U.S. regulatory czar nominee wants Net 'Fairness Doctrine' »

Posted By RedRiverJ 7 months ago in News

WASHINGTON – Barack Obama's nominee for "regulatory czar" has advocated a "Fairness Doctrine" for the Internet that would require opposing opinions be linked and also has suggested angry e-mails should be prevented from being sent by technology that would require a 24-hour cooling off period.

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RedRiverJ

Just an average American. conservative.

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  • 86%
    RedRiverJ7 months ago

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    http://www.donttouchmydial.com/
    Obama seems to want to threaten speech on radio, web and print........

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    dailyblueberry7 months ago

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    Ooohhhh!!!

    Propeller ought to watch out.

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    dailyblueberry7 months ago

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    I wonder if the same "Civility Check" would apply to any intergovernmental emails?

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    • 88%
      MisterX7 months ago

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      Who didn't see this coming?

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    • 78%
      Wolfie20077 months ago

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      What is it with these people and power over everything. If they ever had good ideas they wouldn't have to be so controlling.

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    • 75%
      stephen-johnson7 months ago

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      Actually, the marketplace is handling the "civility check" issue itself. Active membership on web sites that have abusive members has plummeted over the last five years. Nutscape is a case in point.

      Obama wants to appoint a czar for every aspect of life, it seems. As if life can be run better by central planning. That sounds more like a bolshevik than a czar

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      Klarissa7 months ago

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      unfortunately the lower echelon employees are deciding issues.

      If an unknown someone can direct air force one and to jets to fly around New York and get away with it, then

      Sunstein will have absolute power of television, radio, the internet, telephone conversations, newspapers and magazines.

      I hope that we will still be able to read other country's publications.

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      • 67%
        Klarissa7 months ago

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        some quotes:http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/guides/Z...

        The imperative of economic equality also generates a striking opposition between "social justice" and its liberal rival. The equality of the latter, we've noted, is the equality of all individuals in the eyes of the law -- the protection of the political rights of each man, irrespective of "class" (or any assigned collective identity, hence the blindfold of Justice personified).

        However, this political equality, also noted, spawns the difference in "class" between Smith and Jones. All this echoes Nobel laureate F.A. Hayek's observation that if "we treat them equally [politically], the result must be inequality in their actual [i.e., economic] position."

        The irresistable conclusion is that "the only way to place them in an equal [economic] position would be to treat them differently [politically]" -- precisely the conclusion that the advocates of "social justice" themselves have always reached.

        stems, "different" political treatment came to subsume the extermination or imprisonment of millions because of their "class" origins.

        In our own American "mixed economy," which mixes differing systems of justice as much as economics, "social justice" finds expression in such policies and propositions as progressive taxation and income redistribution; affirmative action and even "reparations," its logical implication; and selective censorship in the name of "substantive equality," i.e., economic equality disingenuously reconfigured as a Fourteenth Amendment right and touted as the moral superior to "formal equality," the equality of political freedom actually guaranteed by the amendment.

        This last is the project of a growing number of leftist legal theorists that includes Cass Sunstein and Catherine MacKinnon, the latter opining that the "law of [substantive] equality and the law of freedom of expression [for all] are on a collision course in this country." Interestingly, Hayek had continued, "Equality before the law and material equality are, therefore, not only different, but in conflict with each other" -- a pronouncement that evidently draws no dissent.

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        • 67%
          Klarissa7 months ago

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          More:
          "Prosecution of Americans for ordering or implementing torture, as pundits like Ruth Marcus and legal theorists like Cass Sunstein have argued, should be avoided by the new administration. Move on, don't get diverted, don't be "vindictive," they and others say."

          my comment - looks like Soros has more power than Sunstein.

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