Congress Keeps Holding Repeated, Pointless Hearings Just To Punish The FCC For Standing Up To ISPs On Net Neutrality
from the shame-game dept
In the year since the FCC passed net neutrality rules, ISP allies in Congress have run the agency through an endless gauntlet of show-pony hearings. While most of these hearings profess to be focused on agency transparency and accountability, they're really geared toward one single purpose: to publicly shame the agency for standing up to deep-pocketed telecom campaign contributors. Given the fact the only real way to overturn the rules is for ISPs to prevail in court or via Presidential election, this showmanship has been little more than a stunning display of wasted taxpayer dollars and stunted intellectual discourse.Undaunted, the Senate held yet another "FCC accountability" (read: pointless tongue-lashing) hearing last week, during which Senators pummeled FCC boss Tom Wheeler with many of the same, repeatedly-debunked claims net neutrality opponents have been making since the rules were approved. Among them was the claim that the rules somehow hampered broadband investment, despite the fact that objective data (including quarterly ISP earnings reports) repeatedly shows that simply isn't the case.
For somebody that's had his time repeatedly wasted simply for upsetting the telecom status quo, Wheeler remains impressively cool under fire. For example, when fellow FCC Commissioner (and former Verizon regulatory lawyer) Ajit Pai took to the hearing to again trot out the industry-backed think tank claim that broadband investment had suffered under net neutrality, Wheeler casually highlighted that repetition does not magically forge reality:
"With all due respect to my colleague, what he has just portrayed as facts are not,” Wheeler responded. He said that investment in broadband increased, along with a 13% jump in fiber investment, as well as Internet usage and increased revenue per subscriber.When the rules were approved you might recall that net neutrality opponents also tried to claim that the White House "improperly influenced" the creation of the rules, since the White House vocally supported the Title II approach in November of 2014, and Wheeler voiced his support for Title II in February of 2015. This, net neutrality opponents argued, was clear evidence of an unholy cabal.
But Pai insisted that is not the case. “The FCC’s policies have failed. The administration’s policies on broadband has failed,” he said.
“We are not seeing a decline in broadband infrastructure investment. You can say it and say it and say it, but that does not make it a fact,” Wheeler responded.
Pai said he would offer up sworn declarations from Internet providers showing how the new rules had caused them to slow their investment. But Wheeler, too, offered to submit corporate statements on Internet investment, which would face Securities and Exchange Commission penalties if they were misleading.
Net neutrality opponents can't point out what law was broken (because none was) and FCC history is filled with examples of the White House publicly voicing its policy preference ahead of an FCC announcement (George W. Bush urging Michael Powell to deregulate media ownership, or Bill Clinton writing a public letter urging Chairman Reed Hundt to ban hard liquor ads on TV). Still, neutrality opponents dragged this tired dog out of the cupboard at the hearing as well, accompanied by a thirty page report (pdf) designed to pretend the discredited claim has gravitas. Wheeler again remained relatively unfazed:
"Here, I would like to be really clear: There were no secret instructions from the White House. I did not, as CEO of an independent agency, feel obligated to follow the president’s recommendation.”There's two things that net neutrality opponents in DC simply refuse to acknowledge. One, the net neutrality rules were crafted after unprecedented, genuine public outcry. Two, while it's framed as a partisan fight to try and sow partisan division, net neutrality actually has broad, bipartisan support. And while accountability for laughing at the will of the people and wasting everybody's time may not be forthcoming, the reality remains that these hearings are simply a taxpayer-funded display of just how high some politicians are willing to jump for their telecom-industry campaign contributions. The political and media pretense that they're anything else is laughable.
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Filed Under: congress, fcc, hearings, net neutrality
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Bluff called
Translation: 'No matter how many times you repeat a lie, it won't suddenly become the truth.'
And Wheeling said this in a Senate hearing held to punish him. Ouch.
Pai said he would offer up sworn declarations from Internet providers showing how the new rules had caused them to slow their investment. But Wheeler, too, offered to submit corporate statements on Internet investment, which would face Securities and Exchange Commission penalties if they were misleading.
I'm guessing Pai shut right up at that point when he realized that Wheeler wasn't going to let him get away with the same old tired claims.
'Want to make a claim? Alright, you submit your evidence, I'll submit mine, and if either is found to be 'misleading' whoever presented it get a hearty smack-down by the SEC.'
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Oh Please...
We all know that corruption is so deep up there that it is also possible that Wheeler is doing this because he has been paid to do it. Why would an agency that helped create this whole fucking mess all of a sudden willingly fall on a sword over it?
What are we really gaining? The new rules are shit because they are written in a way that gives too much power to the FCC because all that is needed for an ISP to run afoul of the law is for the FCC to feel like they did.
Damn, I hate the ISP's too, but we are only watching what is essentially a group of corrupt bastards fight out who gets to win in a race to fuck the citizens sideways.
Don't bet that I am going to be cheering for any of these scumbags!
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Re: Bluff called
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Re: Oh Please...
The argument you seem to be making is that since everyone in government is corrupt, the only reason anyone would do the right thing is if they are bribed to do so. But you've assumed your conclusion and have an argument that can be used to prove that everyone is corrupt regardless of their actions.
I consider Wheeler to be a rare example of a person in government that actually have some semblance of integrity and is actually doing what he thinks will be best for the country given the law and the evidence.
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Re: Re: Bluff called
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Re: Oh Please...
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Re: Oh Please...
Wheeler was right up there in the corruption stakes. I'll be honest - when I first saw his credentials, I was fucking terrified for US data infrastructure.
But Wheeler...has been largely on point and taking the corrupt and the amoral, both within and without of the FCC, to task for their blatant lies.
I want him to stay on past this coming election, but I fear that the most progressive person we've seen in nearly 50 years in this arena will be botted out because he ruffled too many feathers.
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I've translated the look in his face for better comprehension.
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Re: Re: Oh Please...
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Re: Re: Oh Please...
My interest is not an invalid on... seriously what has changed in Wheeler to make him seem so appealing now? I am not against having the dingo turn out to be a great baby sitter here, but there are other problems with this that people are not considering.
The new rules by FCC are still problematic... like everything else in this world, as long as the rules are enforce by decent people then we have little to fear, but the current rules are written to allow unscrupulous people to screw the estate and we cannot have that regardless of whether Wheeler is at the helm or not!
People just keep forgetting that every power you give your ally in government you also give to your enemy frothing with corruption!
So regardless of Wheeler's rare status, it is more of an aberration and we cannot allow it to put us on our heels!
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Re: Re: Re: Oh Please...
When it comes to government... there must always be some serious WHAT THE FUCKING going on before we go down the road of granting more power. It goes south almost every damn time!
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Re: Re: Re: Oh Please...
You're not wrong on this point.
For all the good Wheeler has done, doing this was very foolish indeed.
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Isn't It Ironic. Don't Ya Think?
Yet, when the FCC doesn't do what the Senate Majority's paid henchman want it to do, they call it on the carpet, they berate it, delay it, attack it with lies, and make Wheeler pay political consequences for his actions?
I mean, which branch of our gov't is OBVIOUSLY meddling with an independent FCC?
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Re: Isn't It Ironic. Don't Ya Think?
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What will follow
At this point I don't imagine anyone has credibility in congress without immediately citing sources.
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Re: Isn't It Ironic. Don't Ya Think?
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Im confused..
Anyway I'm confused .. shouldn't the FCC be a team of people working towards the same ends? Seems to Me that Pai works against Wheeler any chance he gets, even if it means repeating lies, i realize internal criticism might be good, but the FCC is always being pushed by congress and so on as it is, so why is Pia still on the FCC?
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Re: Dingo
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Re: Re: Re: Oh Please...
That he's not perfect is not at issue here; yes, he could do better, but I'll give him A for effort.
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