After Chat With Ethics Lawyers, FCC Boss Declines NRA Gun Award For Killing Net Neutrality
from the good-call,-hoss dept
Last month you might recall that the NRA gave FCC boss Ajit Pai the Charleton Heston Award for Courage for his decision to dismantle popular net neutrality rules. The tone-deaf celebration was a pretty hollow attention seeking move, but was also an ouroboros of blistering idiocy. One, the NRA appears oblivious to the fact that net neutrality rules would have helped it as well, since the entire point is to ensure the internet is a level playing field for all competitors and voices. Net neutrality protects free speech (even speech you don't agree with), something you'd think the folks at the NRA would be able to appreciate.
Two, there's simply nothing courageous about teaming up with Comcast to screw over the public and the nation's small businesses and startups. Pai's decision is widely derided as the dumbest decision in the history of modern tech policy. And while ISPs like to frame net neutrality as partisan to sow division and prevent meaningful rules, surveys repeatedly indicate the rules had broad bipartisan support.
It didn't take long for ethics experts to point out that the award and the NRA's gift to Pai (a Kentucky long rifle) was over $200 and therefore violated ethics rules and lobbying restrictions:
Anyone care to explain to me why the FCC thinks that the ethics rules allow Ajit Pai to accept the gift of an expensive handmade gun from the NRA, an entity whose interests he can affect (and has affected) by the performance of his official duties? Am I missing something? https://t.co/S6ocyWIV7H
— Walter Shaub (@waltshaub) February 24, 2018
After a chat with FCC ethics lawyers, Pai appears to have finally realized that accepting the award probably wouldn't be a particularly bright idea. As such, Pai wrote a letter to the NRA declining the gun while insisting this whole thing simply caught him by surprise:
"As you know, once my staff became aware of what was happening, they asked backstage that the musket not be presented to me to ensure that this could be first discussed with and vetted by career ethics attorneys in the FCC’s Office of General Counsel," Pai wrote, according to an FCC source who relayed the text of the letters.
“Therefore, upon their counsel, I must respectfully decline the award,” he wrote. “I have also been advised by the FCC’s career ethics attorneys that I would not be able to accept the award upon my departure from government service."
Of course Pai and his staff could have rejected the award at any point (the award occurred on February 23), but then they wouldn't have been able to enjoy all the yucks at the expense of startups, consumers, and the health of the internet. From stem to stern this was just a PR disaster, and you couldn't have paid a fiction author to craft a dumber, more absurd narrative. And while those behind the effort likely believe they were being clever trolls, Millennial voters likely got a decidedly different impression from the tone-deaf gala.
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Filed Under: ajit pai, awards, ethics, fcc, net neutrality, nra
Companies: nra
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Maybe he learned something?
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What other activities are worth more than $200?
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Re: What other activities are worth more than $200?
Now all the self-righteous bigots that turned a blind eye are piling on like rabid dogs.
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no spin here at all huh?
I wonder... what was TD's position on Obama getting the Nobel Peace Prize? Was the same level of condescending prattle offered there as well?
While I fully agree that Pai is a tool, it looked to me like TD has already passed judgement on the subject. For once Pai did the right thing but that is still not good enough for TD is it? Just the suspicious of wrong doing is an open and shut case of proven misdeed for you guys.
Hypocrisy is a nasty disease, you should take a chillax pill. The republicans in congress are only the only group that are as you put it...
"an ouroboros of blistering idiocy."
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Re: no spin here at all huh?
There was no shortage of people questioning whether Obama could legally receive the Nobel Peace Prize. Especially given that it came with a large financial reward. So....
Reuters: Nobel award to Obama required lengthy U.S. Constitution check
It helped that two previous sitting presidents, a sitting vice president, a Secretary of State and a U.S. Senator had previously won the Peace Prize.
Obama donated the financial reward to charity.
Ajit Pai broke the rules by accepting the expensive handmade gun from the NRA. Obama did not break the rules, and first did the legal checks to ensure that he did not break the rules.
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Re: no spin here at all huh?
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Re: no spin here at all huh?
Strangely enough, regular readers are actually quite aware, and the site provides honest people with a search functionality so that anyone interested can find out for themselves.
But, that would require intellectual honesty, whereas you're just a liar who can't take criticism of actual wrongdoing by the people you support, so you try a pathetic "what about" deflection instead.
"For once Pai did the right thing but that is still not good enough for TD is it?"
No, it's not. Doing the right thing after publicly doing the wrong thing and only backtracking after being told by other people that it looks bad is still not a good thing. I know you support conmen and liars in everything they do, but you're not going to get them support from anyone else here until they at least learn to stop doing the bad shit in from of everyone's faces before issuing a fake apology.
"Hypocrisy is a nasty disease"
It is. You should get it seen to.
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Re: Re: no spin here at all huh?
It's pathetic how our resident trolls make wild accusations in the hope that some fool will believe them.
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Re: Re: Re: no spin here at all huh?
Without context, some might be fooled into thinking he has a point, or is correct about some accusations. So, I make sure to correct him whenever I notice some distortion of the truth. What a shame that I see him do that so often. Surely by now, even if you're the kind of tiny-minded person who finds entertainment value in trolling, a person would be bored by this time.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: no spin here at all huh?
I doubt it.
Nobody's going to look at Blue's inane ranting and think, "This guy gets it." Unless they already agree with him.
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"After"
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I assume...
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FAA supports the second amendment,
That they are ignorant of the fact that this is what they are doing when celebrating the death of NN is plausible, but not excusable.
Of course cherry picking from the Constitution, and then waving a flag with one hand and flinging poo with the other is nothing new. SCOTUS has been doing it now for a century.
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Re: FAA supports the second amendment,
Or if you really did mean to type "FAA", what the #&*)! does the Federal Aviation Administration have to do with this?
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Re: Re: FAA supports the second amendment,
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Just covering his ass
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Fickled finger of FATE award..
And shows this has been around a long time
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