ITT Liberals are more of a glass half full whereas Conservatives say back the fuck up from my glass sir while holding a gun at you.
Well I'm still not a fan of the rules per se as I think content prices will go up even tho access prices to said content will go down.All the conservatives on Facebook are giving the exact same argument, it's almost like they're copying and pasting or repeating everything that they heard on Fox News.
Lol."Just as a newspaper is entitled to decide which content to publish and where, broadband providers may feature some content over others," Verizon further said.
All the conservatives on Facebook are giving the exact same argument, it's almost like they're copying and pasting or repeating everything that they heard on Fox News.
Holy shit how much of America is brainwashed into thinking that Net Neutrality is bad? Just by actually reading the context you can see that these new laws stop big ISP's controlling who gets what speeds. On what Earth is that a bad thing?
Reading that Fox piece is just...what. Where did this "government is going to watch you" thing come from? Scaremongering?
Holy shit how much of America is brainwashed into thinking that Net Neutrality is bad? Just by actually reading the context you can see that these new laws stop big ISP's controlling who gets what speeds. On what Earth is that a bad thing?
Reading that Fox piece is just...what. Where did this "government is going to watch you" thing come from? Scaremongering?
If My.President.Obama.Policy.Support = Tenuously.positive Or _
My.President.Obama.Policy.Support = Tenuously.Negative Then
Republican.Policy.Support = Opposite.Obama
End If
I don't fuggin' know how to code
a simple lesson
Code:If My.President.Obama.Policy.Support = Tenuously.positive Or _ My.President.Obama.Policy.Support = Tenuously.Negative Then Republican.Policy.Support = Opposite.Obama End If
I don't fuggin' know how to code
Heh, close. If it was a white democrat would the uproar be as bad?
Heh, close. If it was a white democrat would the uproar be as bad?
More Presidents need to be heckled during the joke theater of the SOTU until they go back to just sending it as a document.It wasn't this bad for Bill Clinton, no.
No one ever questioned the legitimacy of his birth or disrespected him during a State Of The Union,
More Presidents need to be heckled during the joke theater of the SOTU until they go back to just sending it as a document.
Funny no one did it till "B. Hussein Obama" became the President.
Funny no one did it till "B. Hussein Obama" became the President.
The government is us.Wake me up when the government passes laws that are good for the people.
Yeah, how dare the government regulate things, like food, water quality, air traffic, banks, ISPs, etc, worming its way into everything. Get a grip on reality.Net Neutrality - from the same entity that doesn't want you see a nipple on broadcast television.
After reading through the summary on the FCC's website, I've realized how truly scary this all is. Although they try to cushion it by specifically exempting broadband from some of the rules that now apply to it, we cannot expect it to stay that way forever. It never does with the government. They slowly worm their way into every nook and cranny they can until they have control. We are talking about the government here, and if there is one thing government has proven to be over the last, oh I don't know, 5000 years, it would be corrupt and inefficient. If people had any kind of forethought, they would have opposed this. Its just the start, people. The internet in its current form (that is, it being a part of our every day lives) has really only been around for about 10 years and they are already starting to regulate it. Now they just have the rest of eternity to continue regulating it. Have fun while you can folks, it'll will be very different in just a few years, and I'm not talking specifically about the effects of these net neutrality rules, but the endless laws and regulations that will inevitably pass in the coming years. They were just testing the waters here and I pity anyone who can't see these rules for what they are - a first step.
Besides that more philosophical argument, the rules are extremely unfair. My website that has maybe 400 hits per month should not be forced to be treated the same as, say, Youtube, which has over 1,000,000,000 users, by the broadband providers. And add to that the fact that, had they not passed this bill in 2010 and just approved these new rules, our communication through email and web-browsing would have been basically the same as they are now, maybe with some minor differences in which content providers you have access to on your specific service.
But, it passed. And, as usual, the corporations will continue to exist and the added costs of business will be passed on down to the consumer, as they always are when the government intervenes in the economy. Yawn. Wake me up when the government passes laws that are good for the people.
You don't need to qualify it with an if statement.a simple lesson
Code:If My.President.Obama.Policy.Support = Tenuously.positive Or _ My.President.Obama.Policy.Support = Tenuously.Negative Then Republican.Policy.Support = Opposite.Obama End If
I don't fuggin' know how to code
Republican.Policy.Support = !Obama.Policy.Support
An excellent counter argument against the current decision by the dissenting FCC commissioner:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MqnnsFiiIwY#t=239
An excellent counter argument against the current decision by the dissenting FCC commissioner:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MqnnsFiiIwY#t=239
Net Neutrality - from the same entity that doesn't want you see a nipple on broadcast television.
After reading through the summary on the FCC's website, I've realized how truly scary this all is. Although they try to cushion it by specifically exempting broadband from some of the rules that now apply to it, we cannot expect it to stay that way forever. It never does with the government. They slowly worm their way into every nook and cranny they can until they have control. We are talking about the government here, and if there is one thing government has proven to be over the last, oh I don't know, 5000 years, it would be corrupt and inefficient. If people had any kind of forethought, they would have opposed this. Its just the start, people. The internet in its current form (that is, it being a part of our every day lives) has really only been around for about 10 years and they are already starting to regulate it. Now they just have the rest of eternity to continue regulating it. Have fun while you can folks, it'll will be very different in just a few years, and I'm not talking specifically about the effects of these net neutrality rules, but the endless laws and regulations that will inevitably pass in the coming years. They were just testing the waters here and I pity anyone who can't see these rules for what they are - a first step.
Besides that more philosophical argument, the rules are extremely unfair. My website that has maybe 400 hits per month should not be forced to be treated the same as, say, Youtube, which has over 1,000,000,000 users, by the broadband providers. And add to that the fact that, had they not passed this bill in 2010 and just approved these new rules, our communication through email and web-browsing would have been basically the same as they are now, maybe with some minor differences in which content providers you have access to on your specific service.
But, it passed. And, as usual, the corporations will continue to exist and the added costs of business will be passed on down to the consumer, as they always are when the government intervenes in the economy. Yawn. Wake me up when the government passes laws that are good for the people.
America is the only country I know of where on one hand you can have incredible pride about the institutions of government, and the amazing steps forward things like the Constituion were, and then on the other hand condemn government as intrinsically foreign, evil and counter productive. By the same people.
It's interesting enough from him describing how the whole process of FCC regulation works.Turned it off when the goof said the US internet was better than Europe's system.
The state is a corporation with vested interests. It claims a legitimate monopoly on the use of violence. It differs significantly from "the people" in that it can do things that would be legally and morally wrong for any individual or other "private" organization to do.I mean, do you understand how staggeringly insanely stupid that line is? The entirety of human history is people coming together to improve their lives, and democratic government is one of the greatest tools for that. Government isn't seperate from the people, it isn't some evil alien entity, government *is* the people.
...
often against the wishes of nobles, Kings, companies, corporations and other vested interests.
IIt claims a legitimate monopoly on the use of violence.
No, I don't think its claim is legitimate. No coercive violence is legitimate. The state is a unique corporation in that its only business is deploying coercive violence in favor of its interests; often against minorities.You actually think that's a bad thing.
I'm sure in your libertarian paradise, there would be violence for all!
this is why we need to go back to twice-yearly account approvalsNet Neutrality - from the same entity that doesn't want you see a nipple on broadcast television.
After reading through the summary on the FCC's website, I've realized how truly scary this all is. Although they try to cushion it by specifically exempting broadband from some of the rules that now apply to it, we cannot expect it to stay that way forever. It never does with the government. They slowly worm their way into every nook and cranny they can until they have control. We are talking about the government here, and if there is one thing government has proven to be over the last, oh I don't know, 5000 years, it would be corrupt and inefficient. If people had any kind of forethought, they would have opposed this. Its just the start, people. The internet in its current form (that is, it being a part of our every day lives) has really only been around for about 10 years and they are already starting to regulate it. Now they just have the rest of eternity to continue regulating it. Have fun while you can folks, it'll will be very different in just a few years, and I'm not talking specifically about the effects of these net neutrality rules, but the endless laws and regulations that will inevitably pass in the coming years. They were just testing the waters here and I pity anyone who can't see these rules for what they are - a first step.
Besides that more philosophical argument, the rules are extremely unfair. My website that has maybe 400 hits per month should not be forced to be treated the same as, say, Youtube, which has over 1,000,000,000 users, by the broadband providers. And add to that the fact that, had they not passed this bill in 2010 and just approved these new rules, our communication through email and web-browsing would have been basically the same as they are now, maybe with some minor differences in which content providers you have access to on your specific service.
But, it passed. And, as usual, the corporations will continue to exist and the added costs of business will be passed on down to the consumer, as they always are when the government intervenes in the economy. Yawn. Wake me up when the government passes laws that are good for the people.
Net Neutrality - from the same entity that doesn't want you see a nipple on broadcast television.
After reading through the summary on the FCC's website, I've realized how truly scary this all is. Although they try to cushion it by specifically exempting broadband from some of the rules that now apply to it, we cannot expect it to stay that way forever. It never does with the government. They slowly worm their way into every nook and cranny they can until they have control. We are talking about the government here, and if there is one thing government has proven to be over the last, oh I don't know, 5000 years, it would be corrupt and inefficient. If people had any kind of forethought, they would have opposed this. Its just the start, people. The internet in its current form (that is, it being a part of our every day lives) has really only been around for about 10 years and they are already starting to regulate it. Now they just have the rest of eternity to continue regulating it. Have fun while you can folks, it'll will be very different in just a few years, and I'm not talking specifically about the effects of these net neutrality rules, but the endless laws and regulations that will inevitably pass in the coming years. They were just testing the waters here and I pity anyone who can't see these rules for what they are - a first step.
Besides that more philosophical argument, the rules are extremely unfair. My website that has maybe 400 hits per month should not be forced to be treated the same as, say, Youtube, which has over 1,000,000,000 users, by the broadband providers. And add to that the fact that, had they not passed this bill in 2010 and just approved these new rules, our communication through email and web-browsing would have been basically the same as they are now, maybe with some minor differences in which content providers you have access to on your specific service.
But, it passed. And, as usual, the corporations will continue to exist and the added costs of business will be passed on down to the consumer, as they always are when the government intervenes in the economy. Yawn. Wake me up when the government passes laws that are good for the people.
...hoo boy.
If you're this frightened and distrusting of the US government, why continue to live under it?
The UK wound up blocking sex education sites and other stuff when they implemented their filter because it basically just searched for terms like "penis" and so on.Good thing he's not in South Korea, they regulate the internet a lot more then this "will"
And they block porn.
An excellent counter argument against the current decision by the dissenting FCC commissioner:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MqnnsFiiIwY#t=239
Do you actually think that a neutral internet is a bad thing?No, I don't think its claim is legitimate. No coercive violence is legitimate. The state is a unique corporation in that its only business is deploying coercive violence in favor of its interests; often against minorities.
I don't consider a public utility to be "neutral internet" anymore than I'd consider it "neutral power" or "neutral water" we already have enough problems with monopoly contracts granted by local governments effectively banning choices.Do you actually think that a neutral internet is a bad thing?
Something about the Justice Department being less concerned about a monopoly if they're utilities.Why would this have anything to do with Comcast and Time Warner merging?
Fuck it
Obama is Aizen.
There I said it.