The government itself creating a telco and directly providing subsidized Internet access would come at a greater cost to tax payers than the price increases consumers will see as a result of this legislation. Market forces will compel the Internet service providers to operate as efficiently as possible.
This is akin to saying "medical care is a right, so no hospital or doctor can charge more than $100 for a procedure".Thanks, old habits die hard .
Your question is a good one. My short answer is "yes" with some qualifications.
Here are the groups this legislation targets: "To qualify, the household must be eligible for the National School Lunch Program, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program or SNAP, Medicaid, the Senior Citizen Rent Increase Exemption, the Disability Rent Increase Exemption, or is a recipient of an affordability benefit from a utility."
I'm a tax payer who receives no direct benefit from any of those programs. However, I see the provision of *vital* services to all citizens as a government function. Under Covid-19 rules, we have been compelled to operate more and more via the Internet, which already played an outsized role in our lives. Someone upthread compared its importance to that of electricity when we learned to harness it. I think that's an apt comparison. Society now runs on the Internet.
The government itself creating a telco and directly providing subsidized Internet access would come at a greater cost to tax payers than the price increases consumers will see as a result of this legislation. Market forces will compel the Internet service providers to operate as efficiently as possible.
That may be part of the answer, but we can't afford superficial simplistic answers anymore. It's easy to say "racism", "circumstance", or even "laziness" are the causes, but we have to go deeper(tm). We need to start asking questions such as, but not limited to:
These are some of the deep questions we need to be investigating.
- Why have our schools failed these people despite nearly unlimited money?
- What cultures of people are in poverty, and does culture have a role?
- What methods are actually effective at helping a person overcome poverty themselves?
Politicians have failed us. If politicians are too inept to lead, we shall lead. We The People need to look into these questions, and demand accountability where it is due.
Told this story but it bares repeating here.
A few years ago I was shipping something out at a UPS facility near me. A lady pulls up in a big Mercedes and parks right outside the door where there wasn't a spot. She comes in to pick up a few boxes. Very well dressed, nice jewelry, etc.. She was picking up a number of pairs of Uggs boots. Probably about $200 a pair. The UPS employee asks for some form of ID. The lady whips out her EBT/SNAP card. When she left the employee and I just looked at each other and shook our heads. The employee said the woman who just left had a nicer car than she did and she has to work 2 jobs.
Those are the lessons they should be teaching from kindergarten.IMHO, you could have simply said "Culture is the primary cause."
My mother's last teaching job before she retired was for the Dunkirk Public Schools......if you want to know why schools have failed people, go hang out in those buildings for a while. The stories she used to tell us enraged me to no end. If I ever spoke to or treated a teacher with so much disrespect as those "kids" do, my father would have kicked my ass (after the nuns got done with me, but that's another story).
We have generations who believe that they are "owed" something and have no respect for anyone else, much less themselves. And without self respect there is no pride in oneself, or work ethic. Add to that the fact that we reward people for being mediocre.......yeah, we're F'ed.......
That's a poor analogy. The legislation is not capping costs for all tiers of service, and anyone who wants/requires >25 Mbps (which is most households) will be paying market rate.This is akin to saying "medical care is a right, so no hospital or doctor can charge more than $100 for a procedure".
You will quickly find that any expensive to perform procedure will simply not be offered, to anyone.
No, it is an apt analogy.That's a poor analogy. The legislation is not capping costs for all tiers of service, and anyone who wants/requires >25 Mbps (which is most households) will be paying market rate.
If the established ISP(s) can't make the model work, someone will come along and take their place. Do you think that this legislation will bankrupt Time Warner/Spectrum?In most places ISPs have no competition. Efficient markets do not apply to a monopoly.
If the established ISP(s) can't make the model work, someone will come along and take their place. Do you think that this legislation will bankrupt Time Warner/Spectrum?
No, but Time Warner and others should be allowed to charge whatever the people are willing to pay.
They should not be on the hook in their profits to sell a service cheaper than they want and the tax payers should not be forced to supplement these loses.
That may be part of the answer, but we can't afford superficial simplistic answers anymore.
True story, I see it all the time. I say something most times.
I agree to a point. They're providing a service at a set price. You can pay it or not. The problem is that spectrum is the only option I have for internet that isn't satellite or dial up so I don't really have a choice if I want useable internet. I have to pay whatever they want to charge - and their prices just keep going up without better service. What really pisses me off is that they charge less for new customers than they do for someone thats been with them for 10 years.
I'd sugar the twat-waffle's gas tank.
I’ve seen this many times.Told this story but it bares repeating here.
A few years ago I was shipping something out at a UPS facility near me. A lady pulls up in a big Mercedes and parks right outside the door where there wasn't a spot. She comes in to pick up a few boxes. Very well dressed, nice jewelry, etc.. She was picking up a number of pairs of Uggs boots. Probably about $200 a pair. The UPS employee asks for some form of ID. The lady whips out her EBT/SNAP card. When she left the employee and I just looked at each other and shook our heads. The employee said the woman who just left had a nicer car than she did and she has to work 2 jobs.
In many cases that is the fault of government.In most places ISPs have no competition. Efficient markets do not apply to a monopoly.
People deserve
I hope you know I was being sarcastic, and it is taken out of context when you only quote two words.No one "deserves" anything.
From the moment you pop outta your momma's hole you need to fight for everything. Your first breath, your first teat, all of it.
People EARN what they have. And if they want to be useless, lazy, assholes, they've EARNED the right to starve to death.
Fuck 'em all.
What do you think was in the COVID jab?If only we all could have a chip implanted that could get 5g and the government could then check on, health, gunshot locations,etc., it could all be free!