Democrats Pitch $100 Billion Broadband Plan, Repeal of State Limits On Muni Networks (arstechnica.com) 213
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: House Democrats yesterday unveiled a $100 billion broadband plan that's gaining quick support from consumer advocates. "The House has a universal fiber broadband plan we should get behind," Electronic Frontier Foundation Senior Legislative Counsel Ernesto Falcon wrote in a blog post. House Majority Whip James Clyburn (D-SC.) announced the Accessible, Affordable Internet for All Act, saying it has more than 30 co-sponsors and "invests $100 billion to build high-speed broadband infrastructure in unserved and underserved communities and ensure that the resulting Internet service is affordable." The bill text is available here.
In addition to federal funding for broadband networks with speeds of at least 100Mbps downstream and upstream, the bill would eliminate state laws that prevent the growth of municipal broadband. There are currently 19 states with such laws. The Clyburn legislation targets those states with this provision: "No State statute, regulation, or other State legal requirement may prohibit or have the effect of prohibiting any public provider, public-private partnership provider, or cooperatively organized provider from providing, to any person or any public or private entity, advanced telecommunications capability or any service that utilizes the advanced telecommunications capability provided by such provider." The bill also has a Dig Once requirement that says fiber or fiber conduit must be installed "as part of any covered highway construction project" in states that receive federal highway funding. Similar Dig Once mandates have been proposed repeatedly over the years and gotten close to becoming US law, but never quite made it past the finish line.
In addition to federal funding for broadband networks with speeds of at least 100Mbps downstream and upstream, the bill would eliminate state laws that prevent the growth of municipal broadband. There are currently 19 states with such laws. The Clyburn legislation targets those states with this provision: "No State statute, regulation, or other State legal requirement may prohibit or have the effect of prohibiting any public provider, public-private partnership provider, or cooperatively organized provider from providing, to any person or any public or private entity, advanced telecommunications capability or any service that utilizes the advanced telecommunications capability provided by such provider." The bill also has a Dig Once requirement that says fiber or fiber conduit must be installed "as part of any covered highway construction project" in states that receive federal highway funding. Similar Dig Once mandates have been proposed repeatedly over the years and gotten close to becoming US law, but never quite made it past the finish line.
Toss in banning caps for non-satellite internet (Score:2)
and Idgit Pai(d) will probably stroke right out on the spot.
Re:Toss in banning caps for non-satellite internet (Score:5, Insightful)
And ain't that alone worth it.
You forgot why you dislike Pai (Score:2)
I think you forgot what it is that (some) people complain about with Pai. The issue people have with Ajit Pai is when he's asked to make law, such as a "network neutrality" package, he says that's up to Congress, not up to him. Congress has the power to make laws, not Ajit, he says.
If Congress were to pass this law, that would be exactly what Ajit Pai says is supposed to happen.
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Ajit's been a corporate shill from the get go. I honestly give everyone a fair shake, but he's favored corporate interests over consumer interests multiple times. For example, he defines broadband as 25Mbps/3Mbps despite most countries requiring at least 100Mbps down. This in turn lists my broadband internet options as two instead of the corporate monopoly of one (Comcast). Fuck Comcast with a screwdriver. I'm actually getting 5G down/4G up wireless, which kind of meets the promise of a second broadband wit
Yeah yeah yeah... (Score:4, Insightful)
And the GOP passed the repeal of Obamacare several times when they didn't have the votes to repeal a veto too and proclaimed if only they had the Presidency too they could pass this easily. Then when they actually did have all 3 houses suddenly they couldn't pass a thing.
Same here with the Democrats. This is just political season red meat.
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Yeah I guess Comcast and Charter haven't ponied up enough election year donations yet. Time to make sure they get a reminder.
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Funny thing about those BLM donations (Score:3)
One of them, that received quite a bit of corporate dosh, has a manifesto that spends it's time talking about trans rights and equal pay for women and somehow never gets around to mentioning all of those black folk killed by police...
So yeah, those "donations" are really more an attempt to undermine the BLM movement while simultaneously getting go
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Same here with the Democrats.
Democrats control 1 of the 3 houses. Come back in November and re-post this.
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A better way to say it:
When you only have one houses, you get to BE the peanut gallery.
BTW, there are only two houses of Congress.
Re: Yeah yeah yeah... (Score:2)
If the majority is small enough the minority can stop any legislation it chooses to. Notice how the Democrat minority in the senate killed the Republican police reform bill this week.
The minority can't put forth legislation and expect it to pass, but they can usually block anything the majority puts forth, if the majority is small enough.
I heard Republicans seated their 200th federal judge yesterday - thanks Harry Reid!
Re: Yeah yeah yeah... (Score:2)
Senate Republicans couldn't even get all of their own party members to vote for that lip service reform bill
Re: Yeah yeah yeah... (Score:3, Informative)
And by accusing republicans of killing George Floyd - a man that died under the knee of a Democrat officer, in a Dept with a Democrat police chief, with a Democrat city council, in a city with a Democrat mayor, in a state with a Democrat assembly and governor... Yeah, classic Republican crisis.
Re: Yeah yeah yeah... (Score:2)
Sorry - by accusing GOP she single-handedly killed the possibility of any meaningful reform this year.
She's a heck of a leader.
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Hope is that they control 0 of anything in November.
Then who will you blame? What a nightmare.
Back to when Trump took office though right. When nothing was accomplished. He waited two years until dems took a house then blamed everything on that.
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Well, I'll blame the same GOP I blamed for everything early in Trump's presidency, when they had all 3 and almost nothing got done. All those promises, forgotten. While I think Trump has lived up to a few of his campaign promises, it's telling that most of the progress came aftter the GOP lost the house. It's almost as if the GOP was opposing Trump harder than the Dems, behind the scenes.
If you haven't noticed, the everyday grassroots conservative is every bit as pissed with the GOP as your average Berni
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I would hope so. The Republicans have been the ones claiming to be "conservative", but they are no longer even close to being conservative, especially with Trump at the helm.
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Remember right after Trump got elected and the GOP controlled all both houses and the executive? Remember all those laws that got passed? No? That's right, because even when the GOP controls everything, they can't get shit done. GOP: Gaslight, Obstruct, Project, it's the right wing way!
GOP couldn't even overturn the Affordable Care Act when they had complete control, the one thing they've been crowing about doing for years.
Re: Yeah yeah yeah... (Score:3)
Remember when Obama was elected, and he had both the House and Senate (the senate with a full insurer-proof majority), and they had to ram Obamacare thru over the Christmas break employing unusual tactics (for procedural reasons they took a bill in markup and completely gutted it and inserted 1,500 pages of Obamacare) because Scott Brown won the Senate seat Ted Kennedy held, eliminating their filibuster-proof majority?
Remember how they passed the sweeping immigration reform bills they've been planning for y
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The way things are shaping up, November is going to be a very depressing month for you.
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This isn't 2016.
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That's a blatant lie. All the major polls and media outlets were giving Trump 30% chance of winning or more towards the end. And Hillary did get a good amount of votes more that Trump, just not in the low population states that are overrepresented in the electoral college.
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This time in 2016 Clinton and Trump were neck and neck. Currently Biden has a commanding lead.
https://www.realclearpolitics.... [realclearpolitics.com]
https://www.forbes.com/sites/a... [forbes.com]
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/0... [nytimes.com]
https://projects.fivethirtyeig... [fivethirtyeight.com]
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There's something to be said for making folks take a stand. Maybe Rs will kill it. That will be on record, and we can hope, people will remember that during the next election. That's better than not proposing change in the first place.
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"...like a bowl of shit admiring itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
So give them the House & Senate (Score:5, Informative)
Go online to Open Secrets (or watch Secular Talk on YouTube) and you can quickly find out which Democrats (*cought* Wasserman-Schultz*cought*) are hopelessly corrupt. Then register as a Dem, vote them out in the primary and boom! Bob's your Uncle!
What I'm saying is this: Instead of bitching about all this take action at the polls and inform yourself first so you can take action.
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Dig Once (Score:2)
How on earth does this make sense? If you are redoing the 101 between LA and Santa Barbara, fiber might be a good idea. If you are redoing I-15 through the Mojave desert, I think the money spent on burying fiber could be best used elsewhere.
Re:Dig Once (Score:5, Insightful)
could be best used elsewhere.
Like a high speed railway line.... oh wait - too soon?
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Dig Once doesn't require fiber installation, but "ready-made buried conduit" for future installs which may be fiber.
https://www.ncbroadband.gov/pl... [ncbroadband.gov]
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That makes even *less* sense in an area that is unpopulated. It costs approximately nothing to use a water trencher along the side of a highway in the middle of nowhere if you need to run a line in that particular stretch. I mean *maybe* it might make sense to require a conduit under new bridge overpasses so you don't have to bore through the berm or whatever, but even that is probably a lot of money for something that won't ever get used.
If they required fiber *and* a conduit for running future tech, th
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That makes even *less* sense in an area that is unpopulated. It costs approximately nothing to use a water trencher along the side of a highway in the middle of nowhere if you need to run a line in that particular stretch.
Have you TRIED doing it? I have. My GF's parents are piggy-backing on a project to lay fiber along HWY26 in Oregon to get fiber to their community. The costs to lay down fiber along the road were about $100000 per mile, with all the permits, digging, road diversions, etc. And this is a rural road in the middle of the National Forest, the costs to do that for a busy freeway would be an order of magnitude greater.
Plastic conduit itself costs around $2000 per mile. The US interstate system is 46,876 miles, s
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You're assuming that there's no cost other than the conduit itself. One reason that laying fiber in the area you mention costs so much is that I'm pretty sure that goes through a mountainous area, and trenching in rock is problematic. Maybe the road construction will reduce the trenching costs, depending on whether the road bed starts below grade or not, but I wouldn't assume that it will.
Either way, it might make sense to have conduits are under cross streets to eliminate the need for road closures. Bu
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You're assuming that there's no cost other than the conduit itself.
If you are building a new road or rebuilding an existing one then the costs pretty much don't exist. You simply lay the conduit in the soil you have to prepare anyway. It will add a small amount of labor, but that's it.
One reason that laying fiber in the area you mention costs so much is that I'm pretty sure that goes through a mountainous area, and trenching in rock is problematic.
Their segment goes through level terrain and uses road's right-of-way. It's pretty much the best case you can get except maybe for a road in the middle of a desert on BLM lands.
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It's planning for the future. Which means the politicians won't like it.
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The cost of dropping fiber along a highway where they're already digging and have right-of-way is negligable compared to the cost of the highway construction itself.
Costs vary, but estimates are readily available. Here's one [midwestind.com]:
Cost and Price (Score:2)
$5,000 per mile doesn't seem like a lot of money if it's going to be used. My point is that there are stretches of highway where it is not going to be used. In which case, it's pretty damn expensive. It's easy to throw around money when it's not yours.
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I think of your example along the lines of distributed backbone path, and not last-mile. We're talking adding resiliancy, like the original Internet was imagined way back when.
Putting a strong internet infrastructure in place will allow further development, both business and residential. Internet has evolved to be as important to society as electricity, water, and telephone. In fact, it has essentially replaced old-style telephone.
Network (Score:2)
I can see that as an argument. However, a properly laid out network providing redundancy, I don't think, would necessarily overlay with the highway network. Continuing my example above, why run fiber under I-15, which goes through an uninhabited desert, when you can route it down I-40, which passes through a few large towns? Keeping in mind, of course, this is probably already providing backup from existing fiber on telephone lines.
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Maybe. The details of the proposal require conduit to be buried and not fiber, so that is cheaper. My argument would be it is a very cheap way to cover "those things we don't think of now".
Honestly, if there's a road being built to somewhere, then fiber/conduit to the same place probably makes sense, even if we can't think of a good use right this minute.
I-40 is East-West, California to North Carolina. I-15 is North-South, California to Montana. I believe you're speaking to a small stretch in Southern Calif
Oh GOD! (Score:5, Informative)
I live 20miles outside of Metro-Atlanta. I am stuck with for internet only a 1.5Mpbps down/.25 up AT&T shit connection.
Now, I COULD buy a package from Xfinity/Concast for $99 introductory rate for a year then a BOHIC (Bend Over Here It Comes!) rate after that.
And with AT&T, I would have to buy there UVerse overpriced shit package with all the shit cable channels and another BOHIC rate after that.
Why?
Because their lobbyists bribed the Georgia State Legislature and local politicians to allow it.
I live in the United States of Fucking America and I have Third World Shithole Internet connectivity.
But I am sure that when the ISP Lobbyists get done and after their bribes - I mean campaign contributions - we will get some shit that we got under Clinton and Newt Gingrich's Congress.
Lots and lots of money spent by government that goes nowhere but into the shareholder pockets of the ISPs.
This is why we NEED municipal ISPs.
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I have u-verse with out any television or phone service from AT&T, it's internet only. Just like with Comcast, you have to very patiently explain to the sales person that you don't want their crap, you're going to use Netflix or Amazon or something like that. Or be diplomatic and promise to buy their TV service if television ever gets good again.
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I have u-verse with out any television or phone service from AT&T, it's internet only. Just like with Comcast, you have to very patiently explain to the sales person that you don't want their crap, you're going to use Netflix or Amazon or something like that. Or be diplomatic and promise to buy their TV service if television ever gets good again.
Jesus! Really?! I will try the next time the sale people use their hardball tactics.
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Or even better, order it online, and completely avoid the sales droids.
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It does remind me a lot of the people who had TV+phone+internet service from Comcast, and they would always bitch about how some of those services were crap. Then I asked why not use a competitor and they'd say "but we get such a good discount if it's bundled!"
Dont Ever Bundle Cable (Score:2)
Never Ever EVER buy a Cable Package. Get Internet, Only Internet. and nothing else!
No one watches TV. There's nothing worth watching on TV. All you're probably watching are commercials with extra movie reruns that are on Netflix or one of the other 100's of steaming services that are ultimately cheaper. Your Kids are watching Youtube slime videos and could give two shits about Spongebob or Teen Titans. You Wife is Watching Netflix or Amazon Prime since you probably already have that. Hell you're probably wa
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Sounds like you have lots of choices,..
Two choices is a lot? What Soviet country are you from!?
If we had true free market capitalism, I could choose from a myriad of internet only companies. Here I have only ONE - AT&T.
Comcasts/XFinity offers NO internet only plans. And there are NO other companies other than Comcast or AT&T in my area. So, I am befuddled by your sarcastic snarky comment.
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True, the UK has so many packages from so many providers its nuts. most of them do use the same infrastructure though, and that's where you do need the government to run and regulate it. For us its still part of the national carrier, but it should be sold off and run as a 100% seperate company.
That competition though, that's what stops the nasty bundling and forced apckages you guys have to deal with. If you could stop slagging off Trump for 5 seconds and demand competition in the broadband marketplace, tha
Packages (Score:2)
It means that I MUST buy cable TV.
It means that I MUST buy phone service.
That is what package means. Do you understand? To get better service, I MUST buy other shit I do NOT need.
Do you get it?!
You can stop right here. (Score:4, Insightful)
House Democrats yesterday unveiled ...
A bill that will die in the GOP-controlled Senate.
Can't really imagine the GOP wanting to invest in this *and* it would also prevent state/local laws prohibiting growth of municipal broadband, which ISPs/Telcos rely on for their quasi-monopolies in localities.
On the other hand ... These companies will probably find a way to pocket the funding and/or direct it to management and shareholders w/o providing any real, substantial, upgrades/expenditures that may benefit anyone else, so I could be wrong. All I'm sure of is that Congress will act to protect their real constituents -- large, wealthy corporations. /cynical
Re:You can stop right here. (Score:4, Insightful)
Any legislation introduced at this point is part of their bid to take the Presidency and the Senate in November. 'Vote for us and this is what will happen...'
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Just think of all the Republicans praying Ginsburg kicks the bucket before the election.
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A bill that will die in the GOP-controlled Senate.
Well, why do you think they suggest it now instead of when they would actually have to justify why they can't pass it? Of course something that pisses off those corporate whores' Johns but would make the ones footing the bill happy gets only suggested when they know that it doesn't even have a snowball-in-hell chance of succeeding.
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But if the public can get behind it, then in an election year there may be a lot Republicans who abandon the party line of "Mitch is always right". The trick then is to get the public behind it. The urban areas with good internet are leaning Democrat anyway. The rural areas with crappy internet are leaning Republican, so that's where the push should be.
Starlink? (Score:2)
Create telecommunications legislation that requires carriers such as SpaceX or 5G providers to sublease their infrastructure to service providers for a pre-set fee as part of their common carrier license approval. Ground-based consumer bandwidth solutions like fibre and cable are old school now, and spending $100B on them is dumb.
Re:Starlink? (Score:5, Informative)
I don't think Starlink is intended to serve everyone in the world, but rather to serve those who are under-represented (which is itself a HUGE market), so municipal fiber is still necessary.
The best model is one where the city owns the pipes/infrastructure, but private ISP's run the service. All ISP's use the same infrastructure, so no one ISP can lock out any other ISP through unfair competition. The privately owned ISP's pay a monthly fee to the city to get access to the infrastructure and pay for maintenance, then compete on the quality of their customer service. I first read about this in a Slashdot article about Ammon, Idaho.
I was ecstatic to read an article in my local news a few months ago about my city's utility company embracing this very model. The company has begun laying fiber throughout the city, and will lease it to ISP's (both old and new) when it's done. This will eliminate the city's ISP duopoly (Mediacom and AT&T), and encourage competition and low prices.
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First off, you are confusing end user connections with backbone, how the fuck do you think 5G towers get their connection? fiber, that's how. Fiber is their infrastructure.
Second, Starlink will never be able to replace the low latency of a fiber run, they are bragging about 30ms response time, which for satellite is really good, for cable is decent, but comes nowhere close to the 0-1ms I get on fiber. 5G also can't touch the low latency of fiber.
Third, neither of the options you have provided come anywhere
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Second, Starlink will never be able to replace the low latency of a fiber run, they are bragging about 30ms response time, which for satellite is really good, for cable is decent, but comes nowhere close to the 0-1ms I get on fiber. 5G also can't touch the low latency of fiber.
All of these technologies are limited by the speed of light. A 1 ms there-and-back latency is physically possible only within a 150 km radius of your location. If your ISP caches certain websites for you within that radius, then fine. But in general, it's desperately futile to expect that kind of low latency for most sites.
The real question here is (Score:5, Insightful)
Do the entrenched telecom companies have enough in their budget to keep bribing various state officials AND enough Senators to keep this squashed? Will this result in another obscure line charge on customer bills to fund the bribery?
They need to work on their acronyms (Score:2)
AAIAA!!! is the scream you're about to hear from the GOP-controlled Senate.
Or maybe it's Ajit Pai's last exclamation as he's stroking out upon seeing this bill...
As long as they ban track and intercept (Score:4, Insightful)
As long as they make it illegal for the feds, states, and cities to take advantage of those lines to monitor, track, or otherwise search connectivity and metadata of citizens even with a warrant and enforce a strict requirement to operate as a blind common carrier.
The bill is 150 pages long - what's in it? (Score:2)
The bill is 150 pages long. I guarantee you they didn't read it and it's packed full of crap
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Oh yeah, as expected. It's basically going to fund every community agency they like, and also provide free equipment to organizations and people that want it, including:
17 (c) EQUIPMENT DESCRIBED.—The equipment de
18 scribed in this subsection is the following:
19 (1) Wi-Fi hotspots.
20 (2) Modems.
21 (3) Routers.
22 (4) Devices that combine a modem and router.
23 (5) Connected devices.
I'm sure there's a lot more hidden in all that text
Is that all? (Score:2)
Just another $100 billion on top of the hundreds of billions we've already handed over to private industry to do their job. And this doesn't include the billions in fees these same companies have collected for decades to do this very job.
At this point no more money should be given to private industry. They have shown they have no inclination to use the money for its intended purpose. Instead, legislation should be written ordering these companies to use the billions they've already received to build out t
"Universal Fiber" defined as 3Mbps (Score:2)
Text of the Bill defines this "Universal Fiber Broadband" as 25Mbps download and 3Mpbs upload. Liars and Crooks. $100b could pay for nationwide Fiberoptic deployment at $400 per household passed, but instead the bill seeks to pad the profits of big corporate donors to provide nothing more than DSL internet, which literally 99.9% of America already has access to.
(A) with a download speed of at least 25
megabits per second, an upload speed of at
least 3 megabits per second, and a latency that
is sufficiently l
Diff (Score:2)
I'm not sure the feds have the power to tell the states what laws the cities can pass. That's a huge violation of separation of powers. Cities are creations of the states, not the feds.
This is vastly different from passing a law that states cannot un-do because of federal supremacy.
All profit, no accountability. (Score:2)
Cue the bribes, I mean, campaign contributions to knock huge exemptions in the right of small businesses/municipalities to provide a service.
I know how the USA works: Once again, the US senate will ensure this law doesn't apply to the richest 'people'.
Re:Interesting timing (Score:5, Insightful)
Starlink is not going to be comparable to muni fiber. The only people getting paid are the state politicians Comcast and the telcos paid off to get restrictions passed in the first place.
Re:Interesting timing (Score:5, Insightful)
Fuck off with that "government can't do it right" bullshit. Municipal broadband beats profit driven broadband every time it's done. For fuck's sake, the Internet was invented by the government. Also created by government funded research projects: GPS, smartphones, MRI, infant formula, the microchip, touch screens, and so much more. Over a third of all patents come from government funded projects. https://www.statnews.com/2019/... [statnews.com]
Private industry does not like to engage in speculative R&D, it's not cost effective. You can thank government for most of the cool things you like and use every day. Only ideological fanatics deny that government does good things.
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God I miss the days when the kind of post quality was normal. My hat is off to you sir.
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The problem with your post is that the last time government was better at doing things than the private sector was roughly 1955.
Since then corporates have gotten much better at doing things in exchange for money, and the government has gotten better at doing nothing in exchange for money. In fact the more money, the less that gets done.
Now government does fund projects, but they're all done by someone else, research by corporates after receiving mucho government grant or tax perk money.
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Corporations have not gotten better at doing things in exchange for money without help from government. Without things like roads, a stable monetary system, and free trade agreements that let American corporations exploit poor foreigners, they would not even exist.
Government makes better roads. Better sewers. Better harbors. Better bridges. Government is better at helping the poor. At fighting fires. At making libraries. At making parks. Government is better at fighting disease. At curing illness. At runnin
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Re:Interesting timing (Score:5, Insightful)
Your anecdote does not, in any way, contradict my list of actual achievements. You DO NOT give any specifics, how do we know you are not lying, or exaggerating heavily?
Outside of tech, just look at all the construction projects. More private projects fall apart than government projects. Look at what was done during the great depression, with public works.
Or just look at all the good work by government agencies. Do your parks suck? I work for my state's child, youth and families department. Nobody works harder than our social workers and investigators. I'm in IT, and I spearheaded the shift to open source here, back in the early 2000s. We're more than keeping up to date technologically. We got 800 new laptops out the door in two weeks when the lockdown started, and have nearly all our staff working from home.
The problem is corruption, and corruption comes from voters not being diligent enough. Corruption comes from the profit motive, from private industry overruling the will of the people, for money.
So yeah, when you say government sucks I take it personally. It's just anti-government propaganda, from people who want the weak to have no say over what the powerful do, the poor to have no voice, and no recourse to exploitation. Scratch an anti-government wing-nut, uncover an authoritarian.
Re: Interesting timing (Score:2)
I think you ignore the ability of government to freely spend taxpayer money with nearly zero accountability.
One need look no further than Boston's 'big dig' or California's 'high-speed rail' project.
Will they get built? Sure. On budget? No. On time? No. To quality standards? Probably.
Re: Interesting timing (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm assuming you're talking about the V-22? If so, the problem was almost always pilot error. I've worked on these, and in the early testing days, right up until the B revision came out, they were putting helicopter pilots into them. Therein lies the problem. A helo pilot's muscle memory and reactions are all completely backwards from what they need to be, so, when things started to get a little out of control, the pilots would react in the exact opposite way that they needed to in order to not crash. Once they made the switch to using C-130 pilots in them, the issues mostly went away.
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Did you seriously not read my reply at all?!?
I've been working the same government job since 2005. Yes, there are some bad parts, but less bullshit than I've seen in the private sector.
Now, part of it may be that I work in social services, in state government, not federal. My stepdad worked in the FAA and he has some horror stories to tell. But even there it was not all bad, and he is a kind of Ron Swanson-esque libertarian so he just has a general dislike of government. Where I work, people are pretty dedi
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Problem is, I've seen the exact same behavior, on the same scale, in private orgs. So, no, it is not just a govt thing. At least the govt tries to act accountable to We the People -- private business doesn't even do that.
Re:Interesting timing (Score:5, Insightful)
That's is why we don't have an interstate highway system and never put men on the Moon.
Re:Interesting timing (Score:5, Interesting)
The interstate highway system was a federal project. It was not "infrastructure at the state level".
https://www.history.com/topics... [history.com].
No. When airlines were federally regulated, there were scores of national, international, and regional airlines in the US. Now there are just a handful. It's only on example of the "free market" killing competition instead of increasing it..
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Uh, you DO understand that it is private companies making those promises, about military hardware, right?
As for the burden of proof, you are the one making outrageous claims with no evidence. I've already given enough proof for any non fanatical ideologue to accept that I am right. So make a case.
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I can't prove his statement, but I can provide supporting evidence. When I lived in Minneapolis years ago I used the municipal wireless network and while it wasn't the fastest (limited by the technology) it was far more stable than Century Link and the support guys were local and knew their stuff. Since then they've built out a fiber network and charge $50/month for bi-directional 300Mbps or $70/m for bi-directional 1GB/s. Direct from their fiber specs page:
- no data caps
- do not block or filter content
-
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So what? Name one of them that the government put into production successfully.
Do you think it's a private company that operates the GPS satellites?
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As a former AT&T B.L. worker, I can say confidently that we understood fully the extent to which we were "pseudo government": The predictable, non-stratospheric profitability of The Bell System produced a consistent funding stream that allowed the long-term development thinking that produced pretty good technology. We also were more government-like at the worker level, with a serious focus on our work product with less focus on quarterly financial results. That lasted until about 1994, when the changes
$800 / family for more govt = Affordable (Score:2)
$100 billion =~ $800 per household
I like how they have a plan to make you pay $800 for the privilege of allowing city hall to force you to buy internet from the city at whatever price the city wants to charge, and they name it "Accessible, Affordable Internet Act".
Because everyone can afford to spend an extra $800 right now to encourage their city to bill them for internet the same way they bill for electricity or whatever else the city makes you buy from them, at whatever rate the city chooses to charge.
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I like how they have a plan to make you pay $800 for the privilege of allowing city hall to force you to buy internet from the city
Unless you live in one of the "unserved and underserved communities", this bill won't enable you to buy Internet from the city at any price unless the city builds it out without Federal funding. And a large portion of the households in the country won't be paying much at all to underwrite this service, because they don't pay much federal income tax. The tab will be picked up by those who actually pay income tax, as usual. And most of the people who pay the lion's share of federal income tax don't live in "u
Re: $800 / family for more govt = Affordable (Score:5, Informative)
Nothing will prevent a benevolent company from coming in and offering a better, cheaper service than the one provided by your local government. In fact that would probably be encouraged.
The problem is right now, reality is the reverse of that: the corporations have paid state/local governments to grant themselves virtual monopolies, allowing those corporations to charge you whatever they want.
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But it's the state governments, not the local, that are preventing the municipalities (local governments) from building out their own infrastructure. And the ISP does not have to be the same entity that runs wires to your home or business.
Re: $800 / family for more govt = Affordable (Score:2)
Your $800 number is wildly off. This will benefit, conservatively 10% of Americans. If your local cable company or isp offers 100 Mb up/down service, you get no benefit - you are not in an 'underserved community' - this will be, conservatively $10K/served household. And once Verizon, Comcast builds out their network on your taxpayer's dine, they get to charge the 'underserved community' the going rate for service.
Re:Seriously (Score:5, Informative)
Democrats can't even deal with an autonomous zone set up smack in the middle of their cities. There's no way they should be let anywhere near $100 billion...
If you think Democrats are less fiscally responsible than the Republicans, think again. [towardsdatascience.com]
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Also, the research in this one is really sloppy, it takes obama requested spending bill and assigns that to bush but then takes all the money that came back to the government and decreases that from spending during Obama. If you are going to assign spending to a President try to be a li
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That is a rather good article for sheeple, it completely ignores that the House is responsible for originating funding bills and setting taxes, instead the author of the article thinks that is something the President does.
So long as the President has veto power he's more powerful than 2/3rd's of the legislatures. The president effectively makes up more than half of the legislative vote.
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private sector vs public from the ground view (Score:2)
So, they're proposing fixing big, overbearing state governments on municipalities by... making a BIGGER, even MORE overbearing government impose rules on all the smaller governments! >
Though actually I do like bans on prohibitions. Actually I think that's a really good thing and we should have a great deal more of it.
So my read is you had a knee-jerk reaction you were trained to do saying "government is bad" and you couldn't even finish your post without realizing you're wrong in this case.
Sorry dude, it could be my age, but I trust government over any major corporation. I'm too young to have seen what pissed off Reagan so much, but I was an adult through the Bush Jr years and saw privatization fail every chance it was given. When I hear old people speak about it, it makes government involvement sound like a bad i