snozzberries wrote:Holy shit as I was crawling into bed an analogy popped into my head. One you guys should understand. I'm gunna stay up late and write this out for you.
Imagine you have a favorite range you go to. Really, it's the only range you CAN go to. Because all the others were closed down, because the liberals went after them. They came after the ones in the city, they passed bullshit laws to force them out. Crap about needing a permit that's impossible to get.
But you've still got your 1 range, so you are happy. It's nice. Not too busy. You can shoot rifle, pistol, shotgun. 50 yard, 100 yard, 200 yard rifle. You can shoot all calibers, just no exploding targets. Sorry. Pistol range is great to. You pay your $15, and you go in and shoot any guns, and any distance. You realize what a blast it is, so you bring in more guns, different calibers, different bullet weights. You shoot all day long. Still, the range isn't too busy. Always room for more people. Everything is in good repair. The range makes enough money to survive.
Eventually the range decides they aren't making enough money. One day the range owners get greedy and decide they want even more money. They realize they are the only range you can go to. They have a monopoly. So they implement a new pricing plan. $10 per gun. Sure this work great for some people. They only bring their 1 rifle to the range. They save $5 per trip. But for 95% of everybody else, now it costs $20, or $30. Or more. Still, lots of room for everybody.
Then they decide that since the can of worms has been opened, to expand this innovative plans. They want to innovate some more. They start to charge per distance. $5 for the 50 yard, $5 for the 100 yard, $5 for the 200 yard. For pistols, same thing. $5 for 7 yards, $5 for 20 yards, $5 for 25 yards. Still, lots of room for everybody.
That's good, even more money. But time for more "innovation". Pay per caliber. Pay $5 for .22. $10 for .308. $20 for .50. It's only fair, right? You should pay for the services you are getting. Now it's costs you $150 to go to the range. You haven't gotten any additional service, you just pay more.
Net Neutrality says "No fucking up the rifle range." "$15 fee to have fun". The ISP cries out "OMG you are stifling our innovation!" There is no innovation here with regards to the rifle range, the only innovation lies in their billing plans and ways to fuck you over. When you vote for Net Neutrality, when you vote for Government Regulation, you are voting to keep shit as-is, and not fuck shit up. Do you want a $150 range fee?
THIS is an analogy that is factual.
This was good for a laugh, thank you for that. 1st mistake - trusting that the government would actually work in the people's best interest, and solve a problem.
You saw how the IRS was weaponized to target Tea Party conservative groups by denying or delaying (501)c applications. What would hold back the party in power to shut down certain sites, delay approvals, or slow access to a crawl to certain Web sites. How about the Fairness Doctrine applied to the Internet? Sounds awesome doesn't it - may as well live in China. Corruption, fees, regulation, filtering, limitations, POWER.
If you can, get in touch with your dark side Snozz, then go a thousand shades darker into government corruption, taxation, and control.
The reason they want Net Neutrality is because there is unfettered freedom of speech, freedom to share information, free VoIP they can't tax, on and on. The key word is freedom, and our political class can't stand it. They will bury sites with regulations and frivolous fines as punishment for speaking out for or against "Global Warming", Planned Parenthood, Gun Control, Common Sense this and that, fake news, etc.
How much is this new regulation going to cost us? I doubt it will be cheap.
The government is not a high tech company. Many large government agency systems are 40-50 years old. COBOL, assembly language, Fortran, systems using floppy drives. And you want to put them in charge of more regulation?
How Title II Harms Consumers and Innovators
http://www.aei.org/wp-content/uploads/2 ... vators.pdf