The Internet may not be free for much longer. The Republicans who control the House of Representatives, joined by two-thirds of the Democrats, just voted to allow telephone and cable companies that control Internet traffic to begin charging more for meaningful access. The move could create two classes of online users: the haves and the have-nots. In the process, it could destroy a revolutionary democratic-communication medium that empowers all. That conservative Republicans favor such a scheme comes as no surprise. But the fact that House Democrats — including Stephen Lynch and Richard Neal of Massachusetts, James Langevin and Patrick Kennedy of Rhode Island, and Mike Michaud of Maine — joined the robber barons of the right wing on this issue is a rude reminder that even nominally sensible elected officials can be woefully out of touch with the interests of average Americans.
As grim as this development is, the legislation now moves to the Senate where there is at least a hope, albeit a dimming one, that it can be modified, killed, or suffer a much-to-be-desired death due to a failure to reach compromise.
The best hope of saving the Internet from the clutches of corporate pirates is the Internet Freedom Preservation Act of 2006, which is the brainchild of Senators Olympia Snowe, Republican of Maine, and Byron Dorgan, Democrat of North Dakota. The Internet Freedom Act protects what’s known as “network neutrality” by defining the obligations of broadband providers as they supply the link between content providers and consumers.
“The Snowe-Dorgan bill will allow innovators, entrepreneurs, and investors who rely on the certainty of that open marketplace to continue to fuel the engine of our nation’s economy and our global leadership in Internet technology and services,” says a corporate group supporting the legislation. Among that group are Amazon.com, eBay, Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo. They further say: “Our companies join an ever-growing group of consumer and public interest groups, trade associations, bloggers, content and service companies, individuals, and family and religious organizations who believe strongly in the open Internet.”
The goal is to prevent telecommunication and cable companies from defining and controlling the Internet experience and marketplace — at a point when access to computer hardware has become all but universal.
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To keep the Internet relatively free and accessible, it is important that we write our senators now. So far, 12 senators have said they support Snowe’s proposal. In New England they are: John Kerry of Massachusetts, Christopher Dodd and Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut, and Patrick Leahy of Vermont.
Tax dollars paid for the research that developed the Internet, to the tune of billions of dollars. And tax dollars help keep it functioning at a cost of more than $40 million a year. The Internet belongs to the people, not special interests. Let’s keep it that way.
In the eye of the beholder
Luck has been with President George W. Bush over the past several days. His chief political thug, Karl Rove, has escaped prosecution for the role he likely played in leaking the name of covert CIA operative Valerie Plame to a conservative newspaper columnist; an even more loathsome thug, terrorist Abu Masab al-Zarqawi, was killed by an American air strike in Iraq; the dazed and disorganized US-sponsored Iraqi government has finally formed a cabinet; and Bush himself captured international headlines with his dramatic surprise visit to the secure Green Zone that sits in the midst of the violent anarchy that is plaguing Baghdad.
While we believe that, on balance, special prosecutors have done more harm than good, we’ll risk the charge of intellectual inconsistency to say we’re disappointed that Rove evaded the reaper of justice. Still, Vice-President Dick Cheney’s principal butt boy, Lewis “Scooter” Libby, has been indicted, and half a loaf of bad guys is better than none. We look forward to the prospect, which appears to be growing by the day, that Cheney himself will be called to testify in this sordid affair.
We are sad to say that, as welcome as Zarqawi’s death is, we don’t hold out any hope that it is going to make much — if any — difference to the safety or well-being of the American men and women fighting in our name in Bush’s criminally conceived and poorly prosecuted war.
Still, the Republican-controlled Congress, clutching at the straws it has at hand, is trying to turn this week’s debate on the Iraq war into another vote on terrorism. They hope that Zarqawi’s death, the formation of an Iraqi government, and Bush’s visit will change public perceptions about the war. And maybe it will — for a few days, a week, maybe even a few weeks. But the nation has been there and done that. As the steady return of American bodies continues, and as the horrific death toll among Iraqi civilians continues to climb, not even an American public once gullible enough to believe Bush and his cronies will change its mind that it was misled into supporting the gross mistake the world knows as the Iraq war. Senator John Kerry, who initially supported the war, has introduced a clear-cut resolution calling for troops to be out of Iraq by the end of this year. Already the GOP attack machine is trying to tar Kerry, a decorated Vietnam veteran, with the same brush it used to smear Democratic congressman John Murtha of Pennsylvania, another Vietnam vet who earlier called for an end to Bush’s Iraq adventure. Men like Kerry and Murtha, say the Republicans, are soft on terror, unlike tough guys Bush and Cheney, who avoided Vietnam service. At this moment, the question on many minds is this: when will Democratic senator Hillary Clinton of New York change her position and join the courageous members of her party willing to face down Bush?
On the Web
Save the Internet: //www.savetheinternet.com/
Op-Ed for theHill.com by the Future of Music Coalition's Jenny Toomey and Michael Bracey:
//www.thehill.com/thehill/export/TheHill/Comment/OpEd/061306_oped1.html