Zontar said:
There's a problem with that logic, first and foremost being weather this agreement is against Net Neutrality (which it is), but another is that the FCC's stance on the issue of net neutrality is that they want it to say that way. (that's right, the governing body responsible for censorship is the only one who wants net neutrality).
Another is that BWS' whole argument makes the assumption that net neutrality and corporate monopoly are the same thing, capable of coexisting and one will be a by-product of the other, all of which are demonstrably false (this deal being first and foremost) and are not even possible in theory.
*Ahem.* Let me speak for myself. You misunderstand my argument almost completely. (I'm back, baby.)
The FCC, and why I have to keep bringing this up, has no statutory authority over the Internet. They can only be given this authority by Congress which has refused to give it to them. Civics, people, civics.
No, I never said that. Corporate monopoly can't really happen without certain economic realities (for instance, far too expensive to invest in the infrastructure for a small market) in a free market, which we don't really have in America. In our market, corporate monopolies are far more likely to happen at the behest of government, which lets it happen and keeps people from suing the companies over it. Collusion. Just ask PhRMA how profitable that is for them. Fucking assholes, those PhRMA people. And the fucking politicians who listened to them and keep letting them fuck over all Americans.
Zontar said:
Doublegee said:
He's conservative, and the Powers that Be around here are willing to cut leftists a lot more slack than conservatives when it comes to brushing up against the rules.
As a fellow conservative I have to call bull on that, Big_Willie_Styles was definitely not representing the conservative side of the argument, or if he was he wasn't doing so well.
The FCC's official position on the internet is neutrality, with the only action to be taken when federal offenses of already existing laws are violated (ex: child pornography, death threats, that sort of thing). And as for weather or not anyone has the authority to regulate the internet, so long as the backbone of internet infrastructure is government owned super servers that put Google's to shame, then that creates the question "what DOES the government have the right to regulate?". At the end of the day the FCC's stance on the internet is in the best interest of the consumers, and this agreement is just the type of thing that is against everything net neutrality stands for.
Oh, the knives come out when people don't think I'm listening, eh?
I don't advance the "conservative" argument, as there isn't one unified "conservative" argument. We're a big tent of ideologies, unlike most of liberalism (seriously, groupthink is their biggest problem.) I advance my argument.
And Doublegee is pretty spot on about that. If he wasn't, I'd think one of The Escapist talent would be openly conservative/libertarian instead of all the openly political people being liberal. Jim, Yahtzee, and Bob are openly hostile to conservatives/sympathetic to liberal causes. Doesn't take much digging to realize that.
The FCC's position is "Let's regulate that" when it lacks the statutory authority to do so. Congress has not given them the authority, so the FCC cannot regulate the Internet. That's why the FCC lost the case. Happens all the time, bureaucracies love going beyond their purview.