Federal Government Looking To Get More Involved With Your Internet Connection

The excuse they’re using is that not all Americans have sufficient access to broadband internet. That’s the “crisis” they’ve manufactured so that they can solve it by expanding government power over the internet.

WASHINGTON — The Federal Communications Commission began to lay the groundwork for a bigger federal role in the broadband business Wednesday, outlining the hurdles the U.S. needs to overcome to improve the availability of high-speed Internet access.
The FCC identified a number of issues the government should address, including the high cost of laying new broadband lines in rural areas, a lack of airwaves for wireless Web access and ill-informed consumers. …
“This focus on broadband is a reflection of a recognition that the U.S. is lagging behind,” FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski said Wednesday at the agency’s monthly meeting.
The FCC’s latest broadband moves are part of a multi-stage process mapped out by Mr. Genachowski for examining whether American consumers have suffered from the largely hands-off approach the U.S. has taken on Internet infrastructure.

Taking a step back from the government flak-speak for a moment, how can anyone argue that we’ve got an internet connection problem in this country? I live in North Dakota, the 4th least densely populated states in the nation. And while this may be anecdotal, I don’t know of a single person (including people who live way off in the boonies) who doesn’t have high-speed internet or couldn’t at least obtain it if they wanted it.
Further, everyone here has access to at least dial up.
So I’m not exactly overwhelmed with a crisis that consists of maybe a few people living out in the boonies having to settle for dial-up instead of broadband internet. If there were any significant number of people who fell into that category in a specific area you can bet there would be ISP’s jumping at the chance to serve them. And if there aren’t enough people to warrant a private sector business serving them, why in the world should the taxpayers have to subsidize it?
Really, the current liberal push on broadband internet access is eerily reminiscent of FDR’s push for rural electrification. In the 1930′s the electrification of America was moving swiftly, but not very fast in rural areas. Obviously, there’s more incentive to bring electricity to densely populated areas first. But FDR made it a political issue and pushed for government involvement in the electrification of rural America (grabbing no small amount of power for the government along the way). This set up a defeat for FDR at the Supreme Court level, something that prompted his infamous effort to pass a bill that would have allowed him to appoint a new, younger Justice for every sitting Justice over the age of 70.
Something that would have populated the court
Now the liberals are doing it with broadband internet access. Under the guise of pushing broadband internet access into the few areas it doesn’t already exist the government is angling for a power grab over what is fast becoming our largest and most important media delivery system.
As Seton Motley points out at Newsbusters, Obama’s FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski is one who feels that internet access is a “universal right” that must be distributed by government. And, of course, if the government is in charge of distributing internet access then the government gets the power to say which content we can and cannot access.
Much like FDR’s efforts on electrification all those years ago, this isn’t about access. This is a government power grab. America doesn’t have a problem with internet access. Those that want internet, and can afford it, can get it.

Tags: , ,


«
»
  • http://Array AKA WOOF

    South Korea realizes the net drives business and services.

  • sayanything-15427

    Honestly 2h9? I find all the offtopic c%nt posts annoying and I agree with you most of the time. Don’t undermine yourself like that, otherwise you end up being a conservative version of Hannitized.

    Even if they deserve it.

  • sayanything-2407

    I just call it like I see it.
    I am sure i am wrong at times, as others are, but don’t care which side your on – if your right, I will say you are, and if i think your wrong, will say that too.

    I will, of course, always try and back up what I say with facts and articles to show my point of view.

  • sayanything-2

    Where is all your proof that Christians are using terrorism to force people to convert to Christianity, whiny lying c%nt?

  • sayanything-2

    Oh, and holding onto “virtue” and dying is still death.

  • sayanything-2

    Everywhere you go, kicked in the teeth you will be.

  • sayanything-342

    The last thing we need is government bureaucrats more involved with the internet than they already are. They can’t even operate the archaic DMV system properly.

  • http://fu.com/ robert108

    Wrong again! Demand drives business and “services”.(ever hear of a service business?)

    The internet just gets us closer to perfect mobility and perfect knowledge.
    Econ 101.

  • sayanything-2

    Where is all your proof that Christians are using terrorism to force people to convert to Christianity, whiny lying c%nt?

  • http://SayAnythingBlog.com The_Whistler_ofnd

    Interesting, the government restricted 56K modems to only operate at 53Ks.
    What the heck, why not give them control of the entire internets.

  • sayanything-2407

    With Government getting involved I can expect those blazing 56k dial up speed….. /sarcasm

    Anything the government touches it bogs down.

  • sayanything-2

    The enemy sets the rules of engagement. If don’t attack to their level they win. And as soon as elinas, and its fellow leftarded comrades, provides the copious, voluminous, and absolutely irrefutable proof that Christians are using terrorism to force people to convert to Christianity I’ll back off. That will never happen, so I will never back off.

    These tactics have come from the left for 40 years, and Americans have failed to engage the enemy on their terms, and have been losing, steadily. Not any more. It is high time and past that their sh*t be rammed back up their a$$, where it came from.

  • sayanything-2

    Where is all your proof that Christians are using terrorism to force people to convert to Christianity, whiny lying c%nt?

  • sayanything-2407

    Sorry Rob, think he has you on the Infrastructure issue.

    CNET article from 2007: Perspective: Fixing our fraying Internet infrastructure

    In our industrial and information society, our daily lives depend on things we take for granted: electricity, fresh water, communications and our road system.

    The infrastructure underlying each has a limited useful life and is designed to meet the expected demand when deployed. But demand changes, and without proper planning and investment all infrastructure will eventually fail.

    Americans are serious about infrastructure if California voter support for recent water, transportation and school bonds is any indication. In the same way that levees and bridges need to be safe and reliable, our communications networks need to handle our growing Internet traffic. Imagine a day without phone or Internet service, and then imagine a week without them during a crisis.

    The broadband infrastructure in the United States is largely invisible to all but a few engineers. Were it as visible as a road system it would appear to be excellent in some places, but riddled with potholes in others; heavily congested at many times and locations; and in need of massive redesign.

  • Bill

    South Korea is a much smaller country. In terms of infrastructure, its very easy to lay down the fiber required to produce a broadband connection.

    America is Big. Takes us about 50x as much work (we have about 50 times as much space) to lay down the Fiber. However, with wireless Internet becoming so fast amongst cell phone companies due to G3/G4 technology, it won’t be long before fiber optics become a thing of the past, and these upgrades are more sensible.

  • http://sayanythingblog.com/ Pfeh

    No, we can’t possibly. We can certainly do better than we do now, instead of having area-limited monopolies granted by the government. That comes with less government interference, not more.

  • sayanything-9974

    More Government involvement – I guess my prayers are being answered.

    This must be the Hope and Change we were promised. I wonder how much THIS will cost.

  • AKA WOOF

    Conservatives thought the Interstates were a commie plot.

    Maybe we can catch up with South Korea in net access and price.

  • sayanything-2

    Where is all your proof that Christians are using terrorism to force people to convert to Christianity, whiny lying c%nt?

  • http://SayAnythingBlog.com The_Whistler_ofnd

    I thought liberals liked the giant TV sets you can never turn off or change
    the channel.

  • sayanything-287

    Yeah, but they were really crappy television sets and reception and everyone, male and female had to get buzz cuts.

  • sayanything-2

    What happened to all the money collected for this with Algore’s stealth tax added to phone bills? Are you leftards going to tell us that money does not exist? Really?

    I live in a rural area and have no problem getting internet connection. As for it being “infrastructure”, perhaps government should stop pissing away the monies collected for such and start using it to, I don’t know, build infrastructure. Instead they simply disappear it and screech that they “need” more. Typical leftist ideology.

  • sayanything-453

    No need for me to sleep on it.
    The internet is a new type of infrastructure.
    Like airports were at one time. Like telephone poles, like…….a myriad of other things.
    Sleep on that and we’ll see if your feeble mind can grasp the difference by morning, moron.

  • sayanything-453

    Rob Port said on a different thread:

    I’ve always been for infrastructure.

  • sayanything-453

    Onslaught old chap, sorry to dissapoint you!
    I have plans to part with my soul when I am past the ripe age of 102.
    Until then we have a long way to go.

  • sayanything-453

    Hotel! Drunk again I see.
    You are posting on the wrong thread.
    Get back to me when sober and not somber.

  • sayanything-4808

    You’ve been to a US Marines recreation room, obviously.

  • http://sayanythingblog.com robport

    I ought to ban you for being unoriginal.

  • sayanything-2804

    your plans don’t enter into it, now do they.

  • sayanything-453

    It’s your blog, you do as you please.
    I have said before that I am an avid recycler.
    I recycled the last part of your response because I found it fitting.

  • wademiller

    There was already money set aside in the porkulus package for rural internet development. Now we need to pretend there is a greater need so they can control the flow of information? What a crock!

  • sayanything-453

    Rob, in his infinite wisdom said:

    Internet isn’t infrastructure moron.

    It sure is, moron. It facilitates communications and trade moron.
    Highways, freeways roads bridges, rail roads etc facilitate the conduct of business allowing goods and services to flow, moron.
    The internet does facilitate trade and the conduct business, as it allows people to go and shop anywhere they want, moron, it allows business in Baluchistan to make goods available to North Dakota, moron.
    The internet infrastructure allows you and me to call each other morons, moron.

  • http://sayanythingblog.com robport

    Internet isn’t infrastructure moron.

  • sayanything-2804

    happily, if your guy Obama gets his way, the few remaining “Elders” left will all be younger than you.

  • sayanything-453

    Dearest 2hotel9, be advised that form now on I shall ignore you and not respond to you unless you have something truthful and pertinent to the issues being discussed.

  • sayanything-453

    Ofcourse they do. My father’s uncle is 102, alive, kicking and the old bull is still stirring when a young cow goes buy.
    My gandma died almost 100. Just 3 months short. My fathers’ and my mother’s uncles, aunts, sisters, brothers all are either alive or past 85.
    And they achieved that with the so called “socialized” medical care in Greece, without having access to the phenomenal medical technology, and medications we have here.
    Also the women of our clan do not receive annual mamograhy, and none so far has had breast cancer.
    I am not scared of “Obamacare”. Bring it on, baby.

  • http://sayanythingblog.com robport

    Ok fair enough.

    But internet isn’t infrastructure like roads are infrastructure.

    Sleep on that and we’ll see if your feeble mind can grasp the difference by morning.

  • sayanything-453

    I have told him (Rob) before to sometimes listen to his elders, for he still has a lot to learn.
    But he thinks he knows it “all”, as if “all” could be explained away by politics.
    In terms of “life knowledge” he is still a toddler.

  • sayanything-101

    Why are we paying for government libraries?

Create a SAB Readerblog


Recent Comments

Powered by Disqus

Blog Advice and Support
Installs and Upgrades
Theme Modifications
Custom Plugins
Theme Design
Conversions and Relocations
Hacked Site Recovery
Mobile Apps Development