[opendtv] Re: The video here explains net neutrality perfectly

  • From: Craig Birkmaier <craig@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx" <opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sat, 10 May 2014 08:59:39 -0400

> On May 9, 2014, at 7:22 PM, "Manfredi, Albert E" 
> <albert.e.manfredi@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> 
> http://www.eetimes.com/author.asp?section_id=216&doc_id=1322296&;
> 
> I agree entirely with what she describes.

She is a very effective communicator. One might wonder if she is just 
passionate, or if she was paid to put the net neutrality video together. What 
is rather obvious, however, is just how corrupt our political/regulatory system 
has become.

There is no apparent concern that a former lobbyist for the cable industry is 
now in charge of the hen house. The "fix" errrrrrr fox is now protecting us 
chickens....
> 
> However, what I'm not convinced about is her solution. Classifying broadband 
> as a telecommunications service will burden it with all manner of additional 
> requirements, so that close to half of the monthly bill will become taxes. 
> Like telephone.

Why cry wolf now Bert? We've been telling you for years that the politicians 
bought into the "natural monopoly" scam a century ago. It's only natural that 
the courts will steer this thing towards Title 2 regulation and create a "fast 
lane," from the consumer to local, state and federal treasuries.

Working in another "regulated industry," and fighting a battle in the Florida 
legislature this year has opened my eyes once again to the economic realities 
of politics.

I have been studying the issues that led to prohibition and it's eventual 
repeal. I just watched a PBS series - Prohibition. The country flirted with 
prohibition for more than 100 years - most of the country was dry before the 
Civil War. After the Civil War we went on a binge. At one point, the Federal 
Excise tax on alcohol was the largest source of revenue to the Feds. By the 
early teens (1913-14), a large chunk of the country was dry again, and the 
temperance and woman's rights movements were in full bloom. But the real force 
behind the 18th Amendment was another guy named Wheeler...

Wayne Bidwell Wheeler was an American attorney and prohibitionist. His most 
famous contribution to the prohibition movement was making the Anti-Saloon 
league the first organized political pressure group in the United States.

Wheeler could be called the father of modern political lobbying. He understood 
that the only way to have effective prohibition would be to shut down alcohol 
at the national level; as long as you could go to the next county or state to 
buy booze, prohibition could not work. But there was a bigger problem...

The federal government was too dependent on the revenues from the alcohol 
excise tax; if prohibition were to succeed at the national level, the excise 
tax revenues would need to be replaced with another tax source. So Wheeler 
hooked up with the progressive movement of that era, which was pushing for 
socialism and income redistribution. 

> 
> One thing for sure, though. MVPDs offering ISP service, while technically a 
> slam dunk, can't help but have a conflict of interest.
> 
> Bert
> 
> 
> 
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