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Is this the kind of Crap U.S. soldiers die for? Hmmm - In vain or insane Cheap Politics - no freedom for the people - communications is all corrupt in America. Big Bucks: Why North Carolina Outlawed Community Networks
Less than a year after North Carolina became the 19th state to create barriers to community networks, effectively outlawing them, the non-partisan organization Follow the Money has crunched the numbers and found that private telecommunications interests donated quite heavily to lawmakers that pushed their bill through the Legislature:
Recall that Time Warner Cable pushed this bill for years with some help from AT&T, CenturyLink, and others that stood to benefit by limiting broadband competition. But the Legislature wisely refused to enact it... until 2011. Now we have a better sense of what may have shifted the balance. Consider this:
Running unopposed for office, he collected more money from the cable and phone companies than any other Representative and almost 10 times as much as in the previous two cycle combined. As Speaker, he set the agenda and decided priorities. At a time when communities need as many broadband options as possible, he pushed a bill to limit competition. It does not prove corruption, but in the immortal lyrics of C&C Music Factory, it "makes you go, hmmmm." Senator Apodaca, one of the lead supporters of the bill in the Senate, received $21,000 from telecom political action committiees. Only one other Senator came close to that total -- Senate President Pro Tempore Phil Berger. Most Senators collected well under $10,000. How did others in leadership positions do?
None of this data suggests quid pro quo corruption. We are not saying that these people only supported this bill because they got thousands upon thousands of dollars from those who wanted it passed. Nonetheless, the Legislature decided to prioritize a bill to revoke local decision-making authority from communities to make them more dependent on a small number of cable and DSL companies that just happened to give tens of thousands of dollars to key lawmakers. Hmmmmm. No use crying about it now. The question is where we go from here. Time to hold their feet to the fire -- after the bill passed, CenturyLink claimed "Thanks to the passage of House Bill 129, CenturyLink has gained added confidence to invest in North Carolina and grow our business in the state." Can anyone attest to CenturyLink increasing investment in North Carolina? Almost certainly not. AT&T has admitted it won't continue the U-Verse rollout it once promised state legislators. Let's collect the stories of people denied fast, affordable, and reliable access to the Internet due to laws limiting local authority. Always feel free to share such stories with us. CommentsI'm with the band width
Submitted by hd4ms (not verified) on March 22, 2012 - 2:11pm.
Plenty of competition in North GA, which touches N.C. We have two choices (that's right, 2 choices) for internet, but neither allows uploads faster than 1MB. Where's Nikola Tesla when you need him?
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| Msg # | Subject | Author | Recs | Date Posted |
| 110857 | Re: Is this the kind of Crap U.S. soldiers die for? Hmmm - In vain or insane | wyomingsour | 3/27/2012 8:02:45 AM | |
| 110865 | Re: Is this the kind of Crap--- Last mile | samizdat | 3/27/2012 12:49:09 PM | |
| 110878 | Re: Is this the kind of Crap U.S. soldiers die for? Hmmm - In vain or insane | waylonglvlt | 3 | 3/27/2012 6:29:21 PM |




















need to get clean...
After talking to any of these politicians, no exceptions, for a few minutes, I think I would need a shower...filthy.