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Republican Bill Aims To Thwart the FCC's Leaning Towards Title II 182

SpzToid writes U.S. congressional Republicans on Friday proposed legislation that would set "net neutrality" rules for broadband providers, aiming to head off tougher regulations backed by the Obama administration. Republican lawmakers hope to counter the Federal Communications Commission's vote on Feb. 26 for rules that are expected to follow the legal path endorsed by President Barack Obama, which Internet service providers (ISPs) and Republicans say would unnecessarily burden the industry with regulation. Net neutrality activists, now with Obama's backing, have advocated for regulation of ISPs under a section of communications law known as Title II, which would treat them more like public utilities. The White House on Thursday said legislation was not necessary to settle so-called "net neutrality" rules because the Federal Communications Commission had the authority to write them.
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Republican Bill Aims To Thwart the FCC's Leaning Towards Title II

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  • by Billly Gates ( 198444 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @02:49PM (#48845967) Journal

    Clearly this means freedom for all users right?

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Yeah.

      The polarized politics in this country has gotten so out of hand that the electorate shoots themselves in the foot over ideology.

      Last year's election was a complete joke in my state (GA). Every Republican ran with this platform: A vote for a Democrat is a vote for Obama's policies.

      If you ask a typical Obama hater exactly what policies they don't like and why, you inevitably got the media talking points. The only time I saw a reasonable dislike for one of Obama's policies was actually here - the perso

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        But that was the only time. I have a very low opinion of the electorate.

        Yea, no shit. Last week in Virginia, the voters re-elected a convicted pedophile, running from jail [dailymail.co.uk]. But don't worry - he's on work-release so he can head down to the General Assembly to cast his votes... :/

        I guess it's okay since he's a Democrat.

        • Actually (and I speak as a Republican here) he was convicted of sex with a 17-year-old girl, an act which in most other states is legal. Not coincidentally, Virginia is the one state that band radar detectors.

          • "Bans radar detectors!"

          • by Fire_Wraith ( 1460385 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @08:42PM (#48847461)
            Speaking as a Virginia resident, and someone who generally votes left-leaning, you're correct - though he's still a dirtbag.

            The reason (as I understand) that he got reelected is that it was a special election for a state legislative office. This is the sort of race that doesn't get much attention even when it's a general election. Incumbency, and party identification, carry so much more weight than actual issues, because most people never hear about the issues. Heck, I consider myself reasonably involved and aware, and even I can't remember who my state senator is offhand (it's not this guy).

            To bring this full circle, this is part of the exact problem. These races have tons of power, generally fly below the radar of most voters, and also are ridiculously easy to influence with outside money. Notice how so many state legislatures have been pushing agendas doing things like blocking municipalities from offering ISP service, all at the behest of the major incumbent providers (usually who sparked the municipal offering in the first place by refusing to upgrade service in the area to something remotely modern).
        • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

          Dude don't be a lying Republican, right there in the fucking story you linked to "He won re-election Tuesday as an independent" in bold yet, yeah I sure you fucking missed it by accident. Just like the daily mail did itself when they left the browser tab description a "Virginia Democrat Joseph Morrison". which is owned by the Yattendon Group run by the Iliffe Family, staunch pseudo conservatives http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B... [wikipedia.org] (so even worse royalists). Should he be prosecuted, of course, especially as i

          • Sorry, fucker, if I didn't give you the whole history of this. He was a Democrat, resigned while he was under indictment and facing felony charges, then he got this miracle-out-of-the-blue plea deal that let him plead to a misdemeanor instead. At that point, they had already called for a special election to fill his vacated seat, and it was too late to file as a Democrat because they had already put a candidate on the ballot. So he got on as an "Independent" instead. He's a far-left Democrat, but worse,

            • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

              Sorry, fucker, if I didn't give you the whole history of this.

              He's wrong because you don't know the meaning of the word "pedophile" and went the full Fox News [huffingtonpost.com] at the same time? Is anyone who calls Reagan a Republican or Warren a Democrat [go.com] also a fucker? I don't think so.

              You engaged in 10-pounds-of-bullshit-in-a-five-pound-sack willful dumbfuckery and are now whining like a bitch because you got caught.

          • He won re-election Tuesday as an independent

            You sound like you're not an American, so let me explain to you how this works.

            In America, you can't be "kicked out" of a political party.

            The reason to register for a political party so you can vote in that party's primary. For some offices (not this guy's office) they have what's called a primary election where the people from each party pick the best member of their party to run in the real election. So you have members of the Democrat party picking the best Democrat and members of the Republican part

        • But that was the only time. I have a very low opinion of the electorate.

          Yea, no shit. Last week in Virginia, the voters re-elected a convicted pedophile, running from jail [dailymail.co.uk]. But don't worry - he's on work-release so he can head down to the General Assembly to cast his votes... :/

          I guess it's okay since he's a Democrat.

          If you cant find a better source than the daily fail then hand in your internet licence and collect you cheque at the door.

  • by bogaboga ( 793279 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @02:50PM (#48845969)

    U.S. congressional Republicans on Friday proposed legislation that would set "net neutrality" rules for broadband providers, aiming to head off tougher regulations backed by the Obama administration.

    That sentence should have read, U.S. congressional Republicans on Friday proposed legislation authored by industry lobbyists, that would set "net neutrality" rules for broadband providers, aiming to head off tougher regulations backed by the Obama administration. (additions mine).

    • by SpzToid ( 869795 )

      John Thune [opensecrets.org] doesn't have so much telecom money it seems, but the same cannot be said of John Upton [opensecrets.org], who received a lot from Verizon, Cox, Comcast, The National Assn of Broadcasters, and Time Warner.

    • U.S. congressional Republicans on Friday proposed legislation that would set "net neutrality" rules for broadband providers, aiming to head off tougher regulations backed by the Obama administration.

      That sentence should have read, U.S. congressional Republicans on Friday proposed legislation authored by industry lobbyists, that would set "net neutrality" rules for broadband providers, aiming to head off tougher regulations backed by the Obama administration. (additions mine).

      Your additions were a given.

  • by goruka ( 1721094 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @03:03PM (#48846017)
    There is something I don't understand here..
    During all Obama's presidency, did Republicans manage to keep being the ruling party somehow? because it seems even with a Democrat president Obama can't pass any law without going through them.
    Or is all this democrat/republican thing just theater and Obama pretends to be the good guy failing to fight to the bad guys?
    Or something else going on?
    • by Noxal ( 816780 )

      The President is not a part of the lawmaking branch of government. Presidents can't pass laws.

    • by SpzToid ( 869795 )

      The Presidential Executive Branch enforces the laws, (and is the Commander In-Chief of the Armed Forces).

    • by WillyWanker ( 1502057 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @03:29PM (#48846155)

      Because we have a House of Representatives and a Senate which comprise Congress. Both work independently of each other, and each can be ruled by either party. The clincher is that both the House and Senate need to agree to pass a bill. If a bill doesn't make it thru both sides it dies. The deadlock we've been seeing for the past few years has come from the Republicans ruling the House of Representatives and refusing to pass any Democrat-proposed bill coming from the Senate, even tho the Democrats ruled there, and vice-versa.

      Now that both sides are Republican I don't expect anything to change really. Since they are comprised of at least 4 warring factions amongst themselves (the tea party, moderates, extreme right wing faux-christians, and libertarians) it's highly unlikely both sides of Congress will ever agree on anything, and even if they do Obama has the power of veto to block any legislation that might successfully come out of Congress. Yes, Congress can override a veto with a 2/3rd majority vote, but that's extremely unlikely to ever happen. So essentially we will have another 2 years where absolutely nothing gets done.

    • by duckintheface ( 710137 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @03:30PM (#48846163)

      You ask a good question. Democrats could have passed a law in 2009 or 2010 when they controlled House, Senate, and White House. But they didn't, partly becasue they were busy collecting campaign contributions from these same ISPs. Obama has waited until after his personal last election and until after the next- to-last election under his presidency to propose rules that should have been in effect the whole time.

      Aside from campaign contributions, there may be one other reason for the late start on Title II regulation. It is only recently that content providers such as Netflix and Amazon have started producing quality programming and distributing it on the internet rather than on the TV channels controlled by the ISPs. This has undercut the revenue stream of these ISPs and encouraged them to begin differential pricing based on content provider. Comcast now charges extra to Netflix even though Netflix customers already pay for their internet service directly to Comcast. So they are "double billing" for the same service. If allowed to get away with this, the ISPs can be expected to continue to ratchet up the cost of accessing third party content, becasue they control the pipes. But the pipes were developed at public expense and using public right-of-way and so should be treated as a regulated utility.

      • by PixelScuba ( 686633 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @06:20PM (#48846917)
        That's not really true. The Democrats only had a supermajority for roughly 4 months in 2009 [polipundit.com]. With a protracted legal battle, the GOP kept Al Franken out of the senate until July of that year. Ted Kennedy would die later that year and Scott Brown won the MA election. The Democrats had exactly 134 days to pass any legislation before the GOP began filibustering.
        • The Democrats had exactly 134 days to pass any legislation before the GOP began filibustering.

          Or, you know, they could pass bills that were acceptable to both sides. God forbid.

        • To be fair that was a rather odd but close election. The sitting senator Norm Colman initially had won but by a very slim margin (surprising since I figured he would have lost by a large margin after his TV commercial basically telling Minnesotans to STFU about the bailouts just before the election) and it was only during the recount that Franken came out ahead. From the news on it there were some questionable things that happened plus the Minnesota law on recounts states that the ballot judges need to dete
    • > did Republicans manage to keep being the ruling party somehow?

      For most of Obama's years, yes.

      > it seems even with a Democrat president Obama can't pass any law without going through them

      No President can pass any law - wrong branch of government. And when the Legislative branch is indeed "controlled" (majority) by the opposing party, the President and the President's party would indeed have to "go through" the other party. But it's even worse. Although, in theory any Congress critter can start a

      • by dryeo ( 100693 )

        Your questions suggest you're more familiar with a parliamentary system of government where (per Wikipedia) "the executive branch derives its democratic legitimacy from, and is held accountable to, the legislature (parliament); the executive and legislative branches are thus interconnected." In such systems, a majority party (or a coalition) forms a government and from this selects/appoints a top executive (Prime Minister) almost certainly from that party.

        Another example of the wiki being wrong, at least as far as Westminster based Parliamentary systems. The executive is the Crown or her representative, eg the Governor General or in the case of Canadian Provinces, the Lieutenant Governor. Parliament (or Provincial Legislature) passes a bill, much like Congress though generally the Upper House has been neutered or eliminated, and when the Bill gets Royal Assent, it becomes law. In theory Royal Assent can be refused resulting in a veto, but in practice it almo

    • There is something I don't understand here.. During all Obama's presidency, did Republicans manage to keep being the ruling party somehow? because it seems even with a Democrat president Obama can't pass any law without going through them.

      In addition to what others have said.....

      In America, unlike some other countries, congresspeople are free to vote however they like, regardless of party. So a lot of times you'll see a few democrats voting with republicans and vice versa. Because America is so big and diverse, frequently parties are not unified in opinion, for example, a senator in rural west-Virginia might be pro-union, but also anti-gun-control,

      That's why they had so much trouble passing Obamacare even while controlling both branches

  • by davmoo ( 63521 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @03:14PM (#48846079)

    Republicans in both the House and Senate can propose this legislation all day long. They can even vote to pass it. But ti still can't get around a Presidential veto, and in their wildest dreams the GOP does not have the votes to override a veto.

    • by Amigan ( 25469 )
      If only he used the pen for VETO as opposed to EOs...
      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        Well before he can veto, Congress needs to actually pass something, which in and of itself is highly unlikely.

        And I have absolutely zero issues with executive orders. Presidents have been using them for decades and no one ever complained until now. It's just more anti-Obama smoke and mirrors courtesy of the Koch brothers and Faux News.

        • Re: (Score:2, Offtopic)

          by Amigan ( 25469 )
          You mean his EOs to delay/change/alter the ACA? When Congress attempted to pass "into law" his EO on the delay, he announce he would veto it? It *is* good to be king. Note the 2nd paragraph here - delay [thehill.com] that it was a bill to do what the Administration had already announced. Enforcing the law is the Executive branch's job, not changing it.
          • Oh please, stop with the Faux News bullshit. His EO and the bill that the Republicans attempted to pass were NOT equal in form or substance, namely, the EO was a delay that applied only to businesses while the GOP bill would apply to everyone, which would have resulted in a rise in premiums and lower enrollment numbers. And let's face it, the GOP bill is yet another thinly-veiled attempt at derailing the ACA, unlike the EO which was actually a bone toss to businesses to help them get onboard.

            If you're going

            • by sribe ( 304414 )

              When the Black man does it, everyone starts screaming bloody murder.

              Bingo!

            • When the Black man does it, everyone starts screaming bloody murder.

              Close but much more likely is when the other party does it scream bloody murder.
              Remember Bush and how all the democrats screamed about the stuff he did while the republicans kept their pie holes shut. Now that Obama is president and doing the same things the democrats are the ones keeping their pie holes shut and the republicans are screaming about it.

      • EOs are completely legal and have been used since the creation of the union. Reagan used then, Bush I used them, Clinton used them, Bush II used them....name a president that did not use an Executive Order please.

        Idiots.

  • by Amigan ( 25469 ) on Sunday January 18, 2015 @03:34PM (#48846183) Homepage
    The FCC has tried once to enforce Net Neutrality. This was ruled illegal by the courts, see ruling [wsj.com].

    Now by making the ISPs "common carriers", we will get all the innovation that we got under Ma Bell before the breakup in 1983 :-(

    • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

      Utter nonsense.

      The common carrier status of AT&T had nothing to do with it's level of "innovation". It's monopoly status did. Competitive providers are more than capable of operating in a non-monopoly environment. The example of phone services AFTER the AT&T breakup is a glaringly obvious example of this.

      We already have a working model for breaking up the cable monopolies.

      • by Bengie ( 1121981 )
        Common Carrier status for ISPs will let them get access to right of ways. As it stands right now, ISPs do not have access to right of ways, only telcoms and cable companies do, which is why nearly every land line ISP is also a telcom or cable company.
    • You are an idiot that does not understand why Ma Bell was not innovative or what the court actually told the FCC when it over-turned the rules...you certainly do not understand the crap political game the ISPs have been playing with the FCC regarding when they do and do not want to be considered a common carrier.

    • by Bengie ( 1121981 )
      Making ISPs common carriers allows ISPs access to right of ways. Kind of an important thing. Strangely enough, government regulation lowers the barrier to entry, I assume this is a good thing, but I could be wrong. Maybe the current extremely high barrier to entry is a good thing.
  • A free market would permit everyone to operate freely on equal footing, where the biggest players don't automatically get a cut on top of what they already charge.

  • ...of Comcast in their mouth. Nice.

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