FCC Sued By Dozens of Cities After Voting To Kill Local Fees and Rules (arstechnica.com) 106
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: The Federal Communications Commission faces a legal battle against dozens of cities from across the United States, which sued the FCC to stop an order that preempts local fees and regulation of cable-broadband networks. The cities filed lawsuits in response to the FCC's August 1 vote that limits the fees municipalities can charge cable companies and prohibits cities and towns from regulating broadband services offered over cable networks. "At least 46 cities are asking federal appeals courts to undo an FCC order they argue will force them to raise taxes or cut spending on local media services, including channels that schools, governments, and the general public can use for programming," Bloomberg Law wrote Tuesday.
Various lawsuits were filed against the FCC between August and the end of October, and Bloomberg's report said that most of the suits are being consolidated into a single case in the US Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit. An FCC motion to transfer the case to the 6th Circuit, which has decided previous cases on the same topic, is pending. The 9th Circuit case was initially filed by Eugene, Oregon, which said the FCC order was arbitrary and capricious and that it violated the Administrative Procedure Act, the Constitution, and the Communications Act. The cities' arguments and the FCC's defense will be fleshed out more in future briefs. Big cities such as Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia, San Antonio, San Francisco, Denver, and Boston are among those suing the FCC. Also suing are other municipalities from Maine, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Virginia, Maryland, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Texas, Arizona, California, Oregon, and Washington, according to a Bloomberg graphic. The state of Hawaii is also suing the FCC, and New York City is supporting the lawsuit against the FCC as an intervening party.
Various lawsuits were filed against the FCC between August and the end of October, and Bloomberg's report said that most of the suits are being consolidated into a single case in the US Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit. An FCC motion to transfer the case to the 6th Circuit, which has decided previous cases on the same topic, is pending. The 9th Circuit case was initially filed by Eugene, Oregon, which said the FCC order was arbitrary and capricious and that it violated the Administrative Procedure Act, the Constitution, and the Communications Act. The cities' arguments and the FCC's defense will be fleshed out more in future briefs. Big cities such as Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia, San Antonio, San Francisco, Denver, and Boston are among those suing the FCC. Also suing are other municipalities from Maine, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Virginia, Maryland, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Texas, Arizona, California, Oregon, and Washington, according to a Bloomberg graphic. The state of Hawaii is also suing the FCC, and New York City is supporting the lawsuit against the FCC as an intervening party.
litigation nation (Score:2)
FCC in the right here? (Score:5, Insightful)
My experience was all those "local fees" just get shoveled right into the customer bill anyway, and then used as a sandwich for other made up fees that go straight to fat bastards.
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...limits the fees municipalities can charge cable companies and prohibits cities and towns from regulating broadband services offered over cable networks.
That's "competing"?
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A playing referee (Score:1)
How is government competing with businesses it is supposed to govern "admirable"? That's like "admiring" a referee, who is also playing for one of the teams...
Governments are instituted among Men to protect the inalienable rights to Life, Liberty, and Pursuit of Happiness.
Broadband internet is not among on the list...
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Some people would give up phone for cocaine — by your definition, that makes the stuff more important than phone... And, by the way, why are you even talking about phones? The conversation started with NicknameUnavailable "admiring" government-provided Internet-service — not phones...
No, it is not. More importantly, there is no right to Happiness. Only to the Pursuit of it...
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There is an old American saying about the folly of "fighting the cityhall". If it is "municipal", it is government-run. Which, by definition, makes it Communist (or Socialist, if you prefer the lite version).
You're confusing reality with a Smurfs' idyll. Suppose, one of these people decides, he wants to offer his own, competing, service. Do you honestly think, he'll have no problem securing all the necessary permits? Suc
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B) It's not tax evasion, it's a legal tax dodge because they technically get to call themselves a part of the government.
C) If the alternative is Comcast, Time Warner Cable, or some other bunch of rent seekers, fuck them.
D) The perfect system is not an absolute, it's a balancing act between many different things and community broadband at 2
Re:FCC in the right here? (Score:5, Informative)
Muni broadband should have capitalists creaming their expensive jeans, competition drives innovation. The FCC says exactly that every time they kill regulations that help the plutocracy.
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Re:FCC in the right here? (Score:5, Insightful)
Um, that's not really what the impeachment inquiries are about. Even one of the Democratic members said exactly that, that it didn't matter how the foreign policy is done, only that the president can't use foreign governments to help influence an election. The nub is whether or not this particular action falls under that category. Meanwhile Democrats are going overboard in all the minutiae that doesn't matter, and the Republicans are going overboard with absurd excuses or ad-hominem attacks against against witnesses.
I'd be happy to have anyone from either party shed some sanity on the process, but that's unlikely to happen.
Clearly what the president did crosses a line, based upon the public transcripts already made public, with no need to know who the whistle blower was or what his politics are. It's bad behavior, unethical to be sure, and shameful. Is it enough for an impeachment? Hard to say because impeachments are 100% political and not based upon any legal code. Is it politically motivated? Hell yes! Was the Clinton investigation political? Hell yes! Was Trump the most persecuted president ever? No way, Clinton was investigated for a longer period of time. Was Clinton's impeachment about rerunning the election? Yes! Is Trump's impeachment going to be about rerunning the election? Yes! Clinton impeachment vote was largely along strict party lines and failed, and will Trump's impeachment also be along strict party lines and fail? Hell yes!
Some quotes from the past:
Sen. Lindsey Graham, 1999: "A president doesn’t even have to be convicted of a crime to be impeached. Impeachment is about restoring honor and integrity to the office."
Sen. Chuck Grassley, 1999: "The American people have a right to expect their president to be completely truthful, as they can expect you and me to be completely truthful.”
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Was Clinton's impeachment about rerunning the election? Yes!
Given that past impeachment would have given us President Gore, and a current impeachment would give us President Pence, I'm baffled as to why a political party would waste time on impeachment as a means to 'rerunning the election'.
Pence can't do anything with a Democratic House (Score:3)
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I think using a public office (Score:3, Interesting)
As it stands Trump is above the law unless and until he is removed from office. I keep asking myself what would I do if the president of the United States had it in for me. 10 years ago I would have laughed it of
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Nixon didn't get Nixon'd until pretty late in the game. At the start it was very political and sides were of course drawn along political lines. When the tape recording came out though then even many Republicans started turning against Nixon. But I think if you fast forward it wouldn't play the same say. There are many hardcore Trump supporters who are happy about the dirty politics, they don't see the president as someone who governs the country fairly, but as someone who's first loyalty is to the part
Trump brings home victories (Score:3)
I could rattle off reasons why repealing the ACA is bad (pre-existing conditions
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I think you need a better strawman (Score:2)
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‘while this report does not conclude that the President committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him.
Meaning -"we can't find any crime here, but we still don't like him". NO CRIME. None. Yet - you forgive your Democrat masters. Partisan much?
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Re:FCC in the right here? (Score:4, Insightful)
The transcript is pretty clear. Trump wanted an investigation into Biden and the discredited theory that Ukraine was behind 2016 election interference, in exchange for releasing military aid moneys. The pushback from Republicans seems to be along the lines of: the conspiracy theory was true and is reasonable to investigate it, or that it's not quid-pro-quo if Trump didn't have intent, or that it's all false because the person who pointed to the transcripts is biased, or that presidents do this all the time so what's the big deal. Meanwhile Trump is pushing the bizarre idea that the old Ukrainian prosecutor who refused to investigate Burisma was a good guy, that the later ambassador trying to get corruption investigated was a terrible woman, and so forth. We all know that Trump watches or listens to a lot of weird ass conspiracy theory shows late and night and assumes it's all real.
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That's why it's silly to point to Comcast et al as a reason to push for public Internet to "compete" for providing Internet service. If you don't like Comcast, your
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No, it was not. When exclusive cable franchises were legal, cable internet wasn't a thing, and the franchise was for the cable television service ONLY. More than two decades ago such exclusive franchises were made illegal by federal law, and any such agreements have long expired.
"If you don't like Comcast, your local government simply has to rescind its service monopoly, and either award the monopoly co
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ALL fees get passed on to customers by every business.
Re:FCC in the right here? (Score:5, Insightful)
ALL fees get passed on to customers by every business.
Unless the business operates in a competitive market, in which case the business needs to think about how many customers they will lose if they pass on a price increase.
The US Internet access market has no competition, so in that case all fees are passed on.
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A lot of places are only worth bothering with if you can be guaranteed customers or guaranteed no competitors.
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I'm assuming there was some deal done whereby you get the monopoly for a certain area. But you have to cover the whole area.
Otherwise 2 (however many) companies would compete for the profitable bits, and leave the rest with nothing.
It's evil socialism apparently, as well as crony capitalism. But it works in most countries.
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Case 1 A No fees, no competition
Cost + Markup = charge to customer
Cost 10, markup 100%, charge 20
Case 1 B with fees, no competition
Cost (including fees) + Markup = charge to customer
Cost 15, Markup 100%, charge 30
Case 2 A No Fees, big competition
Cost + Markup = charge to customer
Cost 10, markup 20%, charge 12
Case 2 B with Fees, big competition
Cost (including fees) + Markup = charge to customer
Cost 15, markup 20%, charge 18
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I guess that is a liberal mindset?
Not sure hat you mean by that. I don't think economics is particularly liberal (unless you mean neo-liberal, in which case maybe).
I am also not sure what your examples are supposed to prove. Any of those would be undercut by any new entrant to your market who offered a price with a lower markup.
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The US Internet access market has no competition
Cable, DSL, Wireless (frequently from multiple companies). What are you talking about?
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That is where I have the choice of something like 20 different ISP's all offering me different deals.
I am afraid your examples are setting the bar pretty low.
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ALL fees get passed on to customers by every business.
Unless the business operates in a competitive market, in which case the business needs to think about how many customers they will lose if they pass on a price increase.
Unless the company has their own money printing press in the back room, all fees get passed on to the customers. That's how it works.
I own a business. My customers pay all my bills. I can't print my own money.
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I own a business. My customers pay all my bills
Which has exactly nothing to do with competition.
If your customers find someone who will provide your service for less, they will stop paying your bills.
I can't print my own money.
Of course you can't, nobody said you could. Or that you might ever need to.
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Your bills are not your only outgoings. There's also your remuneration. In the case of corporations, that's dividends to shareholders. You can cut your salary and cut your dividends. You can also find ways to cut your other bills so that you can cope with a fee hike.
Re:FCC in the right here? (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, the FCC works for the telecoms companies. They will stop giving the fee to the local governments but still charge the money to the customers. There is no way for the people to win here.
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My experience was all those "local fees" just get shoveled right into the customer bill anyway, and then used as a sandwich for other made up fees that go straight to fat bastards.
Yeah, uh, none of your business, none of the FCC's business.
You don't like City Hall, tough cookies, no whining. Run for Mayor.
The FCC can't change the policy in a way that harms the interests of the cities in an arbitrary and capricious way. What exactly does that mean? That means the Federal Government isn't allowed to change their rules willy-nilly according to the mere preferences of the latest department heads. They have to have and provide actual good reasons for changes, and they have to weigh the im
Re:FCC in the right here? (Score:5, Interesting)
The Federal Communication Act of 1984 gave the localities the power to levy these "fees". The federal government is taking some of that power away. The complaint isn't that the this is illegal or unconstitutional, it's that the change didn't happen per federal rules.
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The complaint isn't that the this is illegal or unconstitutional, it's that the change didn't happen per federal rules.
That it didn't happen per federal rules is literally what makes it illegal.
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My experience was all those "local fees" just get shoveled right into the customer bill anyway, and then used as a sandwich for other made up fees that go straight to fat bastards.
The "we'll have to raise taxes" argument is laughable - they're already taxes, they're just hidden to the people most people don't recognize them as such so they get to get away with fleecing their constituents for more.
Constitution (Score:5, Insightful)
If this isn't a clear demonstration of a run-amock, out of control federal government, I don't know what is. The Constitution specifically states that any right not listed in there is reserved to the people and the States. Issuing taxes and fees to the local population for a local service is a local as local can get, and the federal government has no right to interfere.
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If this isn't a clear demonstration of a run-amock, out of control federal government, I don't know what is.
Well then, you don't know what it is, because it is not the Federal Government that is the problem here.
This is known as Regulatory Capture, and is the reason the FCC is not doing it's job.
This piece explains it quite well. [wikipedia.org]
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This is also why you can't buy health insurance from anyone you want or across state lines. They "captured" that business via regulations. It's amazing more people don't get upset over this. No one stops and thinks "Hey why don't I ever see commercials for health insurance on TV?" it's because you're trapped first by what companies are allowed to sell it in your state and then trapped again by what company your employer uses because they are mandated to provide you coverage whether you want it or not if you
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Funding your health system directly from taxes is cheaper and provides better health care, but yes, your health insurance industry has captured the business.
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Plenty of successful health systems in Europe involve insurance; in fact, the majority. Spain and the UK are relative outliers. Of course markets like France, Germany, the Netherlands etc all have significant regulatory control of how the payor operate, which helps
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Re:Constitution (Score:5, Insightful)
It's actually crony capitalism run amok. The big telecoms want to run the whole show, and bribe politicians via legal campaign donations to do their bidding.
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I don't have any, but I do have a solid line of reasoning.
Most politicians are slimebags. If you give a slimebag more campaign money to do A than B, they are more likely to do A.
In general if you give people more money to do A than do B, they will do more A.
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Any fix will probably require a Constitutional amendment in order to limit campaign donations and political ad spending (for politicians). We probably can't put a limit on issue ads, but maybe increase disclosure requirements so at least it's easier to know who is behind such ads.
Limiting total campaign donations and spending per politician may also help some. However, those with deep pockets still have ability to fund the entry of their chosen candidate.
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I believe the argument that this isn't the responsibility of the federal government is flawed in that they are the ones who granted these powers and that they are those solely capable of revoking them.
Umm? Read that Constitution again. The federal government is not an omnipotent king that "grants powers". The people granted a few powers to the federal government.
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Ya, but if you talk to these state's-rights defenders, they almost always think that the state or feds are allowed to overrule local governments, especially when profits are on the line. Hypocrisy? Of course.
Not quite (Score:2)
> but if you talk to these state's-rights defenders, they almost always think that the state or feds are allowed to overrule local governments
Not quite - people who understand states rights are aware that the states held a convention in 1787 and at that convention they "delegated certain powers to the United States", while all others were "reserved to the states respectively, or to the people".
The states explicitly gave the federal government certain powers, when the states created the federal government
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Also along the way, there was a war. We decided that slavery was right out, that the feds absolutely had the power to declare this no matter how much the states whined about it. States rights originally meant 100% that it was about the right to own slaves, no matter how much hand waving people today make of it. Of course, it took another 100 years for emancipation to really take place but that's another matter. So based on this war, there's a reasonable theory out there that the "loose confederation of
Interesting thoughts. 13th amendment (Score:2)
You're certainly right that life today is a bit different than it was at the founding of the republic. More on that later, so I can take your points in order. Even though that means saving the parts where we may agree for last.
> We decided that slavery was right out, that the feds absolutely had the power to declare this no matter how much the states whined about it.
I don't think that's quite how it happened. I think the STATES ratified the 13th amendment. This was a decade or two after half the states
Normally I'd agree with you, but Comcast interstat (Score:2)
I love the 10th Amendment and Article 1 as much as anyone.
That's inwbof the few things, if not rhe only thing, that the Constitution repeated twice, just in case somebody failed to read it the first time. The wheat cases were a travesty.
However, I think it's reasonable to say that the internet, and Comcast, are interstate commerce. That gives the feds the power to regulate them. Where the feds have power (which is limited to a few areas), the supremacy clause says the feds can prevent the states from als
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The food I buy at the grocery store comes from all over the wold. I still pay a local sales tax at the counter. I could still end up paying a local toll to get to that grocery store.
No such thing as Grocery Tax Freedom Act of 1998 (Score:2)
In 1998, Congress did not pass a law prohibiting states from taxing interstate corn. Congress can (and does) regulate groceries sold in interstate commerce; it has not chosen to bar states from adding their own taxes on interstate groceries.
They did pass the Internet Tax Freedom Act. The Act bars taxes on interstate internet service, on ISPs.
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No, the individual is as local as local can get. Governments at most should only have powers ceded to it by individuals because only individuals have rights. The government has no right to issue taxes and fees without a majority of the population giving the government that power, and even then only as limited by overriding law (i.e. a Constitution.)
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Well someone clearly never went to law school.
There are plenty of issues where Federal interests trump local interests under the Constitution. Many under the commerce clause, but other clauses as well. For example, Federal regulations can preempt local regulations where interstate commerce is impacted. That's why California's exception to set their own
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George Washington and Thomas Jefferson were "camo-wearing freaks"? You must be one of that "smart" bureaucrats that believe they should have the power to rule us all. You really think you're that smart, don't you?
We all know what FCC stands for (Score:1)
For Communist Control
they do the work of China and Russia
They need a new slogan (Score:2)
The FCC, when dumpster fires just aren't dumpster-y smelly enough!
We now accept Yuan and rubles (no bitcoin, that would be too obvious - we have to pretend to *serve* the American public, WINK)!!!
breathtaking levels of Federal corruption (Score:4, Insightful)
It's easy enough to take back (Score:3)
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Remember when Bernie Sanders sued the Democratic Party, claiming that they rigged the primary against him? He lost his case.
You know why? Because the Democrats argued in court - and won - that they are a private corporation that need not respect the results of any vote. But don't trust me, follow the citations from the article below. Face it, your vote is meaningless. They will nominate whomever they please. Like George Carlin said, "It's a big club and you ain't in it".
Court Concedes DNC Had the R [observer.com]
Except he didn't (Score:2)
The lawsuit you linked to was class action. It wasn't filed by Bernie. Bernie supported and endorsed Hilary after losing.
So go take your Bernie Bashing somewhere's else. We all see right through you.
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Well, they can (Score:2)
My vote matters. So does yours. Show up to your primary and they can't rig shit. They can only rig the primary because guys like you either stay home or do whatever your told by the establishment. All it takes to break that is for a 5% margin. If just 5% real anti-Establishment types showed up to the primaries then the margins wouldn't be big enough to rig. Book it, done.
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Court Concedes DNC Had the Right to Rig Primaries Against Sanders [observer.com]
On August 25, 2017, Federal Judge William Zloch, dismissed the lawsuit after several months of litigation during which DNC attorneys argued that the DNC would be well within their rights to select their own candidate. "In evaluating Plaintiffs' claims at this stage, the Court assumes their allegations are true - that the DNC and Wasserman Schultz held a palpable bias in favor of Clinton and sought to propel her ahead of her Democratic opponent," the court order dismissing the lawsuit stated. This assumption of a plaintiff's allegation is the general legal standard in the motion to dismiss stage of any lawsuit. The allegations contained in the complaint must be taken as true unless they are merely conclusory allegations or are invalid on their face.
I admit, I've gotten pretty disillusioned with the voting process lately. The link you gave got me curious though, and I actually went looking for the court document your linked article reports on, in order to actually confirm my disillusionment. But, if I'm reading the court docket correctly, (which, in fairness, I may not be. IANAL), the court actually agreed that the DNC argument was bullshit, and that they *couldn't* rig the primary. The suit was dismissed due to technical reasons where the court point
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Like usual, I'll be voting for the best candidate. I guess I'll be voting for Biden, as he's the Oldest Whitest Malest around, and I'd love the SJWs to freak out about him. (He's the wrong sex, sexual orientation, color, age, and hair color. But he's the right party and we're inclusive, so that's OK this time.)
Actually, I doubt I'll be voting for him, he's already had his chance. And remember: CONGRESS runs the country, t
Re:breathtaking levels of Federal corruption (Score:5, Interesting)
But we got shouted down by those of you who didn't want to go through the trouble of getting legislation passed first at the lower levels of government, before instituting it at the Federal level. That was too hard and troublesome for you. You wanted to take a short cut - pass it at the Federal level and have it immediately apply everywhere, overriding the state and local governments. And you abused the Commerce Clause to accomplish this. Well you got your wish. And the precedent set by your maneuver to bypass the allocation of powers between the Federal, state, and local governments has opened up the avenue by which a single person heading a single Federal agency can override all the state and local governments and set policy for the entire country.
You can't assume the government will always be on your side when you expand its powers. You always have to consider what the government could do with those powers if it becomes hostile to the public's interests. Then decide if that's really a power you wish to give the government.
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If your government is broken up into lots of small governments, then it becomes more difficult to corrupt it all.
That belief is adorable! Small governments in no way will be swamped by lots of lobbyists.
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the closer to gov and choices made to the people, the more power the people have.
Example is that cities and communities are rolling out internet other than comcast. This isn't happening fed or state.
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Given that the only reason for the raid at all was the BATFE wanted to put on a dog and pony show in order to increase their funding and the only reason the compound was buttoned up and ready for the feds is because said federal agency leaked the date and time of the raid to the local press a week in advance so that there would be an audience with plenty of cameras to film the raid, I'm gonna go with you're an idiot. Regardless of whether Koresh was a nutjob or not, the BDs very much were victims.
Uh what? (Score:1)