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Will ‘Astroturf’ Groups Block Net Neutrality Reform?

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Joanne98 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-06-09 07:06 AM
Original message
Will ‘Astroturf’ Groups Block Net Neutrality Reform?

by Megan Tady

Chris, McGreal, a reporter for Britain's Guardian newspaper, took to the road last month to report on how Americans living along Route 66--made famous in John Steinbeck's fictional Grapes of Wrath journey--are faring during the recession.
You might think McGreal quickly encountered "real Americans" protesting President Obama's "socialist" healthcare agenda by hurling insults at town hall meetings. Cable news channels are full of these images, which together portray the United States as a giant angry grassroots rally against reform-minded policies.

Odd, then, that McGreal reports this:

The outbursts against President Obama's healthcare plans filling television screens, with opponents calling him a Nazi and accusing him of planning death committees to do in old people, are to a large degree manufactured by the same people who use similar tactics to oppose abortion.
McGreal has it right: There is no genuine mass uprising against healthcare reform or climate change legislation. But the industry groups and corporations who benefit from the status quo--and thus have the most at stake in these debates--want us to think otherwise. And they've developed a slick way of manufacturing dissent: creating fake grassroots--"astroturf"--organizations to do their bidding in our name.

Jim Hightower describes astroturf organizations as "the corporate version of grassroots...well-orchestrated PR efforts that put real folks out front, but are instigated, organized and funded by corporate interests and right-wing front groups."

Astroturf groups like Americans for Prosperity and FreedomWorks rent themselves out to combat policies that hurt major corporations, from ExxonMobile to AT&T. They were behind April's Tea Bag rallies, which protested tax increases, and flew hot air balloons as part of a campaign to discredit climate change.

Now corporations--AT&T, Verizon, Comcast, Time Warner Cable, and Qwest--are paying astroturf groups to derail one of the most important public policy initiatives of our time: Net Neutrality. The cable and telecom lobby is spending hundreds of millions of dollars trying to become the Web's new gatekeepers.

What is Net Neutrality?

Astroturf groups have set their sights on blocking the passage of a valuable new bill called the Internet Freedom Preservation Act. The bill, introduced into the House in early August, would protect the Internet from telecommunications and cable companies who want to control access to online content--and thereby make more money.

The principle that protects the Internet freedom we now enjoy is Net Neutrality, which leaves us free to visit any website and create and share anything we can imagine. This "open" platform allows us to bypass the old corporate gatekeepers to create our own entertainment, and organize for social change without fearing that an Internet service provider like Comcast or AT&T will block our messages because they disagree with our politics.

Net Neutrality as a baseline rule for the Internet was stripped away by a 2005 U.S. Supreme Court ruling (PDF link) that effectively allowed phone and cable companies to discriminate against websites, applications or services that they didn't like.

We must restore this guiding principle to protect and ensure a free-flowing Web for all. The new legislation would mandate that all ISPs adhere to Net Neutrality and refrain from controlling, blocking or slowing down online content.

Rolling out the astroturf

So who exactly is shilling for industry? Let's connect the dots.

It's no secret the five biggest cable and telecommunications companies want Net Neutrality to disappear. All five just happen to be members of the "pro-consumer" (read: astroturf) group NetCompetition.org, which is trying to make this nasty problem go away for them. Scott Cleland, who heads the operation, has made it his job to bash Net Neutrality, even likening it to socialism: "Just like the Soviet socialists, the net neutrality movement blatantly misrepresents the facts."

And when FreedomWorks isn't throwing a tea party, they're throwing a tantrum about Net Neutrality. Take it from Dick Armey, the former House majority leader who leads the group: "The proponents of Net Neutrality have some very nice sound bites and flowery talking points that would lead you to believe that it's about keeping the Internet free," he writes. "I assure you nothing could be further from the truth."

Who has paid FreedomWorks bills? AT&T.

Meanwhile, the American Consumer Institute--doesn't that sound innocuous--is questioning the new Net Neutrality bill for consumers. Stephen Pociask, a telecom consultant and former chief economist for Bell Atlantic, is behind the site.

In 2006, when a similar Net Neutrality bill was introduced, this group actively worked to get lawmakers to vote against it.

Speak out or cede control

continued>>>
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2009/09/05-2

This could explain why the media has gone out of it's way to help the astroturfers.
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ixion Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-06-09 07:17 AM
Response to Original message
1. The end of Net Neutrality is the end of the internet. Period.
Site neutral handling of requests is the core of what has allowed the internet to thrive. Restricting access to only those who pay for it will effectively kill millions of unique web sites.
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USA_1 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-06-09 07:51 AM
Response to Original message
2. No, It's Not the News Media
the answer is found in the following lines: ''Speak out or cede control''


Since the Democrats choose to do nothing but concede to the Republicans, the public is given the false image that the far right and its loud mouth groups have the majority when they do not. If the far right wins this particular conflict as they have done with the war on Iraq, corporate welfare, the lack of health care reform, it is because the Democrats in Congress and the DNC have chosen to do nothing about it.
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Chef Eric Donating Member (576 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-06-09 09:27 AM
Response to Original message
3. "I am a strong supporter of net neutrality." -Barack Obama
This is an issue that Obama has spoken about in clear, unmistakable terms.

We need to make sure that Obama doesn't forget his words.

We need to make sure that Obama is willing to use the bully pulpit, and twist arms if need be.

The mainstream media has ALREADY been destroyed. If net neutrality is destroyed too, then there will be NOTHING left. We will all be Winston Smith.
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