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Gun Owners of America on Internet Freedom
Gun Owners Of America ^ | Larry Pratt

Posted on 05/10/2006 10:12:33 AM PDT by steve-b

Larry Pratt wrote this letter to Congress:

Dear Representative,

As Congress considers major legislation affecting the nation's telecommunications structure, particular attention must be paid towards maintaining the Internet as a medium accessible to all, so that the free market might continue to determine which goods, services and ideas prosper.

For many years, those few companies whose hardware comprises the "skeleton" of the Internet have had to operate under the concept of Network Neutrality. That is, when selling their services, they had to treat all customers the same… all purchasers of a particular amount of bandwidth paid the same and were given the same level of service.

The result has been a vibrant and competitive marketplace, full of innovation and a definite positive force in our nation's economy. Moreover, unfettered access to the Internet has given rise to an explosion in grassroots activism all across the political spectrum. Every blogger is a potential Patrick Henry, and every grassroots association has the means to disseminate its point of view.

It would be a shame if a handful of major telecoms were free to pick and choose which individuals and associations were the recipients of quality service – and which were left out in the cold. Without even ascribing a political motive to their actions, greed alone will skew the Internet marketplace if companies can deny superior quality of service to those who choose to use the products of competitors.

In the case of grassroots outside groups like GOA, equal access to the hardware, software, and bandwidth that comprise the Internet is essential to a free marketplace of ideas. Indeed, that is what we have had all along, and the result has been every bit as significant as the development of the printing press.

That marketplace has thrived even though we are essentially dealing with a government-supported oligopoly here. As long as government is setting the ground rules, those rules must include forced neutrality in order to ensure that the market will determine which goods and services prosper. It is not enough that the FCC be empowered to set "policies" as such policies would be subject to the whims of future administrations. Rather, the concept of Network Neutrality must be codified as black-letter law.

GOA urges you to insist upon Network Neutrality when revamping the nation's telecommunications infrastructure.

Sincerely,

Larry Pratt
Executive Director


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Government
KEYWORDS: banglist; guncontrol; internet; networkneutrality

1 posted on 05/10/2006 10:12:34 AM PDT by steve-b
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To: steve-b

With Network Neutrality laws:

"Best Effort" is applied to all. Some connections will be slow some will be fast.

Without Network Neutrality laws:

"Best Effort" is applied to all. Some connections can get a guaranteed fast rate. The rest get whatever rate they normally would get.

Let them pass laws mandating open access. No one is fighting that. What the content vendors are fighting is the idea that they will face competition from those willing to pay for better service.

Sure, everyone hates the idea that the internet gets congested but when the telcos come up with an idea to properly tier it to allow time sensitive packets a way to avoid the congestion people freak out.


2 posted on 05/10/2006 10:36:04 AM PDT by Bogey78O (<thinking of new tagline>)
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To: Bogey78O
Reality:

With Network Neutrality laws:
"Best Effort" is applied to all. Some connections will be slow some will be fast.

Without Network Neutrality laws:
"Worst Effort" is applied to competitors of the local monopoly telco's favored partners.

3 posted on 05/10/2006 10:40:07 AM PDT by steve-b (A desire not to butt into other people's business is eighty percent of all human wisdom)
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To: steve-b

If we pass laws to shield gun makers they'll make unsafe guns and hand them out to children! Please stop corporate hand outs!

/sarcasm

Whenever someone rings up network neutrality, the boogeyman always presented is that without laws demanding it we'll see ISP's giving inferior service.

If they want to be honest about it why don't they favor a standard satisfactory minimum and not a demand that no one get good service on the internet.

But I guess everyone getting the same no matter what is a tenant now of American life.


4 posted on 05/10/2006 10:45:50 AM PDT by Bogey78O (<thinking of new tagline>)
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To: steve-b

The USG should never have ANY CONTROL over the internet and NEVER, NEVER NEVER give them your guns.
If we lose the internet it's all over.


5 posted on 05/10/2006 11:31:21 AM PDT by Lowell (The voice from beyond the far right edge!)
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To: Lowell

I have to agree. The government never, ever manages anything well. Keep them out and we'll stay free


6 posted on 05/10/2006 2:07:15 PM PDT by Jim Verdolini (We had it all, but the RINOs stalked the land and everything they touched was as dung and ashes!)
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Comment #7 Removed by Moderator

Comment #8 Removed by Moderator

To: Lowell
What's with the removed comments? Did somebody figure out a way to hijack this thread to the illegal immigration issue?
9 posted on 05/12/2006 7:21:57 AM PDT by steve-b (A desire not to butt into other people's business is eighty percent of all human wisdom)
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