Trump FCC Pick Nathan Simington Wants You To Think Net Neutrality Is A Secret Cabal By Big Tech To ‘Censor Conservatives’
The modern authoritarian GOP knows its radical policies are widely unpopular, which is why it increasingly needs to rely on propaganda. That's also why the party pretends that absolutely any effort to moderate online political propaganda is censorship." With young voters turning away from the GOP in record numbers, propaganda, gerrymandering, and race-baiting anti-democratic bullshit is all the party has.
It's an argument that bleeds into pretty much everything these days, even net neutrality.
After the Biden FCC last week announced it would be restoring net neutrality, Trump FCC pick Nathan Simington came out with a rambling missive claiming that efforts to keep Comcast from screwing you over is, you guessed it, somehow an attempt to censor conservatives. Net neutrality is, Simington claims, secretly a way to help big tech" censor poor, unheard right wingers:
The leaders of Big Tech companies have anointed themselves the arbiters of which ideas are allowed to be expressed and which are not. These companies are, without a doubt, the biggest threat against freedom of speech that our country has faced in decades."
So one, you'll notice that Simington is incapable of talking honestly about telecom monopoly power and his party's 40 year track record of coddling it. But his core thesis, that this is all secretly a favor to big tech," simply isn't true. Why not? Because big tech" companies documentably stopped caring about net neutrality a long time ago.
While Google used to care about net neutrality, it stopped somewhere around 2010. Once Netflix became successful, it too vocally stopped caring about net neutrality somewhere around 2017. While these companies originally supported net neutrality, once they became big and powerful they simply stopped caring. Facebook never cared, and long actively opposed net neutrality.
The GOP knows this, they just think (or hope) that you're stupid.
Simington also tries to argue that because the internet didn't explode into a rainbow of bright colors after the 2017 repeal of net neutrality (which required the use of fake and dead people to pretend the repeal had public support), that the consumer protection rules must not have mattered:
It has now been nearly six years since we repealed the net neutrality rules, and as far as I know, no one has died yet, nor have any other of the solemnly predicted catastrophes come to pass."
Folks opposed to basic consumer protection love to make this claim, but they're actively ignoring that big telecom didn't behave worse post repeal because numerous states rushed in to pass state level laws. Companies like Comcast didn't want to implement major anti-competitive practices on their network, because they now risk running afoul of state net neutrality laws all along the west coast.
This gets conflated into gosh, our removal of federal guidelines must not have mattered," which is misleading bullshit. The FCC repeal of net neutrality didn't just kill net neutrality rules, it gutted much of the FCC's consumer protection authority. The GOP's repeal even tried to ban states from protecting broadband consumers entirely, an effort the courts have subsequently shot down.
Focus on what matters: Net neutrality rules were imperfect, stopgap efforts to keep giant telecom monopolies from using their power over internet access to harm consumers and competitors. If you don't support net neutrality, what's your solution for concentrated telecom monopoly power? The GOP actively supports concentrated telecom monopoly power. There are 40 years of documentable evidence.
From Simington's missive, do you gather he cares one fleeting shit about the problems created by telecom monopoly power? The high costs? They slow speeds? The patchy access in rural markets? The comically terrible customer service? The refusal of ISPs to upgrade poor, minority neighborhoods?
Simington can't even be bothered to actually discuss the actual issue he's trying to counter. Because what the modern GOP cares about is protecting its own power, and, at the moment, that requires propping up the delusion that anything the GOP doesn't like is somehow big tech censorship." Even some basic, popular consumer protections designed to protect the public from big telecom.