originally posted in:Secular Sevens
...aaaaaas part of the debt ceiling bill.
Come on, this is just insanity. I'd really like to know what 'blocking' means, but I'm fairly sure that's code for ending.
[quote]Not sure what to make of this episode, but it matters and so here we are: A draft of provisions that Republican leaders in the House are attempting to demand in return for allowing the debt ceiling to be raised includes the elimination of net neutrality.
The language of the legislative outline that the National Review obtained calls for the “blocking” of net neutrality.
Net neutrality, if you didn’t know, is the set of rules forcing ISPs treat traffic on their networks equally, not speeding or slowing any one piece of content more than any other. This matters as many companies that provide Internet access are also part of larger conglomerates that produce media. Those companies have an inherent incentive to speed their content and slow that of their rivals.
Also, net neutrality protects companies that provide content, such as Netflix, from being unfairly charged by ISPs for the dissemination of their wares. There is much legal wrangling over this issue in courts at the moment, mostly centered around a long-running lawsuit between Verizon and the government.
I’ll be plain: You want net neutrality if you want the Internet to run much as it has these past few decades.
Tying net neutrality to the debt ceiling, however, is bonkers. The two have no relation. Instead, it appears that House Republicans are tacking porkish requests to their coming compromise to raise the debt ceiling to appease their own members, and thus not abrogate the Hastert Rule while also not causing a Federal default.
The most asinine part of this episode is that we are discussing fiscal politics in relation to a technology regulatory issue. Josh Barro of Business Insider was blunt in his assessment of the inclusion, [url=http://www.businessinsider.com.au/republicans-have-abandoned-any-pretense-that-the-debt-limit-fight-is-about-debt-2013-9]stating that Republicans have “finally admitted that the fight over the debt ceiling has nothing to do with debt.”[/url]
In some bizarro scenario we could, at least in some wild-eyed House member’s visions of Things That We Shouldn’t Do, ax one of the most important pieces of technology regulation in place, simply to buy off part of one party in the lower chamber of Congress so that we can pay our national bills.[/quote]
So, what do we all think of this? If they've since retracted that, someone please tell me (I can't find anything saying that they have).
-
If this actually goes through, will it affect Canada?
-
I used to try to stay away from parties, but I'm starting to strongly dislike the Republican party. Not because they are generally conservative, but because they're -blam!-ing Republicans.
-
I hate lobbyists.
-
I'd only be moderately surprised if Obama "compromises" again and this part is allowed through. Couldn't enact it with SOPA or ACTA, but if it gets tied into this it "will be done for the sake of the global economy."
-
And once again, a party adds some unrelated shit they want onto a very important bill so that they can force it through when it normally wouldn't even leave comity... though I doubt that this part is gonna last through the final stages of the bill.
-
Wouldn't this affect the Internet at large as opposed to just the American side of things?
-
[i] [/i]
-
Oh -blam!- oh -blam!- oh -blam!- Well, the Republican Party was dying anyway. Might as well go out with a bang.
-
[spoiler]pmuB[/spoiler]
-
Why? Just, why? What's the point of this?
-
TL;DR