The judges on the D.C. Circuit wrote the decision simply pretending the regulations came from an expert agency entitled to deference based on its expertise. They essentially decided to play along and ignore the widely reported fact that the order actually came from White House political hacks and a decision based entirely on politics to pressure the FCC to ignore its own experts to instead score a political win for the hard-left after the 2014 election landslide.
I'll be honest, this outcome is disappointing. But the fight will, and must, continue on. Obama's FCC's Internet Takeover is too devastating to Internet freedom — it must be stopped.
As I wrote the day the FCC adopted the order, Marxist radical Robert McChesney, who started the "net neutrality" movement, again deserves congratulations. But he cannot be allowed to achieve his ultimate goal to "get rid of the media capitalists in the phone and cable companies and to divest them from control."
We don't know yet whether the Supreme Court will take the case, and frankly we can't count on them getting it right anyway. So we need to:
- Get Congress to block all funding for Obama's plan to regulate the Internet.
- Elect a president who will give us an FCC chair who will bring back the free-market, hands-off approach that allowed the Internet to boom for two decades.
On a positive note, the House of Representatives recently passed language through the Appropriations Committee which would defund the FCC regulations.
And despite today's setback, I remain optimistic that we will prevail in this fight.
------------------
Phil Kerpen is president of American Commitment. Follow him at (@kerpen) and on Facebook. He is a contributing author at the ARRA News Service.
Tags: Phil Kerpen, American Commitment, The Internet, D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, upheld, President Obama's "net neutrality" regulations, To share or post to your site, click on "Post Link". Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service. and "Like" Facebook Page - Thanks!
Source

No comments:
Post a Comment