in terms of class warfare. When they're not busy giving big corporations what they want in exchange for campaign contributions, that is.

      In the case of NN, I think the bottom line is that there's very little true ideology around it outside of geek circles, which are too small to matter. This dearth of real opinion has left the topic ripe for subversion by small special interests -- in this case, big ISPs. By itself, that probably wouldn't work, but the fact that some prominent Democrats have gotten on board with NN has lead prominent Republicans to jump on the other side purely to make political hay. Being that said Republicans don't understand the actual issues, and have zero motivation to (since they don't really care about NN, but about beating up Democrats), all sorts of wild things have been spouted.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    7. Re:yeah, "right" by ShakaUVM · · Score: 0

      >The "right" is against NN because they are paranoid of increased government powers.

      Wow you have been brainwashed.

      If you had three brain cells to rub together, you'd have understood that I was using the third person in my quote. *I* don't believe that Net Neutrality is a takeover of the government. People like Glen Beck, Matt Drudge and Rush (the "right") do. I'm explaining their stance, not endorsing that.

      You'd have been able to figure that out if you thought for a second before making fucking moronic kneejerk posts.

      >>But seriously, if you have even the slightest bit of integrity you will apologize to everyone who had to read that and offer up something better.

      The irony is killing me.

    8. Re:yeah, "right" by Alef · · Score: 1

      People in this country need to wake up and smell the bullshit before they've been fucked beyond the point of no return.

      For what it's worth, as someone watching the US from the outside, I have since a few years back been investing my savings on the presumption that you already are pretty close to or past that point. I don't mean to offend, but considering the current political climate in the US, public spending deficits and trade deficits, it's hard to see how status quo could be sustained for more than at most a few decades without some really fundamental changes occurring. The way I see it, the US is currently running on momentum gathered during the 20th century, and the general perception that its economy is unbreakable.

    9. Re:yeah, "right" by yoshi_mon · · Score: 1

      If you had three brain cells to rub together, you'd have understood that I was using the third person in my quote. *I* don't believe that Net Neutrality is a takeover of the government. People like Glen Beck, Matt Drudge and Rush (the "right") do. I'm explaining their stance, not endorsing that.

      Let us look back at what you said:

      The "right" is against NN because they are paranoid of increased government powers. The power to regulate is the power to destroy, and all that.

      All that we have to go on is a pair of quotes that put the right in the 3rd person. But in addition you then go on to add that 2nd line which does little to clarify the issue. At this point there is very little in the way of knowing exactly where you stand. However you do kinda make an attempt to clear things up at the end:

      Personally, I disagree with both 'the left' and 'the right' on all three of these issues, so I don't know what kind of comforting label I can choose for myself, but don't show your ignorance by misrepresenting the stances of others.

      Not really much in the way of clarification. If anything I've seen that line from a lot of the current libertarians and "tea baggers". Neither of which are all that far away from the right on points that matter and have their own set of kookie issues as well.

      But lets put that all aside for the moment and get to the substance of the issue, since you avoided that part of my post. What exactly is your stance on "the right's" idea that the FCC is doing some sort of power grab when talking about NN when they were egging the Bush administration during it's 8 years of power grabs? Should we repeat that lie, as you did, or expose it?

      --

      Really, I know what I'm doing...Ohhhh, look at the shiny buttons!
    10. Re:yeah, "right" by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>What exactly is your stance on "the right's" idea that the FCC is doing some sort of power grab

      Paranoia.

      >>when they were egging the Bush administration during it's 8 years of power grabs?

      Irrelevant to the issue at hand, though people like the EFF have been pretty consistent in their stances over the years, and I support the EFF.

    11. Re:yeah, "right" by yoshi_mon · · Score: 1

      Paranoia.

      Irrelevant to the issue at hand, though people like the EFF have been pretty consistent in their stances over the years, and I support the EFF.

      Hum...your 2nd response actually makes your 1st one a lot more understandable. I think maybe both of us were maybe on edge because of the nature of this beast.

      So peace to you sir. I've a feeling we have more in common than not.

      --

      Really, I know what I'm doing...Ohhhh, look at the shiny buttons!
  43. Republicans = corporations by unity100 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    no, even more so than the democrats. they do not have any hesitation in opposing giving healthcare to 9/11 first responders, even after drumming up the nationalism/patriotism card for a decade.

    democrats have at least SOME consideration in regard to principle. they at least try to make whatever filth they are doing seem to fit their ideology, even in appearance. republicans dont even have that concern.

    whatever their private backers, corporations want at THAT given moment in time, they drum it. if the corporations want the exact opposite 2 months later, they see no issues reverting back. they even dont care whether someone may notice and make a fool of them in media. and at the end they end up the greatest material for news comedy shows.

    1. Re:Republicans = corporations by Lazbien · · Score: 1

      Citation needed.

    2. Re:Republicans = corporations by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      they do not have any hesitation in opposing giving healthcare to 9/11 first responders

      No, what they opposed was a bill that called for spending $11 billion without any clear explanation of what that dollar amount was chosen, or how it would be specifically spent. And - quite reaonably - many asked why a firefighter who got sick doing his job in NYC at that particular event is any more deserving than a firefighter in San Fransisco who gets sick while doing his job. That is, sick enough that people all over the country need to personally pay more taxes for more spending on those particular people in those particular situations. Why is this a federal issue, and not a New York issue? Why does a federal bill not take into account first responders everywhere in the country? How much more would that cost, if anything? Do you have the answers to those questions, as stated by the people backing the bill? Didn't think so. Neither did the people who put the brakes on that piece of legislation, and asked the Democrat controlled house and senate to answer those questions. Of course, that didn't serve Harry Reid or Nancy Pelosi's political agendas, so it didn't happen. Of course, you know all of that, and you're just trolling, and hoping that you can score some quick points with less-informed readers. Which makes you exactly the sort of asshat that you're claiming the Republicans are, in this case. You're cravenly using a the 9/11 responders as cheap political props. Hope that makes you feel good.

      even in appearance. republicans dont even have that concern

      No, they acted exactly according to principle. In this case, they wanted to know why a certain amount of new debt, borrowed from China and capriciously aimed at one group of people, was in the amount and form that it was.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    3. Re:Republicans = corporations by Viperpete · · Score: 1

      Republicans = corporations

      I would amend it to:

      Republicans = corporations + mainstream religion

      Democrats = a bunch of disorganized do-gooders that each have their own concept of what is "just" and try to shove it down your throat

      Libertarians = every person is king/queen of their castle/bailiwick (it's OK if corporations are considered a "person" in this context)

      personally I think more people are interested in politics (their local sports team is "their" team) vs. appropriate governance.

      --
      loose: not fitting closely or tightly != lose: to suffer the deprivation of
    4. Re:Republicans = corporations by unity100 · · Score: 1

      mainstream religion

      yes. they seem to use religion to herd people.

    5. Re:Republicans = corporations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you serious? Republicans have been reminding us every single year to remember the event. They bring some of the same first responders to Fox News to declare their disapproval for the Islamic community center (it ain't a mosque, no matter how they describe it). As for the cost: the Republicans shoved down a huge tax cut extension worth several HUNDRED times more than that health care agreement. The tax cuts were supposed to be temporary; are you going to argue that it was so vital to extend tax breaks for the wealthy before the end of the year? In the Right's "war on terror," it makes sense to support those bearing the brunt of the damage (so to speak). I'm originally from San Francisco, and I wouldn't try to justify the SF firefighter getting some of the same coverage (to use your example). It's not part of the responders' job description to go through piles and piles of rubble for months on end. Coincidentally, my teacher for my pulmonology class is the Chief Medical Officer for the FDNY.

      If they were truly worried about controlling costs, perhaps they could limit the money spent by the military, state department, or any other large sources. Saving $7 billion from a health bill is not going to make a big difference.

    6. Re:Republicans = corporations by Viperpete · · Score: 1

      but God said we should subsidize (random company name with no sense of consumer loyalty) so they can increase their bottomline.

      For too long only people could create value, automation will eventually fix that. When that happens only those who can afford to own automation will have a affluent lifestyle. Everyone else will be left in the dust, I guess the rest of us will have to squeak by just creating content or fixing their machines.

      --
      loose: not fitting closely or tightly != lose: to suffer the deprivation of
    7. Re:Republicans = corporations by unity100 · · Score: 1

      actually judging from what i saw and learned during my engineering training, it is possible to sustain this level of luxury even if only 1-2% of actual people work, thanks to automation, even today. resources and production is abundant (a lot of factories work on 20% or so capacity to force prices up in market), but not utilized, because the antidemocratic private interests who are holding them in their custody, do not want to have that kind of abundance. artificial scarcity ensues.

    8. Re:Republicans = corporations by Viperpete · · Score: 1

      Exactly my point, Prior to my stint in the Navy as an electronics tech, I worked in quite a few factories (joined the Navy at 26), being a Detroiter it was easy work to get.

      From what I have read and seen the extra production capacity is also used as leverage to break labor unions, the prime example being Caterpillar, where they opened factories in other counties that have 150% production capacity compared to previous plants. It only takes 2 of them for them to be able to close down a union plant and they then open a new one just miles away and hire on all the same people but without organized labor by bringing them all in as temps with individual contracts.

      I saw it happen a few years back to a TRW plant my mother worked shipping/receiving at. Closed the plant, laid everyone off, reopened one 5 miles away, anyone that migrated had to reapply for the same jobs at the new plant. All their floor staff are temps. from a contract house. So instead of having to join a union for a job, you have to work for a personnel contract house used exclusively by the manufacturer for their labor needs.

      --
      loose: not fitting closely or tightly != lose: to suffer the deprivation of
    9. Re:Republicans = corporations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So wait? Its my responsibility to pay for the health care of **New York** Fire Fighters? Especially when its 7 billion dollars just out of no where? Republican's did the wise thing in demanding it be paid for, but just charged to the almighty credit card in the sky that democrats worship.

    10. Re:Republicans = corporations by sabs · · Score: 1

      Wow,

      Do you hear yourself speak.

      Those guys went above and beyond their jobs.
      They worked tons of unpaid overtime digging through the rubble. Hoping to find survivors, but more so, hoping to give families closure and the ability to bury their dead.

      Are you seriously asking why this is a Federal issue and not a NY city issue?
      You do understand that the bill covers First Responders from other Cities that went to the Trade Center int he after math to help.

      And its' not new debt, as the damn bill has a revenue stream attached to it, to pay for the thing.

      You're probably the same guy who thinks that it's okay to forget about Soldiers disabled in action after a few years.

    11. Re:Republicans = corporations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which article in the Constitution gives congress the right to do anything related to the internet? Oh wait it didnt exist when the constitution was written.. Oh wait that means we need an amendment. It isnt that the so called right wing has no principles. It is that we think the retards ignoring the law of the land have none, and consistantly violate their oaths(Hell even the so called right wing politicians violate that oath nearly every day)

  44. Are you sure it's the Right wing who is lying? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A lot of these people look like Republicans, not conservatives. These are the same people who are strongly in favor of increasing the size, budget, and control over peoples' lives, for all levels of government (but especially federal) whenever their own campaign contributors are the ones who are lobbying to receive the subsidies.

    Quit calling them the "Right." They're Republicans. Quit implying they're conservatives. These people are less conservative than FDR and LBJ. Seriously.

    They are radical left-wing nutjobs, just with (some of the) different special interests funding them than the Democrats happen to use, and with a strange religious flavor to it all. There's nothing about wanting to merge government and religion, though, that means conservativism. That's not what conservativism is. Just as there's nothing conservative about using government force to create monoplies and then not regulating those monopolies.

    Conservatives can argue for deregulation, but it always comes with arguments to stop using government's powers to create monopolies. You're either for free markets or you're not, and if you're not, then you're not with "The Right."

    Somewhere along the line, National Socialism got a weird rep for being right-wing, because Hitler hated Stalin so much. Guys, get a clue: left-wing government control freaks can hate each other, because the other guy is the one who gets the control instead of me. National Socialism isn't right wing. Corporatism isn't right wing. Free markets are right wing, and free markets are where companies can fail and their stockholders lose money. Free markets have risk. If someone argues for a system, claiming it's a free market, where businesses are guaranteed a right to make money and also the investors are guaranteed to not lose money, then they are 1) not talking about free markets 2) national socialists (left wingers) 3) corrupt and already in someone's pocket.

    We can flame the hippies and commies later (and they deserve it too) but let's stop calling fascists Right Wing. Seriously, just stop it. You are preventing serious public debate when you try to conflate Republicanism with conservativism. They have almost nothing in common.

  45. Simple definition for Network Neutrality by lalena · · Score: 4, Informative

    Best explanation I ever heard was that without Network Neutrality, our home internet could become just like our mobile internet. It would take a while to get there, but given the limited number of providers in each city it is possible. We really can move backwards. I don't buy the "alternate vendor" argument. Most cities have only 1 or 2 viable options.
    You want chat with your internet. That's $5/month. You want email, voice mail, VOIP, games, NFL games, Blockbuster Streaming... That's extra. You want Netflix streaming. You can't have it. We don't have an agreement with them.
    Most people talk about Network Neutrality as if it is giving preferential speed to one site over another. It can be much worse. We saw what happened when torrents (legal or illegal) were deemed to cause most of their network load. They tried blocking them. My provider blocks the standard SMTP port just in case my computer is a SPAM BOT. How soon before they deem that streaming movies are responsible for 50% of their bandwidth (and are a direct competitor with their own Cable TV offerings) and they block streaming video to "improve quality" for those poor customers who have their bandwidth unjustly stolen from those few who watch TV shows on their computer.

    1. Re:Simple definition for Network Neutrality by KingSkippus · · Score: 1

      That's an awesome definition, and extraordinarily insightful. Thanks for the description, I'm going to start using this to explain net neutrality to my friends and family so they can finally understand why it's so important.

    2. Re:Simple definition for Network Neutrality by mr+crypto · · Score: 1

      Excellent explanation. Commercial sector after sector (airlines charging for baggage and whatnot) have discovered the magic of 'unbundling', which is often nothing more than making an experience so confusing that they end up nickel and diming you to death, and telcos want to do it here too.

    3. Re:Simple definition for Network Neutrality by WWWWolf · · Score: 1

      My provider blocks the standard SMTP port just in case my computer is a SPAM BOT.

      To be honest, that's actually a sensible strategy. Around here, it's even a law: ISPs just can't let customers have egress SMTP traffic, it all has to go through the smarthost. SMTP is a broken protocol that should be replaced as soon as we have a sensible alternative (and unluckily, no one has proposed one yet).

  46. Lets call it what it really is... by Sir_Dill · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The reality is that Net Neutrality has nothing to do with neutrality and everything to do with carriers wanting to enjoy common carrier protections without having to provide common carrier openess.

    Companies like Comcast, Verizon, and AT&T want to be able to not only charge their customers for internet access, but also charge the companies like Google, Amazon, and Netflix for the traffic that their customers generate when accessing those sites. Look at the recent move Comcast made against Level3, "Hey guys, nice work on getting that Netflix account, oh by the way we're going to charge you more to connect to us because you are supplying connectivity for a company which competes with our OnDemand services, thank you for choosing Comcast". What would have happened if Level3 said "meh....I don't think so" and turned off peering to Comcast. Who would have suffered? Mostly us, the consumers. Awesome.

    It's also about being allowed to prioritize network traffic for hosted services over competing third party services, although beating voip providers on price (ala bundling) has pretty much destroyed most of the third party VOIP providers. Being able to provide a better quality hosted product is real easy when you de-prioritize competing services traffic on your network. A few months of poor performance and customers will be switching to hosted services in droves. I think we can all agree that this would fall into the "anti-competitive practices" category. The thing is, they might be doing this already, except that its technically not illegal, or at least its difficult enough to prove that plausible deniability plays a significant role and there is no legal precedent set to file suit on. Net Neutrality laws would make this illegal and at the very least require them to disclose that they are doing it.

    Anyone can see that charging Google or Microsoft money whenever a customer accesses the site is wrong. Somehow they have twisted this into them getting a free ride on their network. Nevermind that the customer is paying for access to the internet and that the site being accessed is also paying to be connected to the internet.

    I am all for traffic shaping based on volume to ensure equal access to all traffic, but if you are using public funds to prop up your infrastructure, you better have full disclosure available.


    THIS is what they are really talking about and it has nothing to do with the government "taking over" the internet. Of course they tend to screw up most things they touch so I have very little faith that even if they do try to regulate things, that they will do a decent job.


    On a side note, many people on both "sides" like to blame de-regulation for the banking problems we have had, and then argue against any other forms of regulation on the basis that regulation is bad and against the free market.
    First off lets get one thing straight, there is no such thing as a free market. Whether by government hands or private hands, someone will ALWAYS be manipulating the rules in their favor. We are not free, but merely have the illusion of freedom so long as we don't piss the wrong person off.

    1. Re:Lets call it what it really is... by haapi · · Score: 1

      I agree with much of your post, especially on traffic-shaping.

      I consider applying QOS and traffic-shaping to be "neutral" actions when not based on content or specific endpoints.

      --
      Well, apparently, you only have to fool the majority of people for a little while.
    2. Re:Lets call it what it really is... by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      Look, we have had Internet access to residential customers priced at a market-building level for around 15 years now. Low, low prices especially for DSL access - sometimes as low as $15 a month. This has been great for the consumer.

      Unfortunately for the consumer the market-building phase is ending. Just about everyone that can afford the $15 a month has the Internet now in their home and the are unlikely to give up easy access to free music, movies, heavily biased blogs and shopping at Amazon. But if the prices go up people are going to complain and perhaps set off a war between providers.

      So the answer is to charge the heck out of the folks really making money on the Internet. Why would anyone complain about Google getting dinged instead of the guy living in a trailer with a 384K DSL connection? Oh, wait. That might affect access to those heavily biased blogs that consume 0.0001% of the bandwidth.

      Let's get real here. The issue is going to be a war between big bandwidth consumers. The structure of the Internet access in the US isn't going to allow for real, dedicated bandwidth over 300K to every home with an Internet connection. So when IPTV moves beyond the nerdy early-adopter stage there are going to be some major issues. It isn't going to be the cable provider vs. Netflix because the cable provider has dedicated bandwidth to the consumers. Netflix doesn't. Hulu doesn't. The bandwidth competition will be between Netflix and Hulu, for example. Amazon's video service vs. Apple vs. Google TV. Anybody out there trying to get bits to the consumer in large quantities.

      Why don't they just increase capacity? Unfortunately, that is a lot easier concept to articulate than to actually accomplish. With cable there is a fiber connection to the "neighborhood node" that serves maybe 1000 homes. One. Fiber. Connection. Divided up across all 1000 homes. When they are reading email and shopping at Amazon this is plenty. Vast overkill. When everyone wants to watch IPTV it is a small fraction of what is required. We are talking about rewiring the neighborhoods with more nodes and more dedicated fiber.

      Yeah, that is going to happen at some point, but probably not for a long time. If the cable companies start today they might get it done in five years. Or ten. And right now, with only a small percentage of people actually using things like Netflix it isn't justified to even start the project. Also, there is a serious question what kind of capacity is really going to be needed. Build too much and you waste money. Build too little and it doesn't work any better than what there is today.

      So a serious question is what is going to be needed 10 years? Because they need to start building it in five.

      All of this noise about control is just that. Noise. Sure, it is a bad idea for the government to regulate bandwidth allocation because they will do it badly for everyone involved. It is equally a bad idea to have Google or Comcast regulating Netflix's bandwidth allocation. We have had "plenty" of bandwidth for all applications for the last 15 years or so. We are about to not have enough by a very large percentage. I don't see how anyone is going to be happy, but government regulation of what is available sounds like a really bad idea.

      At least we can look forward to some creative methods from one or two smaller ISPs to deal with this. The big ones are likely to be very uncreative, probably about like the government would be. It is highly likely the next 10 years or so will be difficult until this is (a) sorted out and (b) 100x current capacity is available to the consumer.

    3. Re:Lets call it what it really is... by jimrthy · · Score: 1

      Anytime you exchange something with someone else without a gun to your head, you're participating in the free market.

      Admittedly, that doesn't happen very often (sales tax, corporations, union lobbyists, legal monopolies, the FCC, etc, etc all get the government's thumb into the pie). But actual manipulation by "private hands" is a totally different matter. They aren't allowed to murder you if you don't follow their rules.

    4. Re:Lets call it what it really is... by isaac · · Score: 1

      One fiber pair is enough to serve IPTV to 1000 homes, easily. 10 gig ethernet is commodity, that's 10 Mbits per subscriber. Move to wavelength-division multiplexing and you can get 40-320gbits over that single pair. What needs upgrades is not the fiber plant but the neighborhood and head end equipment.

      --
      I am not a lawyer, and this is not legal advice. For Entertainment Purposes Only.
    5. Re:Lets call it what it really is... by Sir_Dill · · Score: 1

      Look, we have had Internet access to residential customers priced at a market-building level for around 15 years now. Low, low prices especially for DSL access - sometimes as low as $15 a month. This has been great for the consumer.

      Citation Needed I personally don't know anyone that can get broadband for 15 bucks a month. The cheapest plan I can find locally is 19.99 for 6 months and then 59.99 every month thereafter, and that 19.99 is closer to 30 bucks after the taxes are taken out....oh and some of those taxes are there to support infrastructure.
      While we're on the subject of infrastructure and costs, don't forget that the federal government (that's yours and mine tax dollars) helped to fund and continues to fund the buildout of those networks through the Universal Service Fund.

      Unfortunately for the consumer the market-building phase is ending. Just about everyone that can afford the $15 a month has the Internet now in their home and the are unlikely to give up easy access to free music, movies, heavily biased blogs and shopping at Amazon. But if the prices go up people are going to complain and perhaps set off a war between providers.

      So the answer is to charge the heck out of the folks really making money on the Internet. Why would anyone complain about Google getting dinged instead of the guy living in a trailer with a 384K DSL connection? Oh, wait. That might affect access to those heavily biased blogs that consume 0.0001% of the bandwidth.

      Communications infrastructure occupies a unique position in the market. It connects consumers to multiple third parties who are all individually paying for their own access to the communication network. Now don't get me wrong, I see what your point is, but its wrong. What you are suggesting is that as the phone company, not only should I be allowed to charge my customers for phone service, but I should also be able to charge any businesses they call because I facilitated that exchange EVEN THOUGH the business is paying for the phone line in. How about this, where do you draw the line? I host my own website, should all the ISPs in the world be able to bill me when their customers connect to my site? Personal sites don't make any money, okay what about if it links to my Etsy store?

      Anymore, data service to your home or business is more of a utility than a service. The difference is that the utility provider thinks they deserve a cut of a third parties profits when one of their customers does business with them and I take serious issue with that. Bits are bits and don't cost any more to deliver to amazon than they do to deliver to grandmas blog.

      Let's get real here. The issue is going to be a war between big bandwidth consumers. The structure of the Internet access in the US isn't going to allow for real, dedicated bandwidth over 300K to every home with an Internet connection. So when IPTV moves beyond the nerdy early-adopter stage there are going to be some major issues. It isn't going to be the cable provider vs. Netflix because the cable provider has dedicated bandwidth to the consumers. Netflix doesn't. Hulu doesn't. The bandwidth competition will be between Netflix and Hulu, for example. Amazon's video service vs. Apple vs. Google TV. Anybody out there trying to get bits to the consumer in large quantities.

      The thing you are missing is that Netflix, Hulu, Google, et al already pay to put those bits on the network. They spend TONS of money each month to maintain their connectivity to the net. So you're saying in addition to that, they should pay a tariff to every ISP when one of the ISP's subscribers uses their service?

      What happens when they don't pay?
      It certainly isn't Google that suffers.

      There is already competition between the big bandwidth consumers. Its not over the last mile connection to the actual customer of

    6. Re:Lets call it what it really is... by Tenebrousedge · · Score: 1

      We knew this was coming. We paid---twice, and handsomely---for improvements to our national infrastructure. Gave hundreds of billions to the telecoms. They pocketed the bonus and thumbed their noses all the way to the bank. Citation.

      --
      Those who advocate genocide deserve every protection afforded by law, and none afforded by common human decency.
    7. Re:Lets call it what it really is... by marvinglenn · · Score: 1

      The reality is that Net Neutrality has nothing to do with neutrality and everything to do with carriers wanting to enjoy common carrier protections without having to provide common carrier openess.

      I don't have mod points, so I have to post. It's discouraging to see so much lefty-Flavor-Aid blather here at +5, and something like this only sitting at +4 (at the time of me seeing it).

      --
      The whores get mad when the sluts give it away for free.
  47. Which is more realistic by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    What if ISPs and common carriers started deciding to block FoxNews.com because they didn't like the message?

    No ISP has ever done that. Mostly because if they did so they would cease to be a common carrier and be liable for every torrent. Do you see how the system is self-regulating to prevent this issue?

    What has happened though, is the government has altered the DNS system to re-direct (not just block) access to sites THEY did not like.

    So in arguing the case I'd come way harder down on the side of the bad things happening that derive from what has already happened, vs. theoretical "burning hellfire strawman" issues that simply do not happen in reality.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Which is more realistic by internic · · Score: 1

      No ISP has ever done that. Mostly because if they did so they would cease to be a common carrier and be liable for every torrent. Do you see how the system is self-regulating to prevent this issue?

      Broadband ISPs are not common carriers. In fact, for the reason you point out, if they were common carriers then I believe we would effectively have net neutrality enforced (just as with phone service), and some have suggested this as a solution.

      --
      "You call it a new way of thinking; I call it regression to ignorance!" -- Operation Ivy
    2. Re:Which is more realistic by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      "No ISP has ever done that."

      No, but some mobile ISPs have blocked VoIP, as it competes with their very profitable phone service.

    3. Re:Which is more realistic by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      Mostly because if they did so they would cease to be a common carrier and be liable for every torrent.

      ISPs are not common carriers. ISPs do get the benefits of common carrier status (immunity among other things). In essence, this is what Net Neutrality is all about -- forcing ISPs to have the same responsibility common carriers have.

      A real common carrier is not allowed to charge different prices to different customers. They can offer tiered pricing, or discounts, but the same options and discounts must be given to all customers. This is why you can't negotiate special rates from Federal Express -- as a common carrier, all customers must get the same discounts -- so there is a strict volume-based discount offered to everyone.

      Net Neutrality, roughly, is asking ISPs to adhere to common carrier restrictions on their offerings.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    4. Re:Which is more realistic by m509272 · · Score: 1

      That's exactly what it should be, common carrier and one side pays, either the sender or the consumer. It's been the consumer so far as they are requesting the data be sent to them. This is in contrast to cellular service where both sides pay.

      No transmission provider should be able to deny sending the data through and there should be no way a data provider should be paying anything more for "faster" lanes. They are already paying to connect to the backbone. I'm the consumer and I decide the speed at which I wish to receive data. Faster, I pay more. It's plain and simple. These ISPs simply want to double charge and that should never happen. I want real net neutrality not what the FCC is calling "net neutrality".

  48. yes. by unity100 · · Score: 1

    you tend to frown on any new govt. authority. and, therefore fairies will descend from the sky and protect your freedoms against private interests.

    1. Re:yes. by Freddybear · · Score: 1

      Who is going to protect my freedoms against the government?

    2. Re:yes. by unity100 · · Score: 1

      you.

      its your responsibility to claim ownership of your government, and use it as a tool to protect your freedoms. government, was invented for that purpose.

      no 'invisible hand' will come and protect your freedoms.

    3. Re:yes. by Freddybear · · Score: 1

      "More government regulation" is not the way in which I choose to exercise that responsibility.

    4. Re:yes. by unity100 · · Score: 1

      too bad. because there is no magical construct, apparatus, 'invisible hand' that is going to come to your aid. either you take the responsibility and the only tool known to mankind up to date to effect it, or your liberties get violated, 'privately'.

    5. Re:yes. by Freddybear · · Score: 1

      Adam Smith's "invisible hand" is not a magical construct. It's very real, and is simply the response of free consumers in a free marketplace to the desirability and the cost of goods and services. My liberty is more at risk from Obama and his henchmen (including those at the FCC) than it is from the free market.

    6. Re:yes. by unity100 · · Score: 1

      adam smith's invisible hand, is a belief. a belief which has been admitted to being unworkable, by the very priest of that church, alan greenspan, just a year ago during his testimony in front of the senate inquiry committee.

      'simply the response of free consumers in a free marketplace' is the greatest bullshit in the light of the fact that a company which is as big as a country, has the power to dominate and limit the choice of the consumers you speak of. 4 of these companies, are enough to totally dominate a country. think to yourself, why the hell has the prices of music media has remained around $15 apiece, despite there has been great cost reduction through technologies for production and distribution. buy a cleaning product tomorrow. but this time, check the logo that sits under the small print at the back. then check other cleaning products in the rack, seemingly with different brands. see that your entire cleaning supply is actually produced by just 2-3 corporations, but sold with different brands.

      your choice is a stupid belief. it exists as much as the choice of a serf going somewhere else in the kingdom and being 'free' existed, back in middle ages.

    7. Re:yes. by Freddybear · · Score: 1

      Whoops, sorry, economics is not a religion. Well, maybe your belief in Big Government vs Big Business is, but that's your problem, not mine.

  49. Re:The evil "American Right"...yup by DCFusor · · Score: 4, Insightful
    No, just evil people who grab and increase their power over us because we are dumb enough to let them. We've even let them destroy the language -- liberal used to mean something a lot more like "libertarian" and "conservative" used to mean, you know, look before you leap, spend less than you make, stuff like that. Or even "not all change is for the better, so examine it first before deciding".

    I'm a conservative. No one represents me in government, no one.
    No one in government represents any of my neighbors either, not all of whom are "conservative".
    You can even be a (real) conservative and realize that families are important and should be encouraged -- even ones headed up by married gays. Gheesh, how did those idiots let themselves be hijacked by the radicals? (which applies to either left or right as far as I can tell, just different radicals involved -- sometimes)

    Why did we let them get to this point, where now there is no way to just vote the bastards out? Some choice we get at the polls -- people selected by the "two heads of the same monster" are our "choice".

    This is indistinguishable from a police/fascist state no matter who is in power now.

    --
    Why guess when you can know? Measure!
  50. Solve what problem? by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    That'd solve the issue of ISPs extorting content producers from the other side of the internet.

    SInce we do not have that problem today why are you seeking to "solve" it?

    I don't have eels in my pants, are you also going to pass a law mandating pants with narrow openings and eel traps to "prevent" that problem too?

    When you start trying to solve imaginary problems you can get really bad regulations, really fast.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Solve what problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, considering that the big "ISP + Media" companies have pretty much stated that net neutrality is bad because they "have to" throttle services that compete with their own services or teh intarwebz will implodez!!!11ohnoes!!1 I'm pretty sure that this is a serious issue.

      Basically, the only reason net neutrality even appeared as an issue was because a few of the big players realized that they could play dirty in order to maximize their own profit (like say, $SITE pays $ISP_1 for access to the net, $ISP_1 peers with $ISP_2, now $ISP_2 realizes that it wants to charge $SITE to not throttle access for $ISP_2's customers. Another scenario is that $ISP_2 wants to charge its customers extra for unthrottled access to $SITE). If everyone had kept playing nice the net neutrality issue wouldn't even have appeared in the first place.

      You can thank greedy corporate scumbags who have no problems with breaking a working system in order to make a few more bucks for doing nothing ("Pay us and we do nothing, don't pay us and we throttle you" seems to be the general trend).

    2. Re:Solve what problem? by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      When you start trying to solve imaginary problems you can get really bad regulations, really fast.

      As I implied, I doubt that we're going to get any kind of "good regulation" out of this. When you think of it as a "pre-emptive strike" (against SBC/AT&T's CEO's saber rattling over companies "using their network" "for free" which set the whole tempest off, teapot or not) it certainly does make a lot of sense: we'll go in with a lot of bullshit and get mired for years before everyone decides that it wasn't worth it in the beginning.

      We're currently in the "mired for years" stage.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    3. Re:Solve what problem? by LingNoi · · Score: 1

      Oh jeeze do you never read up on this stuff? It's already happened to sites such as youtube. Your whole post is bunk.

    4. Re:Solve what problem? by zeroshade · · Score: 1

      Since we do not have that problem today why are you seeking to "solve" it?

      We Don't?

      Many ISPs and other companies have been rattling about wanting to do pretty much everything that the concept of Net Neutrality is against for years. Up until 2005, Net Neutrality was pretty much law. It was a Supreme Court case that undid it.

      As another example, maybe you remember in 2006 when AOL blocked all emails that mentioned www.dearaol.com.

      While what the FCC passed as "Net Neutrality" was not in fact Net Neutrality in anything but name, do not claim that it is solving an "imaginary" problem because that is outright wrong.

    5. Re:Solve what problem? by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      We [wired.com] Don't [techcrunch.com]?

      How will the passed net nuetrality regulation affect either of those things?

      One is telco industry financial porn that would vary rates by service - and never actually be put into play because customers would revolt to other carriers.

      The other is about a PEERING agreement, which the regulations say nothing about and never have.

      As another example, maybe you remember in 2006 when AOL blocked all emails that mentioned www.dearaol.com.

      And why would any regulation bock that? Are you seriously saying spam filtering is now outlawed?

      While what the FCC passed as "Net Neutrality" was not in fact Net Neutrality in anything but name, do not claim that it is solving an "imaginary" problem because that is outright wrong.

      No network neutrality proposed to date solves any of the "problems" you listed - you'll note that the free market in fact handled them quite well.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    6. Re:Solve what problem? by zeroshade · · Score: 1

      How will the passed net neutrality regulation affect either of those things?

      I already said that what the FCC passed was not really Net Neutrality. I was addressing the fact what is actually desired from Net Neutrality does not solve an "imaginary" problem as many people keep saying.

      One is telco industry financial porn that would vary rates by service - and never actually be put into play because customers would revolt to other carriers

      Yet if all the carriers do this, there's no where to revolt to. There's not enough competition to prevent it. Not only that, but all the big named ISPs in the US have already been saying they have plans to do this type of thing and have been lobbying enough that the passed regulation might even allow it under the guise of "premium services" or whatnot.

      The other is about a PEERING agreement, which the regulations say nothing about and never have.

      Comcast is asking level 3 to pay them more money to carry the traffic that Comcast's own customers have requested. You obviously believe what Comcast has said, however it seems a little too convenient when they have only done this now, level 3 carries Netflix's data, and it competes against a video streaming service Comcast owns. Aside from the fact that why should level 3 have to pay extra to Comcast to give its customers the data they requested? Comcast is already being paid by its customers. From the techcrunch link:

      Wrong. What Comcast is really doing is holding a certain set of bits hostage. Level 3 does act like a backbone and it is an extremely important backbone. Anything you do online probably touches Level 3 at some point. Therefore, to force Level 3 to pay what a CDN does to blow content through Comcast’s network is non-competitive

      As another example, maybe you remember in 2006 when AOL blocked all emails that mentioned www.dearaol.com

      And why would any regulation block that? Are you seriously saying spam filtering is now outlawed?

      Who said anything about spam? When they set up that block, people couldn't send any emails to their own friends if they contained a link to www.dearaol.com. Spam filters should be handled by whatever client you use to use email, in this case I can understand Aol having a spam filter considering that they are the email provider, but this has nothing to do with spam. A spam filter should send spam into a spam folder, this was AOL preventing anyone from SENDING an email to any AOL user where the email contained that link. It's outright censorship, blocking emails based on content.

      No Network Neutrality proposed to date solves any of the "problems" you listed - you'll note that the free market in fact handled them quite well.

      Actually, the Network Neutrality that the advocacy groups are proposing, that most of the Net Neutrality advocates on slashdot have been stating they want, would solve these problems by disallowing them. The free market didn't handle any of them. Up until 2005 carriers weren't allowed to do any of this. That's when Net Neutrality was removed (note, that Net Neutrality is not a new desire, it's a desire to replace an old regulation). Since 2005, ISPs have been testing the waters with what they can get away with because there is just simply not enough competition at all. Comcast still throttles Bittorrent traffic, and the "free market" hasn't solved that yet.

      What about in 2007 when Verizon censored text messages sent from a Pro-Choice group to its supporters? Give me a break, abuses are happening all the time. The problem is not imaginary. And yes, the FCC's passed "Net Neutrality" rules are no where near what is needed or desired. It doesn't mean that Net Neutrality isn't needed.

  51. Shame on you Rob by Orgasmatron · · Score: 0

    I know this is your site and you can do what you want, but this is just disgusting.

    I don't give a fuck about the media on either side, but not everyone that disagrees with Net Neutrality (in capital letters) is a misguided puppet of some evil mastermind.

    I'm in favor of net neutrality (in small letters), and, like art, I'm pretty sure that I'd know it if I saw it, but I don't imagine that I, or anyone else, could codify it into a law that I'd be willing to impose on everyone by force. And even if I could, I'm not sure that it would be a good idea even then; we are a nation with too many well intended laws with horrible unintended consequences.

    If you want real neutrality, the right way to do it is to break the artificial government created monopolies at the last mile. I'm typing this from a town of about 1800 people that has not granted an exclusive cable franchise (monopoly), so there are two cable companies, both offering fiber to the home starting at about $40/month. 40 miles away, there is a city of 120,000 people that has an exclusive cable franchise (monopoly) with Charter where you can get shitty cable modem service for $70/month.

    Now, internet users in which of those two cities is the most likely to have real net neutrality, with or without a Net Neutrality law?

    --
    See that "Preview" button?
  52. It's the constitutionality!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A fundamental issue in all of this is that the FCC is taking on law making abilities for itself. Note that the original post says that this replacing an original law ... a constitutionally created law by elected representatives. Now when this administration cannot get what it want's constitutionally, it goes through the regulatory route. Now, why can't they get this passed as law when they had control of the entire government??? Perhaps there are issues. Now we have a regulation that nobody has seen, nobody here can influence through their vote, and who knows what side effects it will have.

    But most slashdot readers don't know or care about the constitution unless it effects a left wing cause - so no surprise that it hasn't been brought up yet

  53. too late, the war is lost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The might right will trudge along the same way they always have -- "stay the course" is the only way they can operate -- ne'r mind that the course is over the cliff like lemings. The problem is they will pull those of who are centrists along with them. That's not to say that those to the left would not have us all sit down and have a belly button contemplation while allowing the extremely rich to pick our pockets. Maybe we could implement a plan like a statistical clipped mean -- remove the 10% at each end before voting. I suppose that wouldn't do all that much though since the number of parties in the US is so small -- the vote of a centrist who's leaning slightly right at the moment counts as much as the most raving right wing nut job.

  54. Proof Net Neutrality Is Communism! by Ukab+the+Great · · Score: 5, Funny

    Karl Marx supports communism.
    Steve Wozniak supports net neutrality.
    Karl Marx had a beard.
    Steve Wozniak has a beard.
    Therefore, Steve Wozniak is a communist and net neutrality is communism.

    Similarly:

    Clowns are have painted white faces and entertain people.
    Rush Limbaugh has a white face and entertains people.
    Therefore, Rush Limbaugh is a clown.

    1. Re:Proof Net Neutrality Is Communism! by spidercoz · · Score: 1

      Your logic is impeccable, sir.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - Evelyn Beatrice Hall, re Voltaire
  55. Open your eyes and your mind by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Again, liberal voices tell us one thing and give us their warped version of "freedom" and that is freedom only for those in lock-step with their narrow point of view (that is, suppression of any conflicting point of view). True freedom does not come from regulation, but rather from the absence of it. The solution is so so so simple... if any ISP controls and throttles any content for any reason, then let freedom of speech spread the word and watch any offending ISP wither and die for lack of customers.

    What I don't want is any government official (right or left or anything else) telling an ISP how to appropriately filter content so the result is "neutral" or any other propaganda term they come up with to hide the fact they want to CONTROL what I can see and do on the Internet. They are already telling us what type of lightbulbs we can purchase, what foods we should and should not eat, what cars to drive, and are in the process of driving up oil prices. Encourage everyone to look at this objectively - from the past results of liberal/progressive actions, not their propaganda, and see this threat for what it is.

    Remember, this is brought to you by the people who now want a "no labels" approach to politics - after their liberal/progressive brand has been rejected by the majority of the people. Liberty, what a concept! While I do not like the potential for chaos found in the liberterian philosophy, I am beginning to understand its appeal.

    1. Re:Open your eyes and your mind by AF_Cheddar_Head · · Score: 1

      NN is designed to prevent anyone (government or corporate) telling you what content you can access.

      Oh by the way isn't nice that the government tells that nice farmer that he can't dump all his cow shit in your drinking water. Oh no that's government regulation so that is wrong.

  56. The Rights View of Net Neutrality by rlp · · Score: 3, Informative

    Here's a sampling of articles from conservatives / libertarians on net neutrality:

    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/01/18/kahn_net_neutrality_warning/

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6rOQpQYQtA0

    http://www.onlyrepublican.com/orinsf/2006/06/neutrality_for_.html

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=juw5Ew_fKgs

    http://dailycaller.com/2010/12/17/free-press-and-the-art-of-profligate-fudging/

    http://hotair.com/archives/2010/12/28/if-the-fcc-had-regulated-the-internet-from-the-beginning/

    http://michellemalkin.com/2010/04/06/net-neutrality-aint-over-til-its-over/

    http://www.freetoassemble.com/blog/cincinnatuschili/net-neutrality-comcast-vs-level-3-communications

    A few points:

    1) Not all conservatives / libertarians oppose net neutrality
    2) Most of these writers have a pretty good understanding of the issue
    3) Several who oppose it do it on free market principles
    4) There is a legitimate distrust of the FCC - some view the net neutrality issue as being used as an excuse for an FCC power grab

    --
    [Insert pithy quote here]
    1. Re:The Rights View of Net Neutrality by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>1) Not all conservatives / libertarians oppose net neutrality

      Very true. TFA - a Daily KOS piece - is mostly focusing on Glen Beck / Rush Limbaugh, who are being pretty paranoid about it.

      So far, I think the FCC has been doing a pretty good job keeping the anti-competitive practices of the concessioned monopolies (like Comcast) in check, without overstepping their bounds.

    2. Re:The Rights View of Net Neutrality by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      3) Several who oppose it do it on free market principles

      The free market used to think it was okay to let guys fall into the sausage grinder and then serve that up to you at home.

      We've already seen a dozen times that unregulated free market principles lead to monopolies and market abuses.
      Net Neutrality regulations are no more an infringement on free markets than the FDA's regulations on food quality.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    3. Re:The Rights View of Net Neutrality by webdog314 · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, Glen Beck and Rush Limbaugh compose a major percentage of where conservatives get their "news". Add FOX to that mix and I bet you cover close to 95%. Any conservative who reads outside the problem networks already correctly knows the issues for and against Net Neutrality, but they're not the ones the GOP is going to be listening to when it comes down to saving their seat.

    4. Re:The Rights View of Net Neutrality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) Not all conservatives / libertarians oppose net neutrality

      No, but most do.

      2) Most of these writers have a pretty good understanding of the issue

      Of course, "these writers" are the ones you linked to - and you specifically chose the links because you thought they had a good understanding of the issue, so this is a non-statement.

      3) Several who oppose it do it on free market principles

      And thus fall back to dumb ideology. It's well-known that an absolutely free market without ANY kind of oversight is not stable; freedom, including freedom of the market, must be preserved. This means that we need to look at issues such as Net Neutrality in details, rather than dismissing them out of hand based on an ideology.

      4) There is a legitimate distrust of the FCC - some view the net neutrality issue as being used as an excuse for an FCC power grab

      There are also people who believe that Obama is Kenya-born cryptomuslim communist whose secret mission is to destroy the American Way of Life(tm).

    5. Re:The Rights View of Net Neutrality by orthicviper · · Score: 1

      A company that lets that happen probably wouldn't be in business for long. And if there were no government inspectors, there could be various businesses that do checks on the business and certify them as safe. Government really isn't necessary for the job of inspection to be done. People could only choose to buy meat certified by whatever certification-business they trust most, instead of the FDA. Look at all the bad medicine the FDA lets slip through and kill people. Can we trust the FDA to prevent us from being fed human sausage?

    6. Re:The Rights View of Net Neutrality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The minute you hear the words "power grab" you know you are dealing with tested language - passed through polls and focus groups to see what can have the most effect. What does it really mean? Seriously, it sounds bad but does it mean something? Government power grab? We, the People are grabbing power from ... who?

      And "free market principles"? What does that mean? There is no such thing as a free market. A market can't exist without government. Who decides what the money is? WHo sets up the courts to settle disputes?

      Think about this, if you get government (We, the People) out of the way what fills the vacuum? Maybe the biggest corporations?

    7. Re:The Rights View of Net Neutrality by Jerome+from+Layton · · Score: 1

      Pretty good approach. Consider the idea that an entity that has the power to keep someone from impairing a source such as bit torrent can also require the same someone to impair another service such as Heritage.org "for the prevention of hate speak". The opposing side could decide that there is a problem with Daily Kos for their own reasons. Finally, there is a serious legal problem for the FCC that could involve Contempt of Court due to previous court decisions against the imposition of "Net Neutrality" and several previous Congressional decisions against it, too. In my previous response to an FCC NPRM, I noted that my present service has at least five competitors in the Layton, UT area and that regulation in this area was not warranted. I don't think I was alone in making this observation. The FCC could be required to produce all the comments to their proposal by Congress as part of the preparation for a Hearing under the Federal Records Act. As Nancy Pelosi put it, "Elections have consequences."

  57. You're right! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The mean old mister government shouldn't regulate the food you eat! I'm sure the free market will protect their consumers and not have outbreak after outbreak of salmonella.

  58. Um, it is a takover by Taylor123456789 · · Score: 0

    Before now, there was no governmental control over the internet. the Internet was regulated by NGOs such as ICANN. Now, the FCC has imposed its authority over the internet with this "net neutrality" policy.

    "Takeover" is defined as, "To seize with authority". By exerting its supposed authority over the internet, the FCC has indeed made a takeover of the internet. While some may argue that the low level of interference is not a grand takeover, the FCC has asserted authority, and can now impose any regulation it sees fit. Thus, it has seized with authority, and made a takeover of the internet.

    As a right-winger myself, I am not that concerned with the actual net neutrality policy. I am concerned with the FCC imposing its authority over the internet without any authorization from Congress. In the last two years, we have seen the government "takeover" the banking industry, the finance industry, the health care industry, the automobile industry, and now the internet. Anyone see a pattern here?

  59. Calling a law Net Neutrality doesn't make it so by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Talk about a condescending post.
    Don't confuse the concept of Net Neutrality with the government's implementation of it. Just because we have a Patriot Act doesn't mean that it's patriotic any more than calling something Net Neutrality means that's what they are trying to achieve. As a right-leaning person, I don't have a problem with the concept of keeping web traffic neutral to keep ISPs from throttling traffic but I do have a serious problem with giving the federal government greater control over what's passed over the Internet. If you think anyone in congress has any clue on what Net Neutrality is and that they can craft legislation to protect it, you're crazy. You think the only danger out there is the evil ISPs but I would be far more concerned with getting the US government involved. I don't know how left-leaning people concerned with Freedom of Speech, etc would so happily grant the FCC more control over the Internet. If George Bush was president, would you be against this bill? In general, I think if Democrats could imagine their most hated right-wing politician wielding the new governmental power that you want to grant to the federal government, they'd be less willing to do so; because, in a few years, that's a real possibility (Repubs already have the House).

  60. When by SuperKendall · · Score: 0

    When your ISP demands more money from a website that you subscribe to, and that site raises its rates a month later?

    Hasn't happened.

    When your ISP intercepts your DNS requests and returns incorrect responses?

    You mean like the government just did? The same government you want to hand control over to?

    throttling

    Hasn't happened. Remember that what Comcast did was forging packets, which had the side effect of throttling. Not proposed regulation would have stopped them from doing this.

    demands more money to prevent traffic being discriminated against

    Also has not happened, but what you also start to prevent is some sites like Netflix paying more IF THEY WANT to have an ISP deliver smoother video to you.

    Basically, none of the bad things you predicted are even close to happening, while one of them has happened because of the government you want to hand control of the network too. All to solve problems that do not exist now and very likely exacerbate existing problems. I have a single "what if" for you, since you like them so much:

    When will you be against government management of networks:

    When the government doesn't just alter DNS entries but also has your ISP prevent you from visiting specific IP addresses that were behind the DNS?

    When the government mandates that everyone have a specific level of service, raising your internet rate by $20 a month to subsidize high-speed access to truly remote areas?

    When the government mandates that torrent traffic must be blocked except for a specific whitelist of companies who have a valid torrent licence?

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:When by characterZer0 · · Score: 1

      I said nothing about the government controlling the network, nor did I say any of those things happened.

      The regulations should be a few sentences simply stating that an ISP can not discriminate based on content nor destination.

      Regulation is not necessarily government control.

      --
      Go green: turn off your refrigerator.
  61. Swearing on television by jabberw0k · · Score: 2

    Once upon a time it would have been unthinkable to hear swearing on television, but now you hear it all the time. The first time I heard "she's got a nice a**" was when I unplugged that, I do not want that language in my living room. The networks used to have at least some taste, now it is full of smut and sex. Obviously the FCC does not censor at all, what are you talking about?

    1. Re:Swearing on television by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hahah - funny!

  62. How can you claim anything without the regulation? by SuperKendall · · Score: 3, Insightful

    it seems to me that the poster has given good reason to bolster his claim

    Really? How so? Because I cannot find the actual text of the regulation they just passed. All else then is speculation, except for a few leaked tidbits that indicate the regulation is nothing like the idea of network neutrality most people had. So then, it seems more right to be concerned about what it actually is than arguing that a mythical variant of network neutrality that we will never see in practice, is awesome and you should vote for it.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  63. Technical issues not always understood by whizbang77045 · · Score: 1

    This seems to be another of those battlegrounds where right and left line up against each other, without much regard to what the real issue is. I think part of the problem is that our society is increasingly technical, and not that many people really understand the technical issues.

    1. Re:Technical issues not always understood by spidercoz · · Score: 1

      It's almost as stupid as the evolution "debate," as if it's up for argument.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - Evelyn Beatrice Hall, re Voltaire
  64. Am I on the wrong site? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    *checks URL* Nope, its not Reddit, Fark, or Digg. Looks like the frothing nutters are spreading. Yes, this is a troll.

    FTW: captcha is "congress"

  65. MOD PARENT UP by Vidar+Leathershod · · Score: 1

    Makes some good, salient points.

    --
    The brains of a chicken, coupled with the claws of two eagles, may well hatch the eggs of our destruction.
  66. unfortunately by nimbius · · Score: 1

    despite the best efforts of neoconservatives, the fact still remains: reality has a well known liberal bias.

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
  67. Easy by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 2

    Arguing for some utopian and non-existent version of legislation is all that is done in politics these days. On the right AND on the left.

    Let's take the left's crown jewels : the mandatory national insurance legislation. Take any lefty you know, even a senator if you like. Were they arguing
    a) for the actual text of the law, including all it's provisions
    b) the theoretical accomplishment that "would surely follow" it's passing

    The right is as uninformed as the left. How could it possibly be any other way with the average law spanning 800 pages of text ?

  68. The Actual Report And Order by rossjudson · · Score: 1

    Like always, there's a zillion stories floating around, and hardly any of them actually provide a reader with a link to the actual order. The anti-neutrality arguments take two main themes: That the FCC has no legal right to publish such orders, and that terrible harm will come to the internet if the existing de facto policy of neutrality is codified into law.

    The first is a legal issue, and I have no idea whether the FCC has the authority to do this.

    Based on the language in the order I've read, every argument I've seen so far in the second category is just full of crap. Any real argument against these specific rules should actually quote a rule, and describe in detail how it's wrong.

    1. Re:The Actual Report And Order by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      Based on the language in the order I've read, every argument I've seen so far in the second category is just full of crap. Any real argument against these specific rules should actually quote a rule, and describe in detail how it's wrong.

      Why dont you quote the rule that enforces Net Neutrality, instead of trying to get people to bark on command?

      (I know that you can't do it without ignoring the wording of the rules)

      If this doesnt enforce Net Neutrality, as many are claiming, then what exactly is the end result of passing it?

      The end result is that the FCC, who is activily censoring content in the other industries it regulates, is gicen regulatory control over the Internet while simultaneously you do not get Net Neutrality.

      Wake the fuck up. You are sleeping.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
  69. Re:How can you claim anything without the regulati by dptalia · · Score: 4, Informative
    --
    Genius is one percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration, which is why engineers sometimes smell really bad.
  70. Why? by thorkyl · · Score: 1

    Why does the gooberment(s) need to be involved at any level. Let the markets dictate the results. If an ISP blocks P2P or heavy FTP you switch ISPs to one that does not. Problem solved, and without the gooberment telling me what I can and can not do.

    --
    -- I am the NRA, enough said...
    1. Re:Why? by Haedrian · · Score: 1

      What a great idea.

      And please, tell me what happens if the only carrier in that area is my current ISP?
      Or if all the large ISPs agree that P2P is bad because the RIAA/MPAA slips them a few dollars?

      Then what do we do :) ?

    2. Re:Why? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      <libertarian-mode>

      You're always free to start your own ISP.

      If you don't have the money to do that, that's because you're a loser. That also explains why you're voting for socialists.

      </libertarian-mode>

    3. Re:Why? by WorBlux · · Score: 1

      Splice into a fiber optic main and and start a mesh network.

  71. Give link please by SuperKendall · · Score: 3, Informative

    The closest thing I can find to the actual regulation is this document:

    http://www.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_Business/2010/db1221/DOC-303745A1.pdf

    Which does not list the whole regulation passed, just excerpts. And parts of them look very bad indeed:

    A person engaged in the provision of fixed broadband Internet access service, insofar as such person is
    so engaged, shall not block lawful content, applications, services, or non-harmful devices, subject to
    reasonable network management.

    Bye-Bye torrents; the government has now codified it's perfectly reasonable to block traffic considered "unlawful".

    All that remains is for the MPAA to put forth the pipeline to feed ISP's the torrents the ISP's must block.

    Remember the word "lawful" did not have to be in there at all, it's used in a few places - and it's not an accidental term.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Give link please by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      Mod the parent up - I still haven't seen the rules either. Thanks for the new open government, where we can't even read the regulations!

    2. Re:Give link please by orgelspieler · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why shouldn't ISPs be allowed to block unlawful content? That's just good common sense. If they know kidsxxx.cx is a vendor of child porn, then they should be allowed to block it.

      I've only ever torrented legal stuff, so I don't know why you bring up torrents. If you had said "Bye-bye unlawful torrents," then you would have been correct. I don't see any problem with that. The way I see it, this basically guarantees that my ISP can't slow down my latest Linux download or Netflix movie just because some other asshole is using a torrent stream to download a movie they didn't want to pay for.

      I generally consider myself pro-neutrality, but if your viewpoint is shared by most of the NN crowd, maybe I'm on the wrong side of the argument after all.

    3. Re:Give link please by commodore64_love · · Score: 0

      Oh Jesus Christ on a popsicle stick. It's RIGHT HERE on the front page of FCC.gov. If it was a rattlesnake you'd already be dead:

      http://www.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_Business/2010/db1223/FCC-10-201A1.pdf
      http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-10-201A1.doc

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    4. Re:Give link please by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      Thanks for doing something you should have done to begin with. No thanks for getting nasty about it.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    5. Re:Give link please by Reziac · · Score: 1

      How do you plan to determine which torrents, usenet posts, emails, FTP downloads, etc. are lawful or not?

      A: You can't, without snooping on each and every connection.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    6. Re:Give link please by locallyunscene · · Score: 1

      Bye-Bye torrents; the government has now codified it's perfectly reasonable to block traffic considered "unlawful".

      All that remains is for the MPAA to put forth the pipeline to feed ISP's the torrents the ISP's must block.

      Remember the word "lawful" did not have to be in there at all, it's used in a few places - and it's not an accidental term.

      You're focusing on the wrong thing. Of course it specifies lawful traffic. Otherwise the FCC would be forced into ridiculous situations like fining ISP's for blocking things like child pornography websites. The important question is whether deep packet inspection is allowed to determine "lawful" traffic or if it is like common carriers where they're not going to know about it until someone brings it to their attention.

    7. Re:Give link please by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      I just read that excerpt and it said nothing about blocking unlawful traffic, only about not blocking lawful traffic.

    8. Re:Give link please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Adding in the word "lawful" allows an ISP to do whatever they'd do in the absence of network neutrality legislation, then claim that they did it because they thought the content might be "unlawful". I'd rather see this loophole closed. The ISP level isn't the place to be blocking child porn, anyway - the time to stop that is before it's been made.

    9. Re:Give link please by theaveng · · Score: 1

      As C64love said it was on the front page, in plain view under FCC Acts to Preserve Internet Freedom and Openness.
      No excuse for why you didn't see it.
      No excuse for why you told C64 he was imagining things (an insult).

      --
      FOX NEWS.com should be BANNED from television and internet. Have the Congress take it over and give us Truespeak.
    10. Re:Give link please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why shouldn't ISPs be allowed to block unlawful content?

      The problem of course is who makes the decision of what is "lawful"? The RIAA and MPAA? What are the conditions that must be met in order for something to be considered unlawful. If all it takes is an email from a media lawyer, then they have the power to shut down whatever they like, including torrents and other files which you might consider to be lawful.

      If they know kidsxxx.cx is a vendor of child porn

      How do you know kidsxxx.cx sells child porn? Can I send an email to my ISP saying that foxnews.com contains child porn to get it blocked? Obviously they wouldn't listen to a peasant like me, but a representative of a powerful company would likely have this power. Are you able to look at a naked young woman and decided whether she is under 18? A fair solution of course is that "unlawful" means there was a fair trial and a decision related to the content before the content is blocked, but it's unlikely this is the case.

    11. Re:Give link please by maztuhblastah · · Score: 1

      I've only ever torrented legal stuff, so I don't know why you bring up torrents. If you had said "Bye-bye unlawful torrents," then you would have been correct. I don't see any problem with that. The way I see it, this basically guarantees that my ISP can't slow down my latest Linux download or Netflix movie just because some other asshole is using a torrent stream to download a movie they didn't want to pay for.

      So... uh... aside from deep packet inspection, how exactly do you propose the ISP make that distinction?

      Frying pan, fire...

    12. Re:Give link please by orgelspieler · · Score: 1

      Interestingly, NPR just had a story about how most ISPs are already doing deep packet inspection for government agencies upon subpoena. Now they're realizing there's nothing in their TOS that says they can't just do it all the time. Also, courts have ruled that emails aren't subject to privacy laws protecting snail mail.

      For the record, I don't think ISPs should be forced to block illegal content, just that I don't think it's a bad thing if they decide to do so. I certainly don't think net neutrality rules should apply to illegal content. If they want to deeply inspect my packets going across their network, I really don't care. If they find out that I like researching bomb making techniques and floor plans to public buildings, what could possibly go wrong?

      Oh, wait... maybe I need to start using encryption.

    13. Re:Give link please by orgelspieler · · Score: 1

      The ISP level isn't the place to be blocking child porn, anyway - the time to stop that is before it's been made.

      I absolutely agree.

      As to the rest of your post: disallowing the blocking of lawful content is not the same as allowing or mandating the blocking of unlawful content. And it's certainly not the same as allowing or mandating the blocking of suspected unlawful content. The way its worded right now appears to err on the side of disallowing blocking.

    14. Re:Give link please by orgelspieler · · Score: 1
      Yes, I think there would have to be some due process in order to determine what would be considered unlawful content. I also thing the ISPs should not be allowed to make that determination on their own.

      One even bigger problem is that of jurisdiction, where things that are unlawful in some areas may be unlawful to block in others. That's why it makes the most sense for ISPs to stay out of blocking content all together.

    15. Re:Give link please by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      the regulation, applied to the scenario of blanket blocking of torrents would result in no fine for blocking illegal torrents, but every torrent blocked that was legal (linux ISO, Creative commons content, public domain content, any content otherwise licensed for free distribution would each be a seperate infraction of the regulation, thus the only sane thing for an ISP to do would be to block nothing unless mandated by court order or DMCA takedown to do so.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    16. Re:Give link please by aronschatz · · Score: 1

      The internet should be uncensored... PERIOD. Throwing unlawful in means that one day they could pass a law that says any speech against the government is unlawful.

      I say they meaning our government... It used to be by the people, after all.

    17. Re:Give link please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is a general principle of U.S. law that a person cannot be bound by contract to carry out a service that is illegal. The FCC reg could not be written to be construed in a manner that would require doing or contributing to something illegal.

    18. Re:Give link please by ChilyWily · · Score: 1

      Bingo! Under this so-called NN, would WikiLeaks be lawful or unlawful? I reckon, why bother with these esoteric semantics and rules if they truly want preserve NN for the public (that at worst doesn't care or at best doesn't understand/care)? It would appear that adding exclusions is harder than a blanket rule supporting freedom. If on the other hand, the are not for preserving Net Neutrality but contorting it into something else, then please FCC, at least state the rational and call it Net Neutering or whatever else.

    19. Re:Give link please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the government has now codified it's perfectly reasonable to block traffic considered "unlawful".

      Preposterous. Next thing you'll know, the police will be given the power to stop crime!

    20. Re:Give link please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No excuse for why you told C64 he was imagining things (an insult).

      SuperKendall said no such thing. But coming from a Troll64 sockpuppet, it's no surprise to see you making shit up.

  72. The "unfairness" of critisizing the right by bigsexyjoe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is another case of false equivalence. Whenever someone criticizes the right, someone always complains that they aren't criticizing the left "because they are exactly the same." But it isn't the case. There really is no left-wing Rush Limbaugh and if there is then this person isn't nearly as powerful and influential as Rush. If you have something to criticize about the left or liberals or progressives, then I welcome that, it will ultimately strengthen the movement. But don't insist that the right shouldn't be criticized because you imagine others have the same problem but you can't be troubled to explain how.

  73. Except not. by lukesneeringer · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This article misses the point of the debate, and completely mischaracterizes the reasons why the Right is concerned about the current net neutrality power grab. There are several issues here, which the Daily Kos completely glosses over (which, being the Daily Kos, doesn't surprise me much):

    1. The power grab by the FCC is illegal and has already been repudiated in court. The 111th Congress did not implement net neutrality rules (despite a slight push for them by the Obama administration) and so the FCC decided they would just create the regulations out of the blue. The problem is that a federal court shut that down, stating in a decision that the FCC didn't have the authority to regulate the Internet. So, the new stunt is to reclassify the Internet such that it falls under FCC jurisdiction (under a 1930s law designed to regulate monopoly telephone services). This will probably get thrown out in court, but the Right is correct to point out that this is a violation of the rule of law.

    2. The argument about blocking political speech is not really part of the issue (asinine comments about Rush Limbaugh notwithstanding). No service provider can block out half of the political speech on the Internet (for either side) and stay in business, so proposing net neutrality as a solution to this non-problem is, well, a solution looking for a problem. We haven't had market failure in this area.

    3. Government is notoriously slow and inept at regulating emerging and ever-changing technologies. How many articles have you read on Slashdot that underscore this fact? Laws are static, and the democratic process is reasonably slow (by design) to get things done. Therefore, regulating a fast-changing space is likely to cause more harm than good. This particular administration is likely to cause even more spectacular damage, given its record of accepting only "expert" opinions that line up with its preconceived notions (consensus by tautology) -- see, for instance, the EPA's behavior during the Gulf spill -- and so it's pretty likely that whatever it churns out will be particularly damaging. This doesn't even cover the fact that the FCC isn't going to make the rules public until they're already final. If you want to discourage investment in this market, that's a great way to do it. No wonder unemployment is still 9.8%.

    4. Americans are impatient by nature; if companies foolishly and needlessly throttle services that people really want, they'll just drop the company. The only thing that somewhat prevents this is....wait for it, the FCC, which has allowed and encouraged telecoms to have a monopoly within a municipality, which means less competition for consumers. So, this law is government regulation designed to combat the result of a separate government failure.

  74. Liar - quotes in parent are made up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I searched for your quotes, and could not find anything to corroborate them. They also don't seem like things any politician would plausibly say, at least directly. Based on this, I call bullshit. You made up those quotes, or took them from a source that made them up without verifying them. It is possible that they only said something similar, and that's why I couldn't find them, but you are not allowed to put quote marks around things that are not quotes.

  75. Silence who? by PPH · · Score: 1

    In my neighborhood, its likely that the plug will be pulled on the likes of Limbaugh and Glen Beck first. If there was to be any plug pulling, that is.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
    1. Re:Silence who? by spidercoz · · Score: 1

      Really? Dude I want to move there. As long as it's not California. Or snowing.

      Wow, to live in a neighborhood where the neighbors don't regurgitate shit they heard on Fox News the night before... Unless it's replaced with shit they heard on MSNBC.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - Evelyn Beatrice Hall, re Voltaire
  76. But they are the right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You could have made your point without being blatantly offensive also.

    You're SUPPOSED to be blatantly offensive to them. They like it. Makes them feel like victims.

    It also allows them to do what they claim they want the most - use their own resources to defend themselves, in the breaks between bootstrapping themselves to success and buying more guns to protect themselves from the evil guberment and commie-pinko-fascist democrats.

  77. perfect example by unity100 · · Score: 1

    No, what they opposed was a bill that called for spending $11 billion without any clear explanation of what that dollar amount was chosen, or how it would be specifically spent. And - quite reaonably - many asked why a firefighter who got sick doing his job in NYC at that particular event is any more deserving than a firefighter in San Fransisco who gets sick while doing his job.

    no. what they have opposed, was something that would benefit the people who have been at the forefront of their much-touted 'war on terror'.

    this is not whether the budget is 11 bil, or this or that.

    if, you are drumming nationalism, patriotism, and using various servicemen to that end, you do not come up and oppose aiding them like morons, contradicting your own argument. that was what they did.

    with the drum they were beating, a firefighter at the front of the 'patriotic' 'war on terror', would indeed be more deserving than an ordinary firefighter in omaha. ACCORDING TO THEIR OWN RHETORIC. even if the two firefighters should, in logic and rationale, have the same rights, ACCORDING TO THE RHETORIC REPUBLICANS WERE SELLING, they shouldnt have been.

    just like how someone serving in actual front, gets more reparations, benefits and resources than someone staying at home front.

    1. Re:perfect example by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      no. what they have opposed, was something that would benefit the people who have been at the forefront of their much-touted 'war on terror'.

      No, not "the people" but "some people" - with an undisclosed spending plan and no direct mention of how the money is to be raised or handled.

      this is not whether the budget is 11 bil, or this or that

      Which is exactly why the country is nearly bankrupt. There's no way to do right by any public sector employee if you can no longer even employ them. That's where we're headed, right now. Greece. Ireland. Portugol. Why? Because people like you think it's not important how much is spent, or who arrived at the magic number, or from which generation the money will be borrowed at what cost. Would YOU support a bill that didn't address any of those issues? Why would you?

      just like how someone serving in actual front

      Every firefighter signs up for this possibility. Soldiers get combat pay when they're deployed into a combat zone. We make no such distinctions when people are working here in the states, as firefighters. If you think that being ready to deal with emergencies created by people blowing up stuff in domestic situations is the same as combat pay, then why aren't you proposing that all first responders (any of whom may indeed face that situation) are covered by such a bill?

      Why aren't the local firefighters in DC, Maryland, and Virginia who responded to the wreckage at the Pentagon on the list? Because it's a capricious bill that isn't well thought out, and that's why it was opposed as written. Of course, you know that, and you're still playing cheap politics.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    2. Re:perfect example by unity100 · · Score: 1

      despite i have stressed the word ACCORDING TO THE REPUBLICAN RHETORIC, you are continually talking out of your own opinions and your view.

      if, it was you who was opposing it in the senate, yes, you would be right. because you havent spent the last 10 years drumming a war on 'terror', and attributing patriotism to it.

      however, republicans did. it doesnt matter how 'vulgar' the plan to aid the patriotic firefighters at the forefront of war on terror was, according to THEIR RHETORIC they had to support it, and also advocate bringing in all the firefighters who responded to the wrecks in all states on 9/11.

      they havent. they have contradicted THEIR OWN RHETORIC.

    3. Re:perfect example by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      they have contradicted THEIR OWN RHETORIC

      Not in the least. You find it to be at odds with their world view because you imagine them to be cartoon villains and are projecting your own simplistic hatred into your vision of how they think. You're deliberately setting up a straw man to hate, here. So, there's really no point in fussing with you on the details, since you're not actually thinking about the facts.

      In what way is asking for the Democrats to be specific about who is going to benefit from a vague, randomly-priced benefits package in any way at odds with conservative thinking or routine public policy positions?

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    4. Re:perfect example by unity100 · · Score: 1

      they are worse than cartoon villains. cartoon villains have integrity.

      and, they indeed violated their own rhetoric, multiple times. from leaving the war veterans/servicemen untended in military hospitals by cutting budgets for them, to what we have been discussing. their list is so endless that, i wont even bother detailing it to someone who says they have not contradicted themselves.

      the very fact that a random person on internet, from turkey knows about these instances of contradiction, should be a waking up slap in the face for you. however, apparently its not being as such.

    5. Re:perfect example by ScentCone · · Score: 0

      leaving the war veterans/servicemen untended in military hospitals by cutting budgets for them

      Republicans have no authority over those budget items. That's entirely in the hands of the Democrats in congress. Happily, that's going to (partly) change next year. But that still leaves Harry Reid in charge of that agenda in Senate, as he has been for years. Only he can control whether or not those budgets go up or down.

      i wont even bother detailing

      Obviously, because then you'd have to deal in facts. Which I can understand you're hesitant to do, because then you'd have to explain the actions of the party that's actually in control of the legislature, and has been for years.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    6. Re:perfect example by unity100 · · Score: 1

      Republicans have no authority over those budget items. That's entirely in the hands of the Democrats in congress. Happily, that's going to (partly) change next year. But that still leaves Harry Reid in charge of that agenda in Senate, as he has been for years. Only he can control whether or not those budgets go up or down.

      except that it happened on republican term.

      Obviously, because then you'd have to deal in facts. Which I can understand you're hesitant to do, because then you'd have to explain the actions of the party that's actually in control of the legislature, and has been for years.

      i have learned the 'fact' that american right wing uses the word 'fact', as if it represented a bouqet of parsley, cheaply, like you are doing.

      just saying 'fact' in an abrupt, blunt and repetitive manner doesnt make something a 'fact'.

      no, i wont bother losing time with brainwashed zealots, while they can access truth just a google search further. now, educate yourself, as it is your responsibility.

      http://www.google.com/search?q=republican+hypocrisy&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a

    7. Re:perfect example by ScentCone · · Score: 1, Informative

      except that it happened on republican term

      While the Congress, which appropriates all funds and controls all military spending, was being run by Democrats. Get your facts straight before you lecture someone else.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    8. Re:perfect example by unity100 · · Score: 1

      the incident happened before 2006. moron. and still talks about 'facts'. you are indeed a right wing drone that watches fox news apparently.

  78. You Can Stop Reading At "Takeover" by damn_registrars · · Score: 2, Insightful
    That is just a blanket term used by the right for everything they oppose, regardless of whether or not it makes any sense. See:
    • Government takeover of General Motors
    • Government takeover of Wall Street
    • Government takeover of Health Care

    And now

    • Government takeover of the Internet

    The right screamed nonstop about the inevitability of the first three, none of which actually happened. Now they are screaming that the fourth will happen (either instead, or as well, depending on your take on reality). I'm not holding my breath.

    Basically, if someone is claiming the government is about to "takeover" something, and they don't specify a military invasion as a tool in doing so, they have likely been listening to conservative media again. If you actually try to start a serious conservation with them on the issue you will likely find out in less than 30 seconds that they have no factual information to support their claims.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  79. What nonsense - Net neutrality = censorship by ralphclintellis · · Score: 1

    This is boilerplate socialist/communist claptrap. Net neutrality is a cover for censoring non-socialist voices. Period.

    1. Re:What nonsense - Net neutrality = censorship by spidercoz · · Score: 1

      Ok, Glenn. Somebody get this guy some new meds.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - Evelyn Beatrice Hall, re Voltaire
  80. Or maybe not so... by bashibazouk · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The "lefts" crown jewels was single payer and it failed.

    Mandatory national insurance was the sweetener to get the congress critters who were in the pockets of the health insurance lobbyists to vote for the bill. I don't think either side was enthusiastic about it but it was necessary to get the whole thing passed.

    Isn't compromise fun?

    1. Re:Or maybe not so... by cduffy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "The sweetner"? If you can guarantee that anyone can get insurance regardless of prior conditions, people are just going to opt out when they're healthy and opt in when they're sick. If you're going to prevent folks from being rejected on the basis of preexisting conditions, making participation mandatory is the only way it works at all.

    2. Re:Or maybe not so... by boxo1 · · Score: 1

      Mandatory national insurance was the sweetener to get the congress critters who were in the pockets of the health insurance lobbyists to vote for the bill.

      Mandatory insurance is the only way you can set up a system with mandated coverage for preexisting conditions. Otherwise, why would anyone get insurance? You could always wait to buy insurance until you developed an expensive problem.

      The home owners insurance companies would soon be bankrupt if the government mandated coverage for preexisting fires.

  81. Stop reacting and think. by will_in_wi · · Score: 1

    The issue that most "thinking" conservatives (i.e. not those who simply parrot whatever various talk shows put out) have with the network neutrality concept is not the ideal of keeping an ISP from blocking or throttling competing traffic, but rather the potential side effects from granting authority to the FCC to do that. Currently the FCC has no regulatory authority over the internet and allowing them to simply assume such authority unchecked is rather dangerous. Liberals would not want a conservatively controlled FCC regulating the internet just as conservatives do not want a liberally (modern ideological definition) controlled FCC regulating the internet. A previous poster noted the damage that a Republican controlled FCC with regulatory power over the internet could cause if they blocked all Democrat websites and vice versa. Enforcing internet neutrality between ISPs by introducing total control by an agency of the American government appears to be a bad idea. A well thought out congressional bill to limit ISP interference with traffic is a better idea (although not perfect). Yes, there is a tiny group of liberals who want to use “network neutrality” to control speech on the internet. There is also a tiny group of conservatives who want to do the same thing. I think the majority on both sides agree on this more than they disagree, but as usual that gets lost in the rhetoric. The summary is pretty bad though. How do you encourage an informed, thoughtful debate this way?

  82. Sad, but true by bonkeydcow · · Score: 1

    This is sadly true. I am a conservative, and am all but banned from sites like red state for my attempts to explain net neutrality. I think it all comes down to the word neutrality, the right feels like this is a fairness doctrine for the internet. I don't know what it will take to convince them otherwise. I have personally emailed Limbaugh about his comments and lack of understanding of the issue. No response to date.

    1. Re:Sad, but true by spidercoz · · Score: 1

      You're right, it's a marketing problem. It needs a new name, something that will appeal to the masses who just believe everything they hear. Something with the word "freedom" or "liberty" in it.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - Evelyn Beatrice Hall, re Voltaire
    2. Re:Sad, but true by diamondmagic · · Score: 1

      It's because you can't differentiate between an ideal, and force. Government is force, by definition... The State is the monopoly on the means of coercion.

      There is nothing wrong with Net Neutrality, there is nothing wrong with anything if the conditions are voluntarily accepted by both parties.

      You're missing the point that government enforced Net Neutrality is a bad thing. At that point you are violating one person's natural rights (the ISP) for the sake of a "freedom" that a person has no right to. You are violating individual rights for the sake of enforcing a belief that has had no problem being enforced by the market so far. Fact is, the vast majority of people have no problem accessing YouTube and Facebook and whatever else. All of the fancy graphic illustrations I've seen years ago "$5.99/mo for access to ten whole websites!" has been sheer nonsense. Even if it did come true, an ISP still has a right to sell such a plan!

      How about the FCC, what sort of track record do they have for enforcing freedom? The Fairness Doctrine? The broadcast flag? Their whole existence in recent history has been to silence content, never, ever, to promote it. Even if government-forced Net Neutrality were moral I wouldn't trust the FCC with the task to the end of the earth.

  83. The one simple fact the right is missing. by pcx · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There is one, simple, crucial fact that the right is missing in these debates. There is no free market in broadband access. If you are extremely lucky you can pick between your telephone company and your cable company and they tend to not compete on either price or service and quickly move to adopt the same draconian policies introduced by their "competitors" -- and again, this is if you're lucky, most people are stuck with their cable company. Not even the right will argue against regulating monopolies, we all realize that in the absence of competition monopolies will provide poor service for rates that border on extortion.

    If you want to win the net neutrality debate with the right then offer a simple concession: IPSs which open up their network to third party providers can operate without regulation. Those providers that have no competition or only one competitor must put up with regulation.

    You can also remind everyone that the government invented the internet (arpnet was a darpa project) so the Internet was never created to be run by businesses anymore than the national interstate system was, but that doesn't resonate nearly as well as shifting this back to a monopoly vs. consumer debate.
     

    1. Re:The one simple fact the right is missing. by Jerome+from+Layton · · Score: 1

      Not quite. In addition to the TelCo and Cable, there are two cell phone providers and at least two (maybe more) microwave providers. That means I can vote with my antennas if the land-line services don't cut it. Three of my neighbors already have the antennas.

  84. What pre-2005 law, specifically? by jadavis · · Score: 1

    From wikipedia entry:

    In 2003 Tim Wu, a professor at Columbia Law School, published and popularized a proposal for a net neutrality rule, in his paper Network Neutrality, Broadband Discrimination.

    That indicates that people were trying to do this before 2005. Why, if a law already existed?

    The summary is the first I've heard of net neutrality as just "reinstating" a law. That word appears nowhere in the wikipedia entry.

    Not only that, but there are many different interpretations and degrees of "net neutrality" legislation. So which one was in effect pre-2005?

    --
    Social scientists are inspired by theories; scientists are humbled by facts.
  85. Re:The evil "American Right"...yup by BoberFett · · Score: 1

    Well said.

  86. Mod Parent Up Please! by rbollinger · · Score: 4, Informative

    People here don't seem to understand, Rush isn't fighting the concept of Net Neutrality, he's fighting what the FCC is doing right now! Just because the regulations being pushed by the FCC are called Net Neutrality, doesn't mean that they are. Either Slashdotters have an extremely short memory about what the FCC has been doing in the past month, or you all hate Rush so much that you'll defend 'fake net neutrality' just so you don't have to agree with him. Hell I don't like Rush but he may be right this time. Remember both the Left and Right are in the pocket of big business.

    1. Re:Mod Parent Up Please! by sumdumass · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Right, more precisely, a government agency, the FCC is attempted to wiggle into it's structure, power that congress didn't instill upon them after a court pointed that out.

      It's not the net Neutrality that is of concern, it's a government agency bypassing congress and giving itself more power then a competent court of law said it had. In other words, this is like the FBI or NSA all the sudden determining it has the power to arrest and detain people without due process because of information gathered from once illegal wiretaps that were somehow justified through NSA laws.

      It's fucking frightening to see that parts of the government can magically give itself more power without congress doing so. And whether you like Rush or not, this one thing should at least grab your attention and we should all have something in common with it. Congress sets the rules and laws, not some entity of government who already was told by a court that they didn't have the powers to regulate it.

    2. Re:Mod Parent Up Please! by jhoger · · Score: 1

      You are right. The FCC can't grant powers to itself. If it does overreach, it gets spanked in the courts. So it is unclear what you are frightened about... the checks and balances are in place, and by your own example, quite effective.

      The current rule making, as all successful rule making, is based on EXISTING AUTHORITY ALREADY GRANTED BY CONGRESS. The FCC tried to use its existing authority to create net neutrality rules. The court didn't like how they justified their authority so they sent the FCC back to the drawing board with reasoning that forms a roadmap for the current iteration of the rules. That was version 1.0. This is version 2.0.

      Consider the pace at which Congress is able to pass laws. It is glacially slow. In our system of government, enforcement and interpretation are left to the executive branch and the courts. It is the only thing that makes the whole system work... that other branches closer to the practical problems of implementing the law are left to "fill in the blanks." Congress INTENTIONALLY leaves those blanks because it cannot predict every eventuality.

    3. Re:Mod Parent Up Please! by Count+Fenring · · Score: 1

      Or, more accurately, a regulatory agency that had their enforcement ability stripped from them by right-wing corporate boosterism is seeking congressional action to restore the ability to accomplish their mandate, and protect consumer rights.

      The FCC isn't sneaking around Congress, or staging some sort of coup. They're working in a perfectly sane and legal manner (albeit with a hopelessly watered-down bill, at this point). Stop your fearmongering, you accurately-named person, you.

  87. The right way to make the argument for neutrality by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    The right way to make the argument for net neutrality is to compare the Internet properly to other media, such as Television and Radio.

    Since the FCC permitted more consolidation of media outlets, we have seen two significant circumstances come to the fore, and one other interesting one.

    First, commercial music-oriented radio had consolidated to the point that there seem to be a handful of networks running automated music stations, indistinguishable from one another except for the genre. Interesting, but local flavor is pretty much lost except for perhaps drive-time talkers that mostly interrupt the music. It's all about big advertising contracts and money. Cheap stations, national advertisers, just shovel the money into the bank.

    Second, talk radio has never been bigger, and I propose that is because music radio is such a wasteland. Bit talk radio is driven directly by advertisers, and they want ears, so it is dominated by the talk genre that attracts the most listeners. This looks terrible to those who don't feel represented, but it's all about money.

    Third, the FCC allowing multimedia companies to expand has brought us Fox News. Whether you like it or not, think of Fox News as the television and radio equivalent of a big-city newspaper. Somehow we don;t seem to mind too much that several major newspapers have easily discernable points of view and biases, but for FNC this is just wrong. Compare this situation to some of the other cable news networks, and very few seem, to me, to be anywheres near fair and balanced. Notice I don't mention the broadcast news networks? They have lost. Who cares?

    If you think this consolidation of media companies is a problem, then you can grasp why letting your Internet provider either directly or indirectly filter or manipulate your access to other Internet services may be a problem. If you think the dominance of a few voices in media is a bad thing, you want the opportunity to find others. If your ISP decides to hamper your viewing of movies from, say, Netflix, you should be asking 'why'? The answer is probably nor any further than the on-demand programming your Cable ISP offers, or perhaps the tie-in to a satellite TV company your telco ISP has. And if you want to listen to music via some Internet legal and legitimate service, imagine your ISP thinking they have a music service too. If you want to use Skype, imagine your ISP of either dominant flavor already has a telephone service. Of course they want to sell that to you. Skype is their competitor.

    The problem is, we need to define the Internet properly now. If your cable ISP wants to serve you up limited Internet with the competing pieces missing, they really can only be expected to say so, so you can make an informed choice. Same thing with your telco ISP. If we need to make Internet service a common-carrier utility, we'll see prices soar. And we'll see ISPs try and sell another, cheaper service. One they admit they throttle and manipulate, but hey, if you want videos, they got 'em right here! Telephone? they got that too! Want full-on Internet? That's more expensive, but they got that as well.

    We are close to seeing segregated Internet services. I'm afraid we cannot stop it short of mandating that all Internet service must be free and unfettered. And that opens the floodgates of price gouging as ISPs claim that an unfettered Internet is so overwhelming that they need to build out even more capacity, and that costs so much more than we're paying now.

    Perhaps that is the argument that the FCC (maybe) or local governments (more likely) can use to challenge contracts. As in, if the ISP that has a government-imposed monopoly is claiming they can't provide the service, well, perhaps it's time to open up the bidding to someone who can.

    I'm interested in demanding my municipality add an enforcable SLA to the next cable contract. Uptime, latency to known significant destinations, and support for all RFC'd protocols. I imagine I'll get a target on my back for that, but it would be an interesting start. Because all politics is local, you know.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  88. Re:The evil "American Right"...yup by emaname · · Score: 1

    I can't tell you how encouraged I am by hearing these opinions. My wife and I have been telling our Republican friends that there is NO true Republican party any longer just as there is NO true Democratic party. Both political parties are owned. And we have no choice and no representation.

    I personally would like to see a third choice on ballots; ie, ABSTAIN. Since it is impossible to have a third party in this country, we still need a way to tell the politicos whether or not we actually approve of them. I don't want to vote for the lesser of two evils. If I go to the polls, I want it known that I was there to vote; that I value my vote and took the time to travel to use it. But I think that both candidates suck. Therefore, I abstain.

    I would hope that if there are more people that feel like the game is rigged, they also would abstain. So when they tally the vote, they have to show what percentage of the population actually believes in the puppet that has been put in place.

    IOW, the abstain option would more clearly define a vote of "no confidence."

    --
    An effective "democracy" creates the illusion the people have a say in their government.
  89. Wings are for birds. by spinkham · · Score: 1

    I don't think of myself as right or left wing.

    I'm for as little government regulation and oversight as is necessary to protect citizens from the profit motivated capitalistic forces.

    "Net neutrality" is the term that should mean just that in the telecom space, so I'm for the principle.

    It's also one of those terms that many different parties want to claim has different meanings, so I'm not always for specific implementations of the policy.

    --
    Blessed are the pessimists, for they have made backups.
  90. Re:The evil "American Right"...yup by DavidTC · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No, just evil people who grab and increase their power over us because we are dumb enough to let them. We've even let them destroy the language -- liberal used to mean something a lot more like "libertarian"

    No it didn't. The libertarian position is one that honestly did not exist in politics until about 50 years ago.

    I know, in conservative mythos, the founding fathers were libertarians, but they were not. Liberal, in that day, was basically anti-classism and anti-crown, a position that really doesn't exist anymore in modern politics.

    Once the crown was gone, it continued to be anti-special-rules-for-the-ruling class, a position it still holds, at least in theory. (As we don't actually have any liberal political party, it doesn't really hold any position anymore.) All liberal fights, though the entire history of this country and back to John Locke, are to stop one group of withholding power-sharing from another group, with the groups being the crown, nobles, slaveowners, the superrich, the corporate owners, the whites, the straights...and, apparently, the superrich again. Except now the superrich have intelligently bought both parties.

    (Please note when I say 'liberals', I am, indeed, aware that liberals used to be on the right, and flopped to the left around when I said 'the whites')

    Libertarianism is not classical liberalism, it is neo-classical liberalism. It reinvents the idea that the problem is 'the crown'. Which, frankly, would be a rather strange idea to various classical liberal thinkers, whose biggest problem with the government is the fact that it often failed to enforce laws equally, and not that those laws existed at all!

    and "conservative" used to mean, you know, look before you leap, spend less than you make, stuff like that. Or even "not all change is for the better, so examine it first before deciding".

    Here, you're right. Conservatives, to paraphrase something David Brin wrote on the topic, used to be the serious guys in suits at NASA who did the math. The guys running around in the background monitoring stuff that seemed entirely pointless (Until it was wrong, then they calmly and efficiently saved everyone's life.), and wasn't glamorous, and they went home to their family and read the paper each evening. Whereas liberals were the astronauts and the sci-fi writers and the dreamers, and got all the credit, but without the guys in suits, wouldn't know how to do what they were trying to do. There's the guys who try to do everything, and the guys who figure out what can and can't happen and managed to get some of it done, while otherwise raining on the parade.

    But that ended about two decades ago, when it was decided that the best way to rule the country is not to point out the parts of the left's plans that can't work, and invent better ways...but to simply assert, very loudly, that anything the left wants is wrong. Morally wrong, politically wrong, won't work, every single possible objection.

    Even stuff like cap and trade or the public mandate for health insurance, both of which were conservative alternatives to the left's previous plan. Or stuff like bills attempting to stop child 'marriage', which the Republicans shot down for absurd reasons two week ago. (Apparently, educating women that it is not acceptable for them to be sold to older men when they're 13 as his 'wife' is...um...pro-abortion.)

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  91. SlashDot Needs To Pickup History Book by ThisIsNotMyHandel · · Score: 1

    SlashDot, pick up a history book. The original intent of the FCC was to regulate frequencies so broadcasters didn't overlap frequencies. Win/Win, right? Well not exactly. That regulatory authority soon mutated to something hat regulated content. The fears of the "right" are based in reality because it HAS HAPPENED.

  92. There Is No Perfect Liberty by wytcld · · Score: 2

    Government regulation of the Net takes liberty from large corporations. Yes, it grants that liberty to individuals and to smaller corporations. In doing so it is redistributionist: it redistributes liberty from the larger, more powerful corporate groups who otherwise can easily take it for themselves - and who generally will, when allowed to - to the smaller folks, like some of us.

    The truth is, no corporation can guarantee your liberty. Guarantee of liberty only happens two ways: through custom, and through government. When it is old custom involved, that's true conservatism; when it's new custom emerging, and it's a custom of liberty, that's revolution. True revolution is even rarer than true conservatism. Both are generally masks for groups trying in large part to remove liberty from others, not to distribute it more broadly, but to keep it for themselves, as power.

    Corporations find their profits limited by the liberties of the people. Recognizing that those liberties are rooted in custom and government, corporations hire shills to oppose both - two birds with one stone: to urge a change in customs, and a diminishment of government. Net neutrality thus is the perfect enemy of the shills who wish to control the currents which bend our customs towards a future of total large-corporate control. If the Net remains neutral, its currents undermine control by particular established corporations. Yet the Net can only remain neutral if government guarantees that liberty. So government, if it does guarantee Net liberty, is undermining the primary goals of the right-wing shills. They are entirely accurate in putting forth the idea that it is their direct enemy, and the enemy of those whose liberty they truly most care about: their corporate sponsors.

    --
    "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
  93. No shit by spidercoz · · Score: 1

    The Right taking a misinformed stance on something? I'm shocked. SHOCKED.

    The Right likes to live in a fantasy world that never existed. On the other hand, the Left likes to dream about a world that never should exist.

    The Right and Left both ignore truth whenever it serves their agendas. The Right has been firmly in the pocket of Big Corp for decades. Big Corp (i.e. telcos, cablecos, and Hollywood) are anti-neutrality, therefore the Right is anti-neutrality. Truth doesn't matter and "educating" the Right isn't going to make a shit of difference.

    --
    "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - Evelyn Beatrice Hall, re Voltaire
    1. Re:No shit by ThisIsNotMyHandel · · Score: 1

      What are you talking about? The right is neither for or against "big corporations". The right is for the free market. The problems that ocure in the free market happen when the government picks winners/losers and that is done through progressive policies. If the government would allow the free market to work and didn't pervert the commerce clause under FDR none of this would be a problem. Anyways, I guess you agree that the FCC should be censoring content on radio/TV. After all, those regulations were started with good intentions in mind and how did that work out?

    2. Re:No shit by spidercoz · · Score: 1

      First of all, it's "occur". Second, don't infer things I didn't imply, you look like an idiot. Third, the "free market" hasn't existed in a long time, if it ever really did, and even if, it is not the cure-all people like you seem to think it is.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - Evelyn Beatrice Hall, re Voltaire
    3. Re:No shit by diamondmagic · · Score: 1

      A person bashing an entire collective of people because of a loaded article? I'm shocked.

      The "right" has no problem with the Internet. It's the most free, most liberal institution on the face of the earth in the history of the earth bar none. The "right" doesn't have a problem with that. They have the same issues that the EFF has which is that even if government control of the Internet were a good idea, the FCC has NO history of being fair, free, open, or any of the ideals that Net Neutrality is about. This isn't a "Big Corp" issue, it's a freedom issue, and using the force of government to enforce freedom is something that has never been accomplished, and for good reason. I have to rely on initiating use of force i.e. attack individual rights, to ensure freedom? It's a contradiction of terms. So why would we expect it to work now?

      Big Corp (i.e. telcos, cablecos, and Hollywood) are anti-neutrality, therefore the Right is anti-neutrality.

      Such a massive fallacy I don't even know where to begin.

    4. Re:No shit by ThisIsNotMyHandel · · Score: 1

      Oh my, a spelling mistake. I am not inferring anything. You stated the "right" lives in a fantasy world. I simply showed that the concerns are based in historical events. You can choose to ignore history or learn from it. Which is the more ignorant position?

  94. As one of the evil right by roninmagus · · Score: 1

    I'm a conservative and I think net neutrality is a FANTASTIC idea. I called into a conservative radio talk show that I listen to a lot (Phil Valentine) and tried to explain to him that it is something we need to protect freedom on the internet. He kept saying that "the market will decide" and while I typically agree with him on that, in this case it can't be left to the market since the big telecoms have so much control. They can easily collude on this matter and block content they don't want on their pipes, and I feel that is wrong.

    1. Re:As one of the evil right by diamondmagic · · Score: 1

      Get it out of your mind that competition and "the market" is why freedom is a good idea. That's probably one of the worst, most damaging ideas to ever have been invented. One entity having so much control isn't necessarily a bad thing... It's their property after all, they can decide what to sell, or what not to sell. Does it make sense if we had to have two power lines going to every house in the country, that would be a massive waste of natural resources? Even if we split up power producers, distribution, etc, into separate companies, that would still massively increase costs. Saying you are in favor of "freedom on the Internet" is like saying you are in favor of "freedom from not owning a house"... whose liberty do you have to violate to ensure that non-existent freedom? It seems like you have inconsistent values if liberty is good for one group of people but not for others. What natural law allows us to determine there is an "Internet service provider exemption" to individual rights?

      The free market isn't the best there is because it's open, it's the best there is because it's free, it's liberal (as in liberty). Because an ISP can decide who they sell their services to and under what conditions, that's voluntary exchange and it's a good thing!

      Notice that even so, no one has ever actually blocked content in that manner... But what about the FCC, do they have nearly as clean a record? The broadcast flag? The Fairness Doctrine?!? (Gosh "Fairness Doctrine" is worded an awful lot like FCC Mandated "Net Neutrality"...) Their sole purpose was to establish property rights over radio frequencies over geographical areas. What right do they have to tell companies how to operate their networks that often never even cross state lines? And even if it does become a problem, that's a solution for engineers to solve, not for government force to solve. End to end encryption would allow unparalleled freedom over the Internet, if you cannot determine the content, for instance.

  95. Re:The evil "American Right"...yup by Surt · · Score: 1

    Why would they care if you abstain unless it impacts them in some way. They don't care about non-voters, except to the extent it risks their elections. They'd be happy if 99% didn't vote at all, as long as the 1% voted the way they wanted.

    --
    "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
  96. Stop ISPs from throttling... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes there is.

    Unfortunately that way is government regulation with the threat of punishment of the ISPs for selectively throttling traffic they don't like.

  97. I knew the 60s by wytcld · · Score: 1

    I was watching and listening to FCC-regulated media in the 50s and 60s, and all-in-all it was pretty fucking good. Radio was far better than now (under ownership limitations that prevented anything like Clear Channel). The network newscasts were far more informative and fact-laden (back when networks still owned themselves and viewed quality of news as a public duty). Subversive humorists like the Smothers Brothers had a far larger audience than Jon Stewart today. We had Star Trek in its first run - with a moral sensibility which was a continuation from older shows like Have Gun - Will Travel, which Roddenberry had also written scripts for - arguably a far better and more serious sensibility than can be found in any TV dramas today. Even a few of the sitcoms were good - which is all you can say for TV today, that a few of the sitcoms are still clever and watchable.

    --
    "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
    1. Re:I knew the 60s by redemtionboy · · Score: 1

      back when networks still owned themselves and viewed quality of news as a public duty

      I think that has far more to do with the matter than regulation. Social issues, not regulation issues. And yes, you still had Star Trek, which got cancelled due to lack of viewer ship.

  98. why would anyone want net neutrality ????? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    this doesn't make any sense. i hear all these arguments for net neutrality. they all start with this: i don't want my isp to start charging me for this, this, or that. or i don't want my isp to control traffic and give some sites speeds over others. these are all valid wants and needs, and i agree with them... but the net has been around for YEARS now and I don't see any isp's doing this. they are unregulated and they just simply do not do this. why haven't they done this? well, didn't comcast do this to torrent traffic and once it was discovered, what happened? they had to REBRAND to XFINITI or some crap like that. ISP's do not want to rebrand themselves and have customers lose confidence in their product. i understand that some of you live in the boonies and only have one ISP, but the majority of america either currently has options or WILL HAVE options in the near future with the way cell phone companies are now starting to offer service. More competition always gives consumers more choices. i personally think it is a VERY GOOD idea for companies to have the choice to offer premium or specialized services to those who want them. more choice is always better.

    and YES, net neutrality is definitely a 'government takeover' of the internet. why anyone would want a politician making laws on how to regulate your ISP is beyond me. you all need to wake up. any internet laws at all is BAD.

    1. Re:why would anyone want net neutrality ????? by ArhcAngel · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you were unaware that it is already happening but not the way you might think. Are you familiar with ESPN 3? ESPN has worked deals with certain ISPs to offer the service and if you don't subscribe to an ISP that has signed up with ESPN you can't get access to it. It's the first step in turning the internet into the new cable. Large ISPs like Comcast are also pushing to charge more for high volume sites like Google. The only problem with that is Google is already paying for the bandwidth they are using. Comcast wants to get a cut of the ad revenue Google takes in from their ad sales.

      --
      "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
    2. Re:why would anyone want net neutrality ????? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and what is the problem with this exactly?

  99. Please tell us... by msauve · · Score: 2

    in exactly what ways the final rules differ from your vision of net neutrality, and how those differences might be upsetting to Rush. To simply claim as fact that the FCC's "'fake net neutrality'" isn't "Net Neutrality" (as if your concept is the one and only correct one) is disingenuous.

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    1. Re:Please tell us... by kdemetter · · Score: 1

      That's the problem , isn't it : what exactly can be understood by "Net Neutrality " .

      The reality is simple : each side will have it mean exactly what they want it to mean.

      No regulation is bad because companies can take advantage of that , which can be bad for the customer
      To much regulation is also bad , because governments can take advantage of this , which is also bad for the customer

      In a perfect world , the control shouldn't go to the companies nor the goverments , but to the customer .

      Since we don't live in a perfect world , the only logical option is a balance somewhere in between , which we ( the customer ) can control by thinking before we vote and buy.

    2. Re:Please tell us... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the problem , isn't it : what exactly can be understood by "Net Neutrality " .
      The reality is simple : each side will have it mean exactly what they want it to mean.

      Net neutrality is pretty simple, really. It means you route the packets to their destinations without looking at the contents...you know, the way the net was designed to work?

    3. Re:Please tell us... by kdemetter · · Score: 1

      Yes , but how do you ensure that it stays that way ?

      The only way to ensure it , is by the government enforcing it ( net neutrality legislation )
      However , by doing so , you take power away from companies ( who previously did whatever they wanted ) , but you give it to the government ( who now have the power to regulate what happens on the internet ).

      The problem is that neither groups actually want true 'net neutrality ' : the companies want a model that makes them more profit , and the government wants control over the internet ( like they have with other media ) .

  100. its not just about DPI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you want all your Netflix traffic to be given lower priority by Comcast because they can tell it originates from Netflix, whose video-on-demand services compete directly with Comcast? The same is true of other major ISPs like Rogers in Canada. Expect Skype to be messed with by all the phone-company ISPs too (Bell, Telus, et al.)

    The bottom line is that you just cannot trust large monopoly corporations who provide your Internet connection to treat all traffic fairly regardless of source, because those same corporations are also content providers and service providers and some of that traffic comes from their direct competitors. And on top of that, they would love to just extort money from content providers like Google to make sure they get "highest priority" (read: "pay us money or your traffic will end up in our lowest QoS bracket, making you look bad to the end users).

    It needs to be regulated. ISPs should be allowed to do QoS on various types of traffic, but they should NOT be able to discriminate against traffic based on who is sending or receiving it, except for legitimate maintenance of the network such as blocking spam and DDoS traffic. If they're going to give streaming video traffic higher priority, they should be required to give ALL streaming video traffic higher priority -- they should not be allowed to give their own streaming video services high priority and give their competitor's services a LOW priority.

    Also, if an ISP inspects the contents of a packet (as opposed to just the routing headers on that packet) then they should become partially liable for the content of that packet. That would nip DPI in the butt. If they just deliver the packets, and they happen to contain child porn or something, the ISP should not be liable. But if they pry into the contents of those packets, and the contents turn out to be something illegal, and the ISP fails to report them to the proper authorities, they should be liable for that. If they incorrectly report innocent traffic they should be civilly liable for that too. Then the only safe thing for them to do would be to act like a common carrier and not read the contents of their customer's packets. Too bad the people making the decisions don't REALLY care about customers' privacy, so this will never be implemented.

  101. Home Invasion by TonyXL · · Score: 0

    The telcom owns the fiber. You own your house. Net neutrality forces the telcom to open their fiber to all content. That would be like saying your house must be open to all of your neighbors.

  102. Re:Quick help everyone's Misinformed! by DavidTC · · Score: 1

    You're assuming that there actually are two high speed providers in town.

    I live in a town with one high speed provider, Windstream, because apparently it's okay for the same company to own both phone and cable.

    And, of course, I don't know how 'dialup' would fix anything, considering that, even if there was a third party offering that, they'd end up hooking into, tada, the phone company's internet connection. And, yes, that phone company owns the entire local calling area, and hence any local dialup ISP (If any still exist) would hook into the same internet, so unless I want to make a long distance internet call, dialup is out. (Not that I could functionally watch Hulu over that.)

    Alternately, I could get satellite internet, but that has rather serious bandwidth caps so cannot be used to watch Hulu over either.

    If I want internet that I can watch Hulu over, if Windstream decides to slow Hulu, I'd literally have to purchase a dedicated 50 mile T1 line to another county and find somewhere to have it hooked up.

    (Please note that Hulu is just an example here. Replace with netflix or fox news or whatever.)

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  103. Read the EFF's take on Net Neutrality by sageres · · Score: 1

    Frankly when it comes to the Internet, EFF is the most unbiasted organization that I trust. http://www.eff.org/issues/net-neutrality http://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2009/09/net-neutrality-fcc-perils-and-promise Basically it shows that Net Neutrality can be used as a trojan horse to control the content and the flow of the information on the Internet. Whenever a good idea comes up and one side of the political isle strongly supports it while other is stronly opposes it, you should never look at it as only "black-and-white" issue.

  104. Re:The evil "American Right"...yup by speroni · · Score: 1

    Voting 3rd party effectively does this.

    --
    Eschew Obfuscation
  105. Read the bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, the Right originally came out against it because it included a reintroduction of the "equal time" clause that was eliminated in Reagan's time as President. Reagan foresaw a rise in slanted Liberal media outlets, and opposed it. I suspect Fox News was created entirely to counter this imagined rise in "Liberal Media" that never appeared, because the journalists all believed in truth and balance; now they fear if reinstated this rule (which was never employed once while it was on the books to force the airing of a counter view, though argueably was the motivation for not airing candidates shows during elections, making sure both candidates got "equal time" interviews, etc)

    Now the Right fears equal time means they'll be forced to air opposing views to Rush, Glen, Hannity, etc on Fox News. It also helps that Net Neutrality = Regulation, which is also one of those fundamental issues they like to push (Government is always cramping our style, trying to prevent us from using cheaper products like Aesbestos, forcing us to put real numbers in our financial statements, not put outright lies in our commercials (now cures cancer!)

    Personally, if Republicans stood for Republican values, I'd be Republican. I like fiscal responsibility and less government. But now the right is about Theocracy and enabling criminals (How many criminals have TV shows on Fox? Rush, Ollie North, ...) Last I checked, the Democrats had a balanced budget. Bush oversaw 0 growth in his 8 years pimping trickle down economics. Not to mention war mongering (invading non-agressor countries is neither sound fiscal policy or helpful in our national defense).

  106. The Logic of Free Market by orgelspieler · · Score: 1

    The Logic of Free Market: Obviously, to keep the market free we must regulate it heavily.

    Because, you know, monopolies would never take advantage of their customers, and companies would never collude to artificially increase prices.

  107. Hey... we knew this was coming with 4chan down... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Retards must go somewhere.

  108. It was once said a long time ago... by digitaldc · · Score: 1

    The Greedy Man wants to use fear and doubt regulate and control access to the internet.

    But the Wise Man wants to keep the internet free.

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
  109. More concerned about precedent NN sets by tkprit · · Score: 1
    I went straight to daily kos when the NN news came out, and most of us didn't know wth to think (the media stories were along the lines of "everybody hates it" except comcast and verizon; then the ACLU filed suit; etc major confusion) ...and I still think the opinions through the american political spectrum are too varied to label. The idea is nice, but is the implementation fair (does it go far enough)?

    .

    But now that the info's been disseminated more, my biggest personal concern isn't over NN itself, but with the unfortunate timing of the US's 'discomfort' with wikileaks (do I need a link) + the U.N.'s 'concern' with internet not being controlled.

    Not that the US could be strong-armed by the third-world countries (and other proponents of UN regulation of internet), but that the U.S. could take advantage of the UN's concern in order to stuff wikileaks or other sites/services considered a threat to national security.

  110. Religion is the key by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

    If you blindly believe one unsupportable fairy tale, you'll be willing to base your entire life and society on fairly tales, never bothering to look behind the curtain. This also explains why intelligence and experience in politicians are now viewed as liabilies.

  111. The Whys by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Why shouldn't ISPs be allowed to block unlawful content? That's just good common sense.

    They should be allowed to block whatever they please. However blocking some unlawful content means they are responsible for blocking all of it, which is why it's not done today.

    What I am against is the government saying they SHOULD block unlawful content, which this is a short step away from. We've already seen the government alter DNS for sites it does not like, even though some seemed perfectly legal. Well how about not even being able to reach an IP the government deems "illegal" because your iSP has been mandated to block all traffic to it? After all, that site is illegal....

    The thing is Neutrality, as used, is classic Orwellian Doublespeak. Any time you mandate what a company can do it's only a matter of time before more mandates are added.

    In fact the very aspect of ISP's not being able to block traffic they do deem illegal is because of the Common Carrier laws that would let them be sued if they try to block anything. If you really favor the ISPs ability to block illegal traffic you should be seeking regulatory relief, not doubling up on the dose.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:The Whys by orgelspieler · · Score: 1

      We've already seen the government alter DNS for sites it does not like, even though some seemed perfectly legal.

      Now there's an interesting point. Perhaps net neutrality should apply to government agencies as well as ISPs.

  112. What point.... by ArtFart · · Score: 0

    ...is there to trying to "educate" a pack of rabid hyenas?

  113. Not quite by MikeRT · · Score: 1

    This came up a lot in Gay Marriage for instance, where people couldn't really say no to two people in love getting married, so they started talking about people marrying sheep or dogs instead.

    What about three people? Why can't a man have two lawfully wedded wives at the same time? Who appointed you the arbiter of where the line in the sand is drawn once marriage is no longer between one man and one woman (which the overwhelming majority of human cultures have always defined it as)?

    To the extent that gay marriage redefines how our society views marriage, it opens up pandora's box because today's "reasonable person" who balks at polygamy today is tomorrow's "reactionary."

    1. Re:Not quite by Algan · · Score: 2

      What about three people? Why can't a man have two lawfully wedded wives at the same time? Who appointed you the arbiter of where the line in the sand is drawn once marriage is no longer between one man and one woman (which the overwhelming majority of human cultures have always defined it as)?

      Yeah, why not? As long as all persons involved consent to it, what gives you the right to forbid it? Just because it doesn't fit your moral or religious views?

      --
      If con is the opposite of pro, is Congress the opposite of progress?
    2. Re:Not quite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it opens up pandora's box because today's "reasonable person" who balks at polygamy today is tomorrow's "reactionary."

      This is the real problem with slippery slope arguments. You have merely asserted a plausible outcome as a certainty. I agree that people who favor polygamy would try to use the change in the law defining marriage to try to change it further to allow polygamy. But I don't think that it is likely that US law will ever allow polygamy. In my view there would be no significant increase in the legalization of polygamy given the legalization of same sex marriage.

      BTW, I'm not sure why the government recognizes any marriage. As far as the government should be concerned, my martial status is only an issue of property rights between my wife and I.

  114. You don't pay attention to the news much, do you? by MikeRT · · Score: 1

    Do a Google search yourself for "fairness doctrine" and you will find a number of Democrats calling at various points in the last three years for it. Kerry was one of them.

    That opposing Net Neutrality legislation is going to make it harder for governments to censor?

    Actually, in the US it would, since no federal agency has any direct statutory control over the Internet yet. Law enforcement can enforce specific criminal statutes, but no federal agency has the power to get right in there and start messing with the Internet itself in the United States. The FBI can come in with all sorts of orders, but the telecoms can tell them to go f#$% themselves if the law doesn't back them up.

    Cause it seems to me that a small number of powerful telecoms dominating what people read is more or less a precondition for a modern totalitarian state.

    And no net neutrality proposal will address this point because they all just blithely assume that those telecoms are going to lay there and take it up the ass as a federal regulator reviews their network operations on a regular basis.

    What is really needed is a good plan to separate ownership of the backbone from ownership of the last mile. If Comcast couldn't legally enter the backbone infrastructure market, and "Mom and Pop Fiber Optics" could get access to Verizon's infrastructure at a "reasonable, non-discriminatory rate" it wouldn't matter if Comcast combined content and ISP services because Comcast would not have any more clout than its smaller competitors.

  115. Another thing... by MikeRT · · Score: 1

    The FCC is a regulatory agency and as such can draft up all sorts of regulations based on what Congress permits, intentionally or unintentionally. Other executive branch agencies cannot. Homeland Security needed very specific legislation to shut down those sites recently for copyright infringement. The FCC, depending on how Congress acts, could do whatever its leadership wants.

    That does include censoring "obscene speech."

  116. FCC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was for it before I was against it. I thought it was basically common carrier clause meaning that ISP could not control content. However after seeing a FCC person talk about mandating content on web sites I quickly changed my position. There is defiantly snake oil here and the free maket is a better option in my option.

  117. Figures by Kid+Zero · · Score: 1

    Fixed broadband providers may not unreasonably
    discriminate in transmitting lawful network traffic.

    Which means if Comcast/NBC doesn't like Hulu, you don't get to see it. I don't want the government telling me what I want.

  118. Re:The evil "American Right"...yup by ArcherB · · Score: 1

    I personally would like to see a third choice on ballots; ie, ABSTAIN.

    The answer is simpler than that. Make it so no one may be elected without at least 50% of the popular vote. If no one gets 50%, the top two go into a run-off.

    See, the problem is that if I vote for an independent, it's the same as ABSTAIN. I might as well stay home. The winner is either going to be D or R because they get the most votes. They get the most votes because voting for a TEA/Green party candidate is literally taking away a vote from the next best thing, a R or D. If a TEA/Green party candidate takes 30% of the vote, they are taking 30% of the vote from the D or R that these voters are next closest aligned to and end up giving the race to the D or R they do NOT agree with. By demanding at least a 50% popular vote, your vote is not wasted.

    For example. Let's say you live in a liberal district, 60% liberal. You have a Green Party member, a Democrat and Republican running. The Democrat and Green Party member split the liberal vote and each candidate gets 30%. The Republican gets 40% and wins. The public knows this and will consistently vote for whoever has the better chance of winning, usually the Democrat, even if they want the Green Party member more. Now, with a majority rule, no one wins and the top Democrat/Green Party winner go up against the Republican and wins 60-40.

    --
    There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
  119. Re: by clint999 · · Score: 0

    "No ISP has ever done that." No, but some mobile ISPs have blocked VoIP, as it competes with their very profitable phone service.

  120. solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Charge Limbaugh & Beck with sedition. Payable by death.

    We should at least get their licenses pulled.

  121. What is exactly the problem? by FranckMartin · · Score: 2

    The problem is that there is not enough bandwidth in the USA, so people, instead of throwing more bandwidth at the problem, try to define ways to control the current bandwidth.

    I'm sure we have already spent more money in Network Neutrality issues than if we had put more bandwidth.

    Note this problem is not much felt in other part of the world, because there is sufficient bandwidth for current services. In USA, rural America is still much under dial-up...

    If the government wants to help: bring broadband in all corners of the USA.

    --
    Franck Martin
    Avonsys
  122. Such a shame that we have no other option by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't it just a crying shame that there is absolutely no way we can escape the thrall of politicians? The republicans and the democrats are both just shills for their contributors and for their parties, with almost no concern whatsoever for the actual electorate.

    But alas, there is nothing, no possible way that we could ever escape this system.

    Gee... if only someone could come up with something that would apply the principles of the free and open source software movements to the practice of governance. But that is impossible. We should just remain forever under the tyranny of the politicians. Oh well. Guess we're screwed forever.

    Why don't we just stop talking about politics, since it is so pointless anyway. OK?

    1. Re:Such a shame that we have no other option by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Screw you and your free ideals. You are the fucking devil!

  123. Always by b4upoo · · Score: 1

    The normal and usual tool of the right wing is lies. If it is conservative it is lying. We now have proof that Bush stole his election. The computer programmer who wrote the code that altered the ballot count has testified that he wrote the code and exactly who paid him to do it.
                  Then there is the trickle down economy lie created by Reagen. Obviously that magical theory of economics was absurd and hatched by lunatics. Now we have right wing congressmen who are trying to revive that nonsense. We even have right wingers who want tax breaks for the rich under the absurd supposition that the rich will somehow create jobs in America if they have more money. Think about that for just a moment. If you were wealthy and wanted a big return on investment why on Earth would you invest it in the US? Why not buy a factory in China and earn some real money like everyone else or perhaps a factory in Mexico where labor is cheap? After all if you want to build yachts wouldn't it be better to pay $10. per day to a highly skilled worker in Mexico than pay $250. per day to a skilled worker in the US? And they'll let you pollute and make a mess of everything with a few bribes here and there.
                  If it is right wing it is lying and if you don't stomp them out they will bite you or steal the food off of your table.

  124. Actually a similar thing happened by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    with regard to the right wing ('fair and balanced') reporting of the health care debate. Is it really that strange to see another multi-billion dollar industry (substituting telecoms for health insurers/pharma corps) following the same pattern, with the right wing political/media apparatus peppering it's coverage with inaccuracies, slants and whiffs of 'big government' conspiracies?

    Much of the language used to shape that debate was actually formed by PR agencies hired by large health insurers as revealed by Wendell Potter (former VP and head of corporate communications for large health insurers CIGNA and Humana) in his book Deadly Spin: An Insurance Company Insider Speaks Out on How Corporate PR Is Killing Health Care and Deceiving Americans (Nov 2010) . Publicly funded health care was to be branded as "socialism" and a government intrusion. Here is an interview with Mr. Potter.
    Republican talking points followed this pattern and then Fox reporters/anchors were ordered to use the same language in their reporting by Fox's managing editor, Bill Sammons.

    from Leaked email: Fox boss caught slanting news reporting (Dec 9, 2010):

    As far back as March 2009, Fox personalities had sporadically referred to the "government option."

    Two months prior to Sammon's 2009 memo, Republican pollster Frank Luntz appeared on Sean Hannity's August 18 Fox News program. Luntz scolded Hannity for referring to the "public option" and encouraged Hannity to use "government option" instead.

    Luntz argued that "if you call it a 'public option,' the American people are split," but that "if you call it the 'government option,' the public is overwhelmingly against it." Luntz explained that the program would be "sponsored by the government" and falsely claimed that it would also be "paid for by the government."

    "You know what," Hannity replied, "it's a great point, and from now on, I'm going to call it the government option."

  125. Strategy by metrometro · · Score: 1

    We have to "educate them before the debate can really be held"? No, you morons. THIS IS THE DEBATE. IT'S THE THING HAPPENING RIGHT NOW.

    Here's a better idea: Put the pro-Net Neutrality megaphone solidly in the hands of Google*, and the rest of the Valley. Then get out the way. Yes, Rush, will jump at this and make it a Google vs. Me debate, because Rush is a fanatical self promoter, and would love to be as important as Google. But the thing is... people USE Google. They LIKE Google. They TRUST Google. So Google needs to get out there and make this about innovation and jobs, and make the opponent position that Comcast can jack up rates whenever they like. Limbaugh can get shoved next to Comcast, which just happens to be the most hated company in the world. Just sayin'.

    If it's business vs. fanatics, the businesses will always win. Ain't America great? So we fanatics need to get businesses that support neutrality -- and data portability and open standards and all the other aspects of Open Stewardship -- at the front of the room for a while.

    * I recognize the problems with the Google/Verizon statement, but we work with what we have.

  126. The problem it is called Policing not Regulation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is one of the biggest problems in America today...
    The word 'Regulation'.
    It has been perverted by the echo chamber of radio and news to mean things that word never meant.

    The NN issue..
    Call it Policing Equal Access or something like that.
    Anything but Regulation Because it is not about ‘regulating’.
    It is about the opposite. It is about not allowing providers to ‘regulate’ content, only speed.

    I hate it that big business can redefine 'the internet' to mean: Well, you can access these websites, but streaming will work for crap, and you can host this but no that, Oh and only on Mondays...
    Oh, and VPN will not work..
    Why? “Because VPN is not the internet”
    Fuck you Charter! That’s a real quote from them to me.
    And don't even bother shopping for another provider because you mysteriously will not be able to even access their sites half the time.

    It's just like the banks.... Selling a AAAA+ rated derivative that is actually complete junk is THEFT.
    Selling some normal factory worker an adjustable rate mortgage with a balloon payment and glossing over it and telling them they can refinance at any time and having them sign false income statements is FRAUD.
    Getting bonuses on cooked books is THEFT.
    Yet we can reign then in.. It just can’t be done let me wring my hands and worry about the restoration of Wallstreet. We can’t have ‘Regulation’ as it will hinder our ability to STEAL.

    Don’t call it ‘Regulation’ or ‘Regulatory Bodies’ Or ‘Regulatory Departments’.
    Call it Law, Law Enforcement, and Policing.
    Then ask.. What? You don’t support Laws and Police?
    You are for Theft and Fraud?
    You support criminals?

    Because when the correct words have been perverted such that we can’t do common sense things to stop theft, fraud, and monopoly abuses, we need to find other words.

  127. Regulating the internet is bad, on any level by bifrost · · Score: 1

    Which is why this is not a left/right issue.
    The right currently doesn't want to regulate the internet, we should all want that.
    The left currently wants to regulate the internet and impose restrictions on it, do not want!
    The fact that people trust the FCC to regulate the internet when the same people don't want the FCC regulating TV/Radio is what makes this whole issue so hillarious.

    The fact is that once the government gets to regulate the internet, they get to regulate it more and more.
    Rarely have we seen the case where regulations ever go away, so we should avoid it like the plague.
    Imagine the imposition of taxes on the internet, thats been a meme/troll for years, yet this could make it happen.
    Imagine the FCC imposing content restrictions because it maybe "violates US interests", that would have people up in arms.
    If you want to avoid the problem, don't have the government in the business of regulating the internet, period.

    If there are problems with content/eyeball providers, the courts should be used to sort that out, it'll be much more effective than any
    governmental relief ever could be.

  128. The ultimate evil by sgt_doom · · Score: 0
    "Since the opposing side is so badly misinformed,.."

    This is the most stupid comment imaginable!

    They aren't "badly misinformed", Ameritard (yes, I am getting highly impatient with all those American Zombie Consumertards out there who can't even find their own vaginas!!!)!

    This is the typical, Ameritard political theater of the absurd strategy:

    Fight against something -- claiming it has something to do with a "government takeover" (as if the frigging government hasn't long since been taken over by the banksters!!!!) -- so the douchebag party enlists all its brainless and mindless lackeys to fight for what the evil ones really desire.

    Hence, we get a health insurance super-screw job, conceived and structured within the rightwing Heritage Foundation, using insurance exchange scam created within Enron, and written by a former VP from WellPoint, who has since been appointed by Obama to the Health and Human Services, where she is industriously involved in writing waivers to exempt those health insurance companies from following the rules enancted against "pre-existing conditions" etc.

    Just like that next Wall Street scam, cap-and-trade, which the dems are pushing for as the R-Cons are against, so ergo it must be "good." (Carbon offsets did not original with Igor -- or Al Gore, that complete fraudster -- but early in the Reagan Administration, when we still had a few authentic democrats in congress who promptly laughed it off the house floor.

    Holy Mother of Godzilla! Will you people never frigging learn anything???? And don't get me started on that completely phony "financial reform" Frank-Dodd, or Dodd-Frank Act -- everyone involved with that should be hanging from a noose! (Allows for proprietary trading by the banksters -- instead of lending out money to small biz --- allows for the establishment of privately run clearinghouses -- i.e., ICE US Trust -- owned by the banksters-oil cartel, which OWNS all the exchanges, etc. --- allows for private equity firms and banksters to take energy companies private for future Enron debacles and thievery.)

    1. Re:The ultimate evil by macsuibhne · · Score: 1

      Your 'bot has malfunctioned: there is an unbalanced parenthesis in the fourth paragraph; I'm guessing trying to squeeze Al Gore into the frankly nonsensical diatribe/parody threw off the parser. There will be another Turing test next week. In the meantime, you fail.

      Tony.

      --
      -- "Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?" -- Juvenal
    2. Re:The ultimate evil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you are supporting Wall Street's cap-and-trade, and the Reagan administration's original push (on behalf of the oil cartel and Wall Street) to adopt carbon offsets and carbon permit trading?

      You love Blythe Masters and JPMorgan Chase's carbon derivatives and their worldwide ownership (along with BP, Royal Dutch/Shell, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley) of those climate exchanges?

      You dig on the banksters, huh, scumbag???

      sgt_doom

  129. Private infrastructure investment will stagnate by dirkdodgers · · Score: 1

    If we go Net Neutrality, it must be coupled with large public investment in major net infrastructure enhancements.

    In a Net Neutrality world, telcos can't afford to roll out major infrastructure enhancements to support 1080p video and similar mass market content, because even if they could charge consumers more directly, which they realistically can't, that infrastructure will just go to support more bittorrent use for the top 5% of users.

    In a Net Neutrality world, telcos can't go to Google and Netflix and Hulu and Apple and get funding for major infrastructure enhancements based on deals to ensure QoS of delivery of those providers' content. And consumers and the rest of providers won't get the downstream benefits of those major infrastructure enhancements, because they won't happen.

    In a Net Neutrality world, these major infrastructure enhancements will only happen on this schedule if the government funds them directly. Unfortunately this has been something governments have been unwilling to do explicitly. We should just agree that internet infrastructure is like roads and highways inasmuch as it should be publicly funded and owned. Of course that means that the government controls it and monitors it, but the government already does this, and since it's private and not public, they do it with telcos directly without oversight and restriction.

    1. Re:Private infrastructure investment will stagnate by Tjp($)pjT · · Score: 2

      So stagnate like it did in the late 90s? Not so. They sell a rate of delivery and a volume cap. Content neutral ... If you want 1080p video subscribe to an appropriate rate and volume combination. If the market demands 1080p Internet streaming content then charge enough to support it.

      Love the bittorrent strawman. If the bittorrent user pays for the committed information rate and freedom from volume caps then they are already paying for their use. Same as someone who wants to plays 1080p video off of You Tube. There is NO difference. Do remember some people actually distribute legitimate files over torrents

      The Googles, Hulus, Apples, and Netflix of the world already pay huge amounts for their side of the Internet connectivity and infrastructure to support their operations. You're saying they need to pay the intermediate carrier that already is paid by the consumer for their connection. So you'd like them to pay twice for the same delivery mechanism that other businesses only pay once for, solely because they have a successful product? Not a great way to encourage new technology in my opinion. You're asking Apple to support Microsoft. Or Google to support my ISP operations. They all pay for a pipe with a committed volume and bit rate now. As a small ISP do I now get to bill Google, Apple, Hulu, and Netflix as well? After all with your logic my users use their services so I should bill them to help build up my infrastructure.

      I chatted with the good folks at NSF in 1996 about a new NAP in the pacific northwest. Their answer was that the government wasn't funding more NAPs and the private sector would be responsible for future growth. And after that point in time when hardly any VC would look at such a venture, we've come full circle and the greed just hits that much harder. We went through the "anything mentions Internet fund with wheelbarrows of cash" craze to a better more thought out planning phase today. We have almost used the dark fiber put in in the late 90s but lots still remains dark. No need for the government. If it will be viable commercially then the private sector will fund it. We do need to start looking at network connectivity as a utility though. The profit on an investment in 3 years or less mentality needs to go. I have routers and switches that are over ten years old and still fine for what they need to do. I invest in new hardware as I have demand. The only "disposable" in 3 year hardware I have are mac minis. And most of those actually last for lots longer. But we only plan them for the time we can get vendor service contracts on them.

      Capitalism works. In the late 90s the private sector spent billions on infrastructure for the network. Lots of companies died as a result. This is OK! The money that was spent was not wasted as other companies own those assets and they are the better managed, more savvy competitors. If we have a demand for gigabit network service to the home, it will happen. And the private sector can fund it. And they will make money doing it. The core Internet structure is already government funded by the way. The contracts for services support a good bit of the expansion the private sector benefits from.

      The other major major flaw in your concepts is who gets the revenue from the QoS. If Apple pays my backbone provider they'd get a some commitment for enhanced delivery to my ISP connections? Which ones? Which backbones? All of them. Everywhere. Even if they don't directly connect to Apple, but already get paid through peering arrangements for the traffic from Apple's suppliers that transit their network. And how to I get paid to turn on the QoS for Apple's traffic. (Literally it is a few Cisco IOS commands, with the side note Cisco had iPhone now it is an apple brand, Cisco had IOS, now it is associated with Apple. Maybe Apple should buy Cisco?) And if I give priority to Apple's content, do I reduce rates for the people I will be dumping or delaying packets from like poor Yahoo or MSN to make way to enhance delivery of Appl

      --
      - Tjp

      I am in wallow with my inner money grubbing capitalistic pig. ... Oink!

  130. Right Wingers want to keep porn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "they think it's all about keeping porn off the Internet and allowing the Government to censor websites"

    What? Those right wing Rushties want to keep porn on the internet? Maybe those kooks are on to something ...

  131. To debate, you need rational people... by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1

    ...those of us who want the internet to remain open to innovation and freedom of expression have to help educate them before the debate can really be held.

    To debate, you first need people who are open to debate and rational argument. The bribed people on both sides are neither. They don't want to debate, they want to have their way. Debating, in this case, is only a distraction. Thinking you can educate them is either misguided or hubris of the highest order.

    --
    That is all.
  132. Educate the Right? Can't be done! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Limbaugh can't be educated because he makes too much money blithering his half-truth bs on the radio.

    The American [political] Right can't be educated, period! Learning requires an open mind & the poltics of the Right don't allow for that.

  133. Health care reform is meant to reduce the deficit by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

    The left didn't care that we couldn't afford it as long as they got what they wanted by passing the healthcare bill.

    Except that health care reform is intended to reduce the deficit over the long term, by curbing the rapid growth of health care costs over the long term.

    Remember, there are all sorts of tax deductions and credits for health care. This means that the government sees comparatively little revenue from dollars that get spent on healthcare, which gets more and more expensive much faster than inflation. Also, sick people produce less, and growing numbers of uninsured or underinsured people means less revenue for the government.

    The Congressional Budget Office says that health care reform increases the deficit over the next 10 years, but reduces it dramatically over the next 20. They're not necessarily right, but they're analyzing this deeper than the critics.

  134. This again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's pretty sad that any time there's any article regarding politics, the comments turn into a massive flame war.

  135. Re:The evil "American Right"...yup by youngone · · Score: 1

    I think you're not represented in Government because you're not a corporation or lobby group with lots of campaign funds to dole out. Neither are your neighbours. The whole liberal/conservative thing is just a smokescreen as you point out in the first part of your post.

  136. Before choosing "sides" we need understanding by Bob+Fr · · Score: 1

    In http://rmf.vc/FCCPerspective?z=sdt I observe that the Internet is a larger concept then telecommunications. Both "sides' seem be accepting the idea that the Internet is just another telecommunications service and that is simply wrong.

    Neutrality is a good principle but it doesn't address the inherent conflict of interest that comes from having service providers owning the physical infrastructure. I use the term "Broadband Internet" to distinguish the sliver of telecommunications capacity used for exchanging bits from the larger concept of a "Generative Internet".

    The first step is to break free of the 19th century business model of selling services to pay for providers' private infrastructure. We need to own our local physical infrastructure and fund it as a commons. That is a sustainable model that generates the hypergrowth we elsewhere in computing and connectivity. For more see the essay and others such as http://rmf.vc/Demystify?z=sdt which go into the detail.

  137. Re:Educate the Right? Can't be done! by ThisIsNotMyHandel · · Score: 1

    Try educating yourself first. Let me provide a historical example of why people do not want FCC regulation over the Internet. The original goal of the FCC was to regulated frequencies so that radio/tv stations didn't overlap. This was a good thing. Soon the FCC started regulating content on those airwaves. Was that their original mission? Nope. Did that stop them? Nope. (And if you want to be technical, it was the "progressives" who imposed this censorship. Many of the problems in this country today are the result of "progressive" policies during the FDR administration. Then again, we can ignore history and bash republicans with baseless arguments.)

  138. Mod Article "Troll" by Garrett+Fox · · Score: 2

    The entire article is a troll's post. "The Republicans are lying, they're badly misinformed, and we the enlightened have the correct answer and must re-educate them." Then the commenters jump on and say, "Why yes! I understand the Republican position -- it's because they're anarchists who love anything done by a big corporation, and it's on this basis that I judge everything they say!" If you want to have a serious debate about Net neutrality, this kind of article isn't the way to do it. Then again, the actual politicians these days have been dismissing the ruling party's critics as stupid, ignorant, and irrational -- in nearly that exact language -- so it's no surprise that their supporters would also talk that way.

    --
    Revive the Constitution.
  139. Healthcare all over again, indeed by BobMcD · · Score: 1

    Like I said, it's healthcare reform all over again, and I wouldn't be at all surprised to find that the government take-over talking points that have emerged on the Right are coming straight from the telcos, just like the government take-over talking point on the public option came directly from the insurance industry.

    This is actually cuttingly salient, even though the author doesn't realize it. Remember how we were told that there would be no government take-over of healthcare due to the reform bill? Remember how that turned out to be a lie? As a matter of fact, only government-approved healthcare plans are presently available. You cannot get child-only coverage at all in many places. You did not get to 'keep your doctor' nor 'keep your current plan' because your employer makes those choices and simply would never, ever have paid those increased costs out of pocket. Note, too, how the major employers will SAVE MONEY by DROPPING COVERAGE altogether once the exchanges come up.

    I just find it ironic that even now, after we can see everything that's going wrong with the newly-minted power of the Federal government to ration out health insurance - even NOW do we yearn to give them more power over the internet. What could possibly go wrong???

    You pro-government guys are probably certifiable at this point, and yet you call us anti-government guys crazy. Go figure.

  140. First rule of politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    have to help educate them before the debate can really be held.

    and this is why you have already lost the debate. Education is the same as indoctrination. Different people hold different values and different beliefs, and you cannot simply "educate" those away. The other side probably thinks that you need to be "educated" as well.

    The first rule of politics is that "if you're explaining, you're losing."

    The market is not swayed by logic. It is swayed by emotion. Logic is vulnerable to ignorance, apathy, and confusion. Emotion is not. Logic takes effort to understand. Emotion does not.

    The reason that the left is losing is because it does not understand this.

    If you want to educate them, you need to appeal to emotion. Tell them that some liberal ISP could start restricting access to conservative media. Tell them that they could block the NRA, or the DNC, or pro-life sites. Tell them that an ISP could start charging them extra to allow them to access iTunes.

  141. Some people on the right, some on the left by Tjp($)pjT · · Score: 1

    I am decidedly on the right politically, with the caveat I don't discriminate on personal freedoms as to what should be protected and what should have hob-nailed boots trounce it. So maybe neither "side" really wants me. But I strongly favor net neutrality. I also think the best way to combat the fight against it is to add language that loses carriers "common carrier" status when they start filtering based on content. Because truly they are then filtering the content so damaging content they deliver (viruses, SPAM, unwanted content in general or psychic damaging who-ha, or whatever other thing one perceives as damaging content) can land them in a court case. It is one thing to say we provide a connection to the Internet, and if you suck too much on the pipe, we'll slow you down. It is quite another to say that we will allow you full access to XYZZY site but access to PLUGH will be at 20Kbps or we won't allow access to HULACADABRA without an additional fee. It is even worse when they say, cool to connect with your Doors Phone 23 Phone, but that iPineapple is going to cost you more!

    In my opinion once they do more than sell me a rate of bits (that may be volume restricted) then they lose common carrier status. And they open the door to a multitude of legitimate (and of course spurious) lawsuits thay will be defending against. My phone service does not stop people from calling me if the phone company doesn't make money from them too. My phone doesn't prevent me from calling other people. (Notice the blocking services offered by the phone company are in the control of the consumer!) The main flaw to the phone argument is 800 numbers but there the 800 provider is receiving a special service (ANI-caller ID that can't be blocked, so be careful calling those anonymous 800 number tip lines) in exchange for what they pay so you don't have too. The internet "pipe" to a consumer is different though. It is dumped into the Internet without consideration as to what the packet contains. It gets routed the same whether part of an email, VOIP call, or DNS request.

    If net neutrality is ever defeated I urge everyone affected to file using their jurisdictions anti-spam laws immediately in small claims court or to lodge a complaint with their state's AG if possible on each piece of SPAM, naming not only the spammer but the provider that services their Internet connection as well since they now control content.

    Of course, just my opinion, you are as always personally responsible for your actions in these matters.

    --
    - Tjp

    I am in wallow with my inner money grubbing capitalistic pig. ... Oink!

  142. Ah...no by bashibazouk · · Score: 1

    It is one way of doing it. I believe the single payer system was another and a few other ideas were on the table as well. The mandatory insurance was the only one that the insurance companies would support and the only one that would get enough votes.

    Break a leg and see if you can get insurance before it falls off...

    1. Re:Ah...no by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      So passing a law that you *KNOW* will collapse the system you're creating is somehow equally good as the principle ?

      Man, is the left that ideologically entrenched ? Or is there simply some desire to *make* the system collapse ?

  143. Re:Health care reform is meant to reduce the defic by cforciea · · Score: 1

    Don't be ridiculous. As far as your average American voter is concerned, any budgeting beyond oh, the next two years or so might as well not exist. If you can't translate this into either increased services or decreased taxes for somebody right now, they are going to be against it. Oh, and the services have to be so easily understandable that some media talking head can't spin it easily into a negative and so obvious that the beneficiaries can't easily ignore it. For your average mouth breather spouting off about the issue, increasing the deficit over the next 10 years is the same thing as saying you are increasing the deficit for the rest of eternity.

  144. You are naive if you thing government is not you by bussdriver · · Score: 1

    Government is your responsibility and a democratic representative government like the USA has is even MORE tied to its public. If it sucks it is your fault.

    Government run by and for the corporations is no longer the same form of government and it is also your fault for giving up to their influence -- and its those forces who have incentive to break government so they can clean up the messes they create while blaming government for their actions and demotivating people from taking back control.

  145. Be self informed by joeboomer628 · · Score: 1

    If you care about this subject read the proposed legislation. There are liars on both sides and the only way to see the truth is to go to the source.

    --
    JoeR
  146. Re:The evil "American Right"...yup by buybuydandavis · · Score: 1

    The Declaration of Independence held that the just purpose of government is to secure our rights.

    That's about as small-l libertarian as you'll find anywhere. Classical Liberals such as Madison, Jefferson, and Paine really were libertarians.

    Where Libertarians of today often diverge from Jefferson and Paine is a tendency to view government granted monopolies in copyright, patent, and even land, as absolute natural rights instead of limited grants by government to "promote the useful arts" or find a way to peacefully coexist while exploiting natural resources.

  147. Re:afraid of net neutrality laws by DocSavage64109 · · Score: 1

    The flaw in your argument is that if the government does nothing, then your ISP will use its monopoly / near monopoly to provide poor service to any web services (like Netflix) that compete against what the ISP is also selling (cable tv). This is already occurring, and the only way for us citizens to fight back is to pass laws preventing their schemes.

  148. Prove it by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    All I ask for is a concrete link proving what you say, and then an explanation of why you think network neutrality solves the problem you see.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Prove it by LingNoi · · Score: 1

      Why should I waste my time doing your research, I have better things to do then educate ignorant lazy people.

      Even slashdot has reported it happening, use the search feature.

  149. Re:The evil "American Right"...yup by DavidTC · · Score: 1

    The Declaration of Independence held that the just purpose of government is to secure our rights.

    Sigh.

    I know libertarians have decided that 'taxes' are infringement our rights, but that's something that libertarians invented. That is not actually an infringement of rights, and no one pre-1950 or so would have ever thought it was.

    That's about as small-l libertarian as you'll find anywhere. Classical Liberals such as Madison, Jefferson, and Paine really were libertarians.

    No, they were liberals. They promoted equal justice before the law, and they wanted inalienable rights that all men had and couldn't be removed.

    They didn't give a flying fuck about taxes, or even 'less laws'.

    You read the Declaration of Independence, notice how many complaints there are about taxes (two, one of which is complaining about the fact they were basically paying taxes to a country that is functionally at war with them) and how many complaints about the fact the US cannot create laws it needs because England refuses to let it (eight).

    Complaining about the lack of laws is right up there with complaining about the fact England isn't following the laws that do exist. The only complaints about taxes, the only complaints about actually enforced laws, are mere afterthoughts.

    The founders of the US wanted a 'government of laws, not man'. They did not want a government of 'less laws'.

    I don't care what sort of absurd revisionism you've managed to internalized, read the damn Declaration of the Independence, actually look at the complaints listed as reasons the US was founded.

    The only 'small government' stuff WRT to the founding of the US that existed was the idea that the states would be a lot more powerful, and the US a lot less. But while a lot of people on the right think that would mean 'less government', that wasn't the reason they 'wanted' that, nor is there any particular reason that state governments would be less intrusive.

    They 'wanted' states to have more power, because they figured it was the only way the states would agree, and because turning everything over to the Federal government couldn't work at that time anyway.

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  150. Re:The evil "American Right"...yup by buybuydandavis · · Score: 1

    They didn't care about taxes?

    Wasn't there some party in Boston about taxes?

    Did you notice that we needed a constitutional amendment to have an income tax?

    But I'm not so concerned about how you got your knickers in a twist over taxes.

    If you don't understand that they believed in limited government, with specific and enumerated delegated powers, you just didn't pay attention.

  151. The Wacko CmdrTaco by jlrowe · · Score: 1
    I cannot believe the flat out ignorance of so very many folks on how the government of the U.S.A. is supposed to work. But before we get started on *that*, let's look at this:

    "All you really have to know about Net Neutrality is that its biggest promoters are George Soros and Google."

    To begin with, the article linked is at www.dailykos.com, which is run by Markos Moulitsas. He is American born of a Salvadoran (a country with long standing socialist influences) mother and a Greek (more socialism) father, and grew up both in El Salvador and Chicago. Now I am from Indiana, not all that far from Chicago and know that a Republican in Chicago is regarded a Liberal in Indiana. He backed, and campaigned for Liberal Democrats throughout. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Markos_Moulitsas]. He is a Leftist, and his web site reflects that.

    The DailyKos article links to an article at thinkprogress.org, from which google tells us that Soros funds Thinkprogress and following the money, behind Net Neutrality, just as Rush alleged. And for that matter, reading the entire list of inter-networked organizations covered at http://discoverthenetworks.org/ finds George Soros deeply involved in funding a vast network of anti USA, anti-freedom, anti-capitalism, anti-Business organizations of the progressive Left. That includes the attack on the Chamber of Commerce.
    George Soros, a statist Socialist who wants to control the world, is behind “Net Neutrality” [link here]

    All of these individuals and organizations are committed Socialists and Progressives. The problem with that here is the USA, is that it is the diametric opposite of the US Constitution, Liberty, Capitalism (which is just people saving their money and investing it), and all else this country stands for. It is nothing new that Socialism has been infiltrating the USA for over 100 years. And it is nothing new that Socialism has never, ever, not one time, worked for an extended period of time. It seems to work, until it runs out of other peoples money. It will then die as it has always in the past, and with a fair share of suffering and violence as the throes of death proceed.

    In short, Net Neutrality, especially done by the FCC, is un-Constitutional

    The problem of the FCC “regulating” the internet is that they have NO governmental right to do so.

    They were denied that right previously in court.

    They were denied that right by Congress regardless of how many times it was tried.

    Briefy, the Executive branch (President, and *his* FCC) cannot make law. Congress makes law, which when passed must be approved by the President. And that can be revoked in the Courts. The case here is that the President through the FCC is making law.

    Obama, long before he was elected President, Obama lamented that the "Constitution is a charter of negative liberties". [audio]. The problem here is that the Constitution in every point, limits government and gives it NO right to do anything TO its citizens. That was done by design of the Founders. Obama laments that because he wants to impose Socialism and wealth re-distribution. These two, Socialism and the US Constitution, are incompatible.

    I also cannot understand why people here ca

  152. You can take my internet porn away when... by okmijnuhb · · Score: 1

    You can take my internet porn away when you can pry it from my cold, dead, hand grip!

  153. Re:You don't pay attention to the news much, do yo by dachshund · · Score: 1

    What is really needed is a good plan to separate ownership of the backbone from ownership of the last mile. If Comcast couldn't legally enter the backbone infrastructure market, and "Mom and Pop Fiber Optics" could get access to Verizon's infrastructure at a "reasonable, non-discriminatory rate" it wouldn't matter if Comcast combined content and ISP services because Comcast would not have any more clout than its smaller competitors.

    And I'd like a pony too.

    Don't kid yourself that Congresspeople and sundry interest groups are fighting Net Neutrality for anything approaching the idealistic reasons you name. They're opposing it --- solely, simply, absolutely --- because it might separate large ISPs from their profits. The world where this happens is not a world where anyone's going to lift a finger to separate Comcast from its infrastructure.

    When Congress decides to fully regulate the Internet --- and they will, regardless of what happens to this bill --- they'll use something splashy like terrorism or kiddie porn, not something esoteric like packet delivery rules.

  154. The opening paragraph... by davesque · · Score: 1

    Since most of the discussion I've seen here is somewhat devoid of facts, I've just taken a few moments to review the first section of the document that details the recent vote of the FCC on Net Neutrality rules.

    I encourage anyone to read through at least this first section from the following link:
    FCC Report and Order on Net Neutrality

    It is troubling from the outset.

    Section I.1: "Today the Commission takes an important step to preserve the Internet as an open platform for innovation, investment, job creation, economic growth, competition, and free expression."

    Anyone notice where free expression falls in that list? This should give any American, left or right, something to worry about.

    What follows is taken from the "three basic rules" which are said to govern the FCC's philosophy on net neutrality:

    Section I.1.iii: "No unreasonable discrimination. Fixed broadband providers may not unreasonably discriminate in transmitting lawful network traffic."

    The previous two rules of Section I.1 apply in part to both "Fixed" and "mobile" providers. Mobile providers are clearly, glaringly absent from the third rule. The unspoken message is this: "Mobile broadband providers may unreasonably discriminate in transmitting lawful network traffic." Is this an unfair understanding that one might take from Section I.1.iii?

    It does not take any party affiliation to feel worry about the implications of even the first few words present in this document.

  155. Ain't broke, don't fix it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No matter which angle is used to talk this up, regulating a nonexistant problem framed as "internet dataflow issues" comes down to nothing more than corporate greed. Are we that blind to the truth?

  156. Abolish the FCC! by mbstone · · Score: 2

    So I was driving through a rural area, where the only station was broadcasting the Limbaugh show, and he had some guest host on talking about "net neutrality." The guest host was just as good at ad-hominems and straw-men as is Limbaugh, then the host opined that the FCC should be abolished as an unnecessary, unelected government regulatory agency. Why, one of the commissioners is the child of an African-American politician!

    There's something Limbaugh and I can agree upon.

    I think people who don't agree with Limbaugh should be able to set up their own radio transmitters across the street from whatever local station carries Limbaugh, on the same frequency, and whoever can pump out the most wattage, wins!

    Abolishing the FCC would enable Limbaugh wannabes to set up on any frequency they want. Who cares if the frequency belongs to the control tower at O'Hare?

  157. We are all idiots. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What a bunch of idiots you Americans are - mind we Brits are not a lot better - we haven't got a party of the left either now that our Liberals have joined with our Conservatives and our Labour party is off somewhere with Ghengis Khan.

  158. oh fuck off by unity100 · · Score: 1

    it doesnt misrepresent anything. the corporations which are the sponsors of republican party and american right are annoyed with the level of freedom you have on the internet. they see it damaging to themselves. also there are rogue companies like google, which do not comply with the existing corporate hierarchy and bow to them like others do. so, internet is the enemy.

    they use their media monopoly (http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1867262&cid=34218862) (80% of american news are owned by parents of 4 movie studios) in order to fool and deceive the gullible. then, these come up to you and yell about their freedoms.

    its no different than catholic church sending people to die in middle east by yelling 'deus vult'.

  159. All you need to know at this point is... by RogueWarrior65 · · Score: 1

    All you need to know at this point is the fact that Congress (yes, with Democrats in control of it) told the FCC that they don't have the authority to do what they're doing and the FCC told Congress "Screw you, we're doing it anyway." This is not Venezuela, boys and girls, this is America and we have a representative government here.

    Beyond that, if you haven't read the nearly 200 pages the FCC put out, and I mean ALL of it, you can't talk intelligently about it. Same thing with AZ SB 1070 except that people were too effing lazy to read 16 pages which was really only 8 pages because the same language was duplicated with the words "knowingly" and "willfully". You may think Net Neutrality is great because the only thing that's been promoted in the media are things you want to hear which really amounts to about a page of text. So what the hell is in the rest of it?

    I've said it before and I'll say it again: business never bends over and takes government regulation up the a$$. The consumer gets the sh*t end of the regulation stick. Always.

  160. Summary Translation by Yadyn · · Score: 1

    "If only those poor dim-witted neanderthals knew what they were talking about, then we could actually make progress!"

    Boy, I haven't ever heard this sort of elitist condescension in politics before! Shall I kneel and give praise before or after you enlighten us unwashed masses?

  161. hairyfeet got BLOWN AWAY 4 times in 1 day? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1916240&cid=34612834

    http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1916240&cid=34647708

    http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1922942&cid=34665368

    http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1924664&cid=34669668

    ROTFLMAO, I wouldn't listen to "professor hairyfeet" guys, he's only an ITT Tech student.

  162. Re:The evil "American Right"...yup by DavidTC · · Score: 1

    Wasn't there some party in Boston about taxes?

    No, you moron.

    There was a tax involved, but not the way you think. Originally, colonists were taxed to pay their own (English) governors, an arrangement they had no problem at all. However, the English crown decided that this might make the governors loyal to the colonists, not the crown, so changed the arrangement...the colonists would pay the crown, and the crown would pay the governors.

    As English citizens, they could only be taxed by the crown with the consent of the their parliamentary representatives...and they had none. Before, the taxation to pay for governors was arguably also illegal, but everyone seemed okay with it.

    The English, however, had a plan to make the colonies pay as much in taxes as they cost, so started taxing imports, and creating monopoly importers to assure taxes were paid. By the time of the Boston Tea Party, however, this had gone so hilariously wrong that all the taxes had essentially gone away due to political pressure, and the only thing left was the monopoly shipping.

    And now the major problem was smuggling of tea. Legal tea was a) actually cheaper, and b) had no taxes on it. Please read that sentence again. In fact, England was subsiding the shipment of the tea...via the pockets of people in England, as they couldn't manage to collect any tax revenue from the colonies.

    However, the tea monopoly was seen as the last remnant of the previously illegal taxes, and a heck of a lot of people made their living off smuggling tea.

    So people interested in getting representation in parliament (As English people were granted the right to under English law) continued to not purchase the tea. Or even allow it to be offloaded, which would allow the shipping company to collect their rebate back in England.

    A large portion of the people participating in the Boston tea party, in fact, were smugglers who would be put out of a job by the tea.

    No one in American was being taxed for the tea. It did not cost any extra due to taxes. The monopoly of the East India Company was simply a reminded that England thought it could tax colonists without representation in parliament. (Please note that while I called it 'illegal', in actuality, imports could be taxes like that, just not taxes on specific people. The colonists, however, pointed out that it was only tea to them that was originally taxed, thus making it a tax on them in practice.)

    Did you notice that we needed a constitutional amendment to have an income tax?

    No we did not. That amendment does not do what people think it does.

    Taxing the income of people has, under the constitution, always been legal. Period. It is an indirect tax, it is, and always has been, legal.

    For 100 years or so, so was taxing property and real estate and rent. Then, in 1985, the Supreme Court decided those were direct taxes, and hence could not be made without being appropriated between the states equally. Then, the 16th amendment undid that ruling. It allowed the Federal government to tax money produced from ownership of stuff, and to tax the actual ownership too.

    In other words, the 16th amendment allows Federal property tax, Federal income tax was already allowed. I point you to The Revenue Act of 1861.

    Please read this for more information.

    Also note that, later, the Supreme Court changed its position on property taxes, stating that they never were direct taxes, that was a mistake, and thus the 16th amendment wasn't needed at all.

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  163. Re:The evil "American Right"...yup by ZFox · · Score: 1

    Even stuff like cap and trade or the public mandate for health insurance, both of which were conservative alternatives to the left's previous plan.

    Shoot me in the foot or shoot me in the head and I'll always choose my foot--either way, I still won't think it's the right thing to do.

  164. Net neutrality Lies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Corporations can always be counted on to do whats in their own best interest to make the most money, and politicians can always be counted on to do what is in their best interest politically (which may also include money).

    The CNN versions of this net neutrality, just don't cover it well enough. The ISPs are now throttling back all kinds of traffic under the claim that they have to, but I was already paying for the higher bandwidth, now they want ot be able to lower my bandwidth, and still charge me the same. Where they use to simply charge you more if you want a bigger pipe. This is like going to the gas station, telling them you want $20 worth of gas (@ $3.20 / gal) and the gas station decides to lower the amount of gas that goes through the hose, because your car is not moving cargo, so you end up getting less gas for the same price.

    This FCC ruling is too vague, and helps only the big corporations (as usual). ISPs are selling a fraud. They are charging me more but providing less.

  165. Re:The evil "American Right"...yup by wurp · · Score: 1

    I read your reference to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_tax#U.S._constitutional_law_sense I believe it is the same disingenuous bullshit that has the SCOTUS using regulation of interstate trade as de facto permission to regulate anything.

    Most of the US Constitution is clearly written language that puts strong restrictions and obligations on the federal government. The reading of "direct tax" that was taken by the US government 70+ years after the constitution was written waters the taxation clause down to the point of being no restriction at all. While my reading may well be far different from the founders, I doubt very much that the wishy washy reading exemplified in your reference bears much relationship to what the founders meant.

    Also, calling people morons for a difference of opinion, or even a mistake about the facts, only makes your argument look weaker.

  166. The Government is best... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...what governs least.

  167. You Can't Teach Those Who Don't Want to Learn by n8r0n · · Score: 1

    Teaching the right about what Net Neutrality means is pointless. Conservatives don't make decisions based on facts. They make decisions based on their guts. And there's considerable behavioral research that indicates that when confronted with the fact that their existing views are contradicted by actual facts, those holding the views will actually become more convinced of their erroneous viewpoints (see climate change, Obama's birth, health care death panels, WMDs in Iraq, etc.) . So, in reality, the best thing you could do is just ignore them, and hope that their opposition remains at a relatively low energy intensity.

    This is a sad statement about human nature, but if liberals and intellectuals don't come to terms with this simple reality, they will continue to be frustrated by the knuckle draggers among us.

  168. Re:The evil "American Right"...yup by DavidTC · · Score: 1

    The reading of "direct tax" that was taken by the US government 70+ years after the constitution was written waters the taxation clause down to the point of being no restriction at all.

    The US government always taxing things throughout its history. Please google 'Whiskey Rebellion', which was about a tax in 1791, which is two years after the constitution was signed.

    But I'm sure it was all 'watered down' by that point, and none of the founding fathers were around. I mean, it's not like Washington wasn't still in his first term or anything.

    Oh, but that must only apply to taxes on 'things'. Surely no one one back then would try to tax 'income'...and they didn't. No one suggested taxing income until the war of 1812. Wow, that's more than two decades after the constitution was signed.

    But person in power was President James Madison, who didn't know anything about the Constitution. Yeah, yeah, sure, he wrote the Constitution, but that was 20+ years ago, I don't know how he's supposed to remember what he put down. So he had his Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Dallas draft and propose an income tax modeled on the British, in clear violation of his own intent when he penned the clause forbidding direct taxes. (The reason we didn't get that tax, BTW, was because the war ended, not because there were any hypothetical constitutional problems with it.)

    I know that fools teach that the Federal government couldn't tax income until the 16th amendment, and thus when it's pointed out that incomes clearly were taxed before then, that magically is somehow unconstitutional and no one noticed, but that is an utterly incorrect reading of the constitution, period.

    What the constitution bans are 'Capitation, or other direct, Taxes' that aren't appropriated equally. Capitation is a head tax, a tax per person, and 'direct taxes' are taxes on mere ownership of stuff. That's it. That's what that means.

    The clauses has never included the taxation of monetary transactions, which the Federal government can tax however it wants, and has taxed its entire history. The Supreme Court confusingly once said that 'direct tax' might sorta include income from property, but quickly backed away from that, and have never even slightly indicated that an income tax was a 'direct tax'.

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  169. What are you blabbing about? by bashibazouk · · Score: 1

    Single payer works. See Canada, the UK or just about every other first world medical system. Mandatory national insurance also works in theory, and it keeps the health insurance companies in business as well. There were also other ideas on the table that would have probably worked as well. You accuse others of being ideologically entrenched. Look in the mirror. There is usually more than one working answer, compromise chooses which one is used.

    1. Re:What are you blabbing about? by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      This argument is beside the point. You're talking compromise, and all advantages it has, but you agree that the compromise we have will crash and burn the system.

      So it is not reasonable at all. Your "kumbayah" compromise, according to you yourself, leads to destruction of all insurance. It leads to millions of people without ANY medical insurance.

      Unless, of course, forcibly plunging people into misery, without any healthcare, is your goal. Because, I suppose, when they're punished enough for disagreeing with you they'll finally be open to your "perfect" option ?

      ALL first world countries have totally underfunded their care systems and have had to bail them out several times already, leading to per-capita debts that dwarf the disasters Obama has forced upon Americans.

      Do we really need to explain what happens the first time a country can no longer bail out it's single payer system ?

      And what you might keep in mind is that you, in all likelihood, won't need any medical care you can't pay for yourself in, say 15 years (or 30, depending on your age). With a single payer system you'll be left without any medical care once you actually need it. You'd think such a detail would factor into a lefty's calculation.

      You demand the government steals heaven for you. What will happen, obviously, is that that government is going to steal from the richest and easiest target, because that's the only place where such amounts can come from. The government can only steal medical care from the poor, because the total wealth of all others wouldn't cover a year's worth of medical care for the poor. So they'll steal from those who can't pay for their medical care.

      That'll be you. And me of course. Thanks for that.

      The only way one can reasonably think that a single payer system works is if you seriously think government has unlimited resources and there will always be more. Needless to say, this is beyond stupid.

      Your solution is typical lefty : more stuff for you now (free medical care), and lots of suffering for everyone later. The sad fact is that you see yourself as massively different from all other such political systems, whether we're talking fascism (the holocaust, in case you don't know this, was started to pay for massive social benefits for germans. It *did* pay for those benefits, but only for a single year), socialism (with the "engineered famines" in order to pay for social services, population had to drop ...) and all the various latin american and south asian disasters. And Zimbabwe. Free stuff now, and tomorrow we don't care about.

      The only problem is ... no-one can stop tomorrow, no-one can stop the bill from coming in, no matter how much fantasies you have about "let's just steal from a few more rich jews or bankers or arms merchants or ...".

  170. Again: what are you blabbing about? by bashibazouk · · Score: 1

    As I neither stated my political convictions nor gave a value judgment on compromise, I must ask: who is this imaginary person you seem to be arguing with?

  171. They are NOT misinformed... by TaleSpinner · · Score: 1

    ...sadly, you are incorrect. While you may view "Network Neutrality" this way (and most hackers, including me, would agree with you, by the way), the sad fact is, Democrats in general and Liberals in particular do not. Limbaugh is correct, "Network Neutrality" has become a trojan horse to try to silence conservatives by forcing "equal time" laws to apply to the web. "Net neutrality" as most technical types understand it has been, as I have stated before, entirely subverted to serve a different objective, one that is equally discriminating as network non-neutrality would be.

    I'm sorry, but it's a fact: when a politician latches onto your favorite catchphrase you must understand what they really mean by it. Right now there are three different definitions of "net neutrality" - ours, the Democrats, and the Republicans. If you use the phrase you must understand not only your own meaning, but the meaning it will imply to anyone you speak to.

  172. Constitution? Heard of it? by I8TheWorm · · Score: 1

    And somewhere among the yelling crowd, nobody could hear the Constitution whimper...

    --
    Saying Android is a family of phones is akin to saying Linux is a family of PCs.