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(53,475 posts)Rec.
sabrina 1
(62,325 posts)Greedy, corrupt bastards they are enemies of freedom and democracy.
Thanks for the post, I hope it gets the attention it deserves here and everywhere else.
What she said ^^^^^
Damn it we HAVE to get money out of politics!
littlemissmartypants
(22,631 posts)And built 'coxa to nowhere' some of which ends across the road from my house.
Yes, that is with a b, BILLION!
These creeps are experts at using taxpayer money for their own gain. I am sick of it and of them.
sabrina 1
(62,325 posts)money to actually do something worthwhile with.
adirondacker
(2,921 posts)Enthusiast
(50,983 posts)It's just one big WTF!
Louisiana1976
(3,962 posts)Lobbyists are running our country, citizens. We didn't elect them. And they do not have our interests at heart. All they know is the bottom line. We need to get The Corporation out of Congress. Otherwise, this is NOT a democracy. Because it seems like whoever we elect always ends up beholding to them, and not us. What needs to be done is they need to be kicked out of the halls of Congress if they come asking for a bill like this, when they could have done the right thing to begin with. Too bad, so sad, boys. Lobbying needs to be abolished. Period.
PatrynXX
(5,668 posts)Iowa not know for high speed access. 30/15 isn't high speed. but compared to Mediacom at 2-3 mb up (don't know down) it's high speed.. and we spent a fortune burying the fiber too..
Enthusiast
(50,983 posts)This is similar to the fossil fuel industry lobbying to limit funding for renewable energy projects.
These corporations are the enemies of the people of the United States. They have co-opted the democracy.
They should be condemned by every office holding Democrat from the president on down.
Mr. Obama, where is your condemnation of Verison, AT&T and Comcast? We want to hear it. You are the only one of us with a bully pulpit.
niyad
(113,251 posts)sufficient caffeine.
sadly, though, it is not in the least surprising.
Jasana
(490 posts)I just hear it and the hair on the back of my neck starts to stand on end... in anger. Why yes, I am located in a comcast monopoly zone.
We really need to do something about these evil turds. I'm just not sure what yet.
whereisjustice
(2,941 posts)Impact of Texas Rural Electrification on Children Duncan Coleman
August 6th, 1939
All we had in the house was the fireplace, the dirty old washboard, an earsplitting, gasoline-run washing machine, and our dull kerosene lamp. Piddling poor things compared to Aunt Susies magical devices. Aunt Susie lived way out in the big city, a world away from Fischer. Wondrous things were at that house of hers. Light came in little glass containers instead of from the window, a noiseless washing machine permitted peace and quiet, a big white box kept food fresh, and a dirt sucking device left her floors spotless. I was especially fascinated by the sunshine bottle. At first, all I thought you had to do was go out and grab a tiny piece of the sun and stick it inside the dinky thing. I was informed however, that electricity made those teeny wonders work. I asked my mother, How come we dont have sunshine bottles back in Fischer?
She looked into my puzzled eyes that were searching for an explanation and harshly retorted, Thats for the city folk, Johnny. We arent ever going to get no light bulbs or electricity.
I thought to myself, Why are city folk allowed to have these light bulbs and not the folks down in Fischer? When I got back from Aunt Susies, I asked my history teacher, Mrs. Vanhouten, this question and she gave me a history lesson on how the first practical light bulb was invented by an innovator going by the name of Thomas Edison in 1879.
This didnt answer my question so I petitioned to President Roosevelt himself after his inauguration and all he had to say was, The focus of this nation is toward the relief and recovery of our people in this Great Depression. I would fund electrification in Fischer, but electric companies have jurisdiction concerning light bulbs and what areas they are distributed to. I had finally come to the source of how to get light bulbs in my home town! I expressed my deep-seated desire for light bulbs in Fischer to the electric company to which they firmly responded, There is no economic incentive to serve the town of Fischer with electricity. I had hit the end of the road. I could only marvel at those little sunshine bottles from afar, envying all that possessed such an awe inspiring invention.
As time went on, I heard from Mrs. Vanhouten that a congressman by the name of Lyndon Johnson was campaigning to bring electricity to the Hill Country. The whole town decided to join the movement when Johnson came to our meager farming community and told us of the benefits of electricity. He preached to my peers and me at the school house about electric lighting that would be easier on the eyes for reading, electric radios that would grant us the privilege of music and important news, electric refrigerators that would stop food from going rancid, noiseless washing machines, time-saving electric irons, efficient and economical electric stoves, and vacuum cleaners for improved sanitation. His dreams for poor farmers like us finally came true with the establishment of the Rural Electrification Administration in 1935, which allowed rural communities everywhere to form electric cooperatives to bring power lines to the country, including the Texas Hill Country.
It has been four years since that day and half a century since the light bulb was first made practical by Thomas Edison. On this scorching hot day in Fischer, Electricity finally came to our modest old schooling house. Mrs. Vanhouten had been anticipating this day with great anxiety for months on end and even had gone to the trouble of already installing the air conditioning unit as well as the lighting system. I couldnt wait a second longer to see that empty bulb fill with sunshine again. Right before my eyes in Mrs. Vanhoutens classroom I saw the lifeless bulb fill with shining bright rays as if to challenge the sun itself with its all-consuming radiance. Some of my classmates were dumbfounded with awe, others were frightened by it, and still others such as me were filled with elation! Ultimately my classmates lost interest and chose to bask in the refreshing coolness of the air conditioner and eventually went back to their school work as if it were just another trivial day, but I was captivated by that sunshine bottle. I stood in the classroom gazing into the brilliance of the class light bulb and reflected on why it took fifty years for this dazzling sight to reach my humble town. How could such life enriching device be kept from us? I pondered.
Many considered the light bulb as well as electricity to be uneconomical for rural communities. Early electric companies did not want to construct the costly amount of poles and electric wiring lines required to bring electricity to the Texas Hill Country. It took Congressman Lyndon B. Johnson to convince President Roosevelt to disregard previous population density requirements for rural electrification loans. This, coupled with the assistance of electric cooperatives such as the Pedernales Electric Cooperative, allowed for the dissemination of affordable electricity to the sparsely populated Texas Hill Country in the 1930s and 40s.
Rural electrification granted improved standards of living and increased economic competitiveness of Texas farms a goal that Lyndon Johnson envisioned all along for the Texas Hill Country.
http://www.pec.coop/docs/default-source/pdfs/duncan-coleman-essay.pdf?sfvrsn=2
Spitfire of ATJ
(32,723 posts)A few years ago I was doing a home network and looked up the DSL modem I was having problems with only to find out the local phone company had bought them in bulk years ago from a French DSL company that had recalled them because they were unreliable pieces of shit that dropped connections if they got above room temperature.
mackerel
(4,412 posts)lonestarnot
(77,097 posts)beans to the bastards.
N_E_1 for Tennis
(9,715 posts)Iwillnevergiveup
(9,298 posts)and in the case of women, barefoot, pregnant and stupid.
Grrrrrrr!
K&R
LynneSin
(95,337 posts)And because I do not have any of Comcast's 'Triple Play' programs which includes their expensive television services my internet would have been $70 a month. Luckily I was able to get a $35/month program but it's a much slower rate. It's an ok service but if I have too much running at once I notice but since I'm the only person in my house for the most part it's fine.
LiberalLovinLug
(14,169 posts)seriously f'd up.
My guess is that these big networks long plan is to wait it out until technology allows them to wire these more remote locations. So they don't want some "community" coming in and establishing a network in advance of that because that may shut them out in the future.