Why are Civil Rights Orgs & Leaders Helping Big Media Giants & Telecoms Take Over & Cripple the Internet?

We have spoken about the importance of Net Neutrality for a couple of years. For those unfamiliar with the term,  this is principle that up to now has governed the internet and leveled the playing field. Its been the ultimate democratizing agent. Here the little guy writing a blog from his bedroom is just as just as accessible as the big media giant in a high-rise office.  because of Net neutrality many communities and people who never had a voice, were able to gain one via the Internet and for the most part thats been a good thing…

Because of Net Neutrality we were able to stay abreast of the student protest in Iran.  We were able to track important world event in places like Copenhagen during the Climate Change conference.  Net Neutrality is what allowed Barack Obama to tap into millions of people who used the internet to help get him elected. Net neutrality has allowed scores of artists who didn’t fit the criteria established by corporate media giants  to reach audiences all around the world. It was Net Neutrality that allowed groups offended by CNN’s Lou Dobbs to organize and push for him to leave the network. Net Neutrality is what allowed us to organize and get the information out about the huge anti-war protests a few years ago.

Many of us scoff at the severe restrictions that China has placed on her citizens where people are not able to send out or surf the net for information and varied perspectives.  many of cringe at the thought of having our freedoms curtailed. It’s with that in mind that we find it appalling that some Civil Rights organizations and leaders, many of whom been sponsored by big telecom companies like AT&T and Comcast have lined up to tell the FCC that Net Neutrality is not needed. These big telecom companies have spent billions of dollars and aggressively lobbied Washington lawmakers to allow the internet to be parcelled up and have what amounts to toll lanes. If you can pay the money you can have a website that loads fast and is one quick away. Everyone else would be out of luck.  It would create a situation that chased many of us to the net in the first place-to get away from the dictates of big media.. How and why groups like LULAC, The NAACP and 3/4th of the Congressional Black Caucus are sitting alongside these big-time lobbiest who want to cripple the internet is more than horrifying.  But in this day in age, money talks.

We caught up with James Rucker who heads Color of Change who sat down with us and explained whats at stake.  he talked about how there would not have been a Jena 6 campaign had it not been for Net Neutrality. He talked about how there would not have been a campaign to get advertisers to drop sponsorship Fox’s Glenn Beck‘s show had it not been for Net Neutrality. He lays out the devastating impact it would have on artists especially those who are independent …What’s at stake is very eye-opening.    Below are the links to the podcast as well as a recent column he wrote on the topic..

-Davey D-

Interview w/ James Rucker on Protecting the Internet-pt1

Interview w/ James Rucker on Protecting the Internet-pt2

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Why Are Some Civil Rights Groups and Leaders On the Wrong Side of Net Neutrality?

by James Rucker of Color of Change

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/james-rucker/why-are-some-civil-rights_b_440926.html

It’s said that politics creates strange bedfellows. I was reminded how true this can be when I traveled to D.C. in recent weeks to figure out why several advocacy groups and legislators with histories of advocating for minority interests are lining up with big telecom companies in opposition to the FCC’s efforts to pass “Net Neutrality” rules.

Net Neutrality is the principle that prevents Internet Service Providers from controlling what kind of content or applications you can access online. It sounds wonky, but for Black and other communities, an open Internet offers a transformative opportunity to truly control our own voice and image, while reaching the largest number of people possible. This dynamic is one major reason why Barack Obama was elected president and why organizations like ColorOfChange.org exist.

So I was troubled to learn that several Congressional Black Caucus members were among 72 Democrats to write the FCC last fall questioning the need for Net Neutrality rules. I was further troubled that a number of our nation’s leading civil rights groups had also taken positions questioning or against Net Neutrality, using arguments that were in step with those of the big phone and cable companies like AT&T and Comcast, which are determined to water down any new FCC rules.

Most unsettling about their position is the argument that maintaining Net Neutrality could widen the digital divide.

First, let’s be clear: the problem of the broadband digital divide is real. Already, getting a job, accessing services, managing one’s medical care–just to mention a few examples–are all facilitated online. Those who aren’t connected face a huge disadvantage in so many aspects of our society. Broadband access is a big problem — but that doesn’t mean it has anything to do with Net Neutrality.

Yet some in the civil rights community will tell you differently. They claim that if broadband providers can earn greater profits by charging content providers for access to the Internet “fast lane,” then they will lower prices to underserved areas. In other words, if Comcast — which already earns 80 percent profit margins on its broadband services — can increase its profits under a system without Net Neutrality, then they’ll all of a sudden invest in our communities. You don’t have to be a historian or economist to know that this type of trickle-down economics never works and has always failed communities of color.

Whether the phone and cable companies can make more money by acting as toll-takers on the Internet has nothing to do with whether they will invest in increased deployment of broadband. If these companies think investing in low-income communities makes good business sense, they will make the investment. Benevolence doesn’t factor into the equation.

On my trips to Washington, I met with some of the groups and congressional offices questioning or opposing Net Neutrality. I asked them what evidence they had to back up claims that undermining Net Neutrality would lead to an expansion of broadband to under-served communities, or that preserving Net Neutrality would thwart expansion. Not one could answer my question. Some CBC members hadn’t yet been presented with a counter to the industry’s arguments; others told stories about pressure from telecom companies or from other members of congress. As one CBC staffer told me, many CBC members have willingly supported the business agenda of telecom companies because the industry can be counted on to make campaign contributions, and they face no political backlash.

I also heard from people who don’t consider themselves against Net Neutrality, but who say their issue is prioritizing broadband expansion over maintaining Net Neutrality–as if the two have some intrinsic competitive relationship. When I’ve asked about the relationship, again, no one could provide anything concrete.

To those taking positions against Net Neutrality, I ask what sense it makes to undermine the very power of the Internet, especially for our communities, in order to provide access to everyone, presuming for a second the two were even connected. It’s like what we have with cable — our communities are saturated with programming that they cannot control, with no benefit of empowerment for anyone. Again, no one with whom I talked had an answer to this point.

Thankfully, there are an array of grassroots, media and social justice organizations that have not followed this line of reasoning and are actively supporting Network Neutrality, such as the Center for Media Justice and the Applied Research Center. Black and brown journalists and media groups who understand the need for unconstrained expression on the part of our communities are on the same page as well: the National Association of Hispanic Journalists, UNITY: Journalists of Color, the National Association of Latino Independent Producers, the National Association of Black Journalists, and the National Hispanic Media Coalition have all been vocal supporters of Net Neutrality.

Prominent lawmakers, including CBC members Reps. John Conyers, Maxine Waters, and Donna Edwards are vocal supporters, as are House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and President Obama — who has pledged to “take a back seat to no one” on the issue. And last week, Mignon Clyburn, a commissioner at the FCC, called out advocacy groups entrusted by many to represent our communities, for making half-baked arguments that completely miss the boat on the importance of Net Neutrality to our communities.

As Clyburn pointed out, far from being just a concern of the digital elite, Net Neutrality is essential to what makes the Internet a place where people of color and marginalized communities can speak for ourselves without first asking for permission from gatekeepers, and where small blogs, businesses, and organizations operate on a level playing field with the largest corporations. Net Neutrality regulations are needed to protect the status quo, because the telecom industry sees an opportunity for profit in fundamentally altering this basic aspect of the Internet.

In the coming weeks I plan to head back to DC to continue to fight for Net Neutrality. I’m hoping that on my next trip some of the anti-Net Neutrality civil rights groups or CBC members will heed my call and explain their position. I would like to believe that there is more to the “civil rights” opposition to Net Neutrality than money, politics, relationships, or just plain lack of understanding. For now, I’m doing my best to keep an open mind. But I don’t think it will stay that way for much longer.

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