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James G. Lakely: 'Net Neutrality' Is Socialism, Not Freedom

By: James G. Lakely
Op-Ed Contributor
October 20, 2009

Advocates of imposing "network neutrality" say it's necessary to ensure a "free" and "open" Internet and rescue the public from nefarious corporations that "control" technology.

Few proposals in Washington have been sold employing such deceptive language -- and that's saying something. But few public policy ideas can boast the unashamedly socialist pedigree of net neutrality.

The modern Internet is a creation of the free market, which has brought about a revolution in communication, free speech, education, and commerce. New Federal Communications Commission Chairman Julius Genachowski apparently doesn't like that. He stated last month the way Internet service providers manage their networks -- in response to millions of individual consumer choices -- is not sufficiently "fair," "open" or "free."

The chairman's remedy is to claim for the FCC the power to decide how every bit of data is transferred from the Web to every personal computer and handheld device in the nation. This is exactly what the radical founders of the net neutrality movement had in mind.

The concept can be traced to an iconoclastic figure, Richard Stallman, a self-described software freedom activist who introduced the term "copyleft" in the mid-1980s. In his 2002 essay "Free Software, Free Society," Stallman fiercely attacks the idea that intellectual property rights are one of the keystones of individual liberty, so important that patents and copyrights are affirmatively protected in the body of the Constitution.

According to Stallman, "we are not required to agree with the Constitution or the Supreme Court. [At one time, they both condoned slavery.]" Like slavery, he says, copyright law is "a radical right-wing assumption rather than a traditionally recognized one." Rebuking those who might find a Marxist flavor in his call for a "digital commons," Stallman turns the tables, writing: "If we are to judge views by their resemblance to Russian Communism, it is the software owners who are the Communists."

Eben Moglen's 2003 treatise The dotCommunist Manifesto is more honest about the thinking behind net neutrality -- it's sprinkled throughout with the language of communism's great and bloody revolutionaries. The people must "struggle" to "wrest from the bourgeoisie, by degrees, the shared patrimony of humankind" that has been "stolen from us under the guise of 'intellectual property.' "

How does one bring this about? The professor of law and legal history at Columbia University would start with the "abolition of all forms of private property in ideas."

Most bold and radical of the neutralists is Robert W. McChesney, founder of Free Press -- the leading advocacy group in Washington pushing for net neutrality. In an August interview with a Canadian Marxist online publication called the Bullet, McChesney rejoices that net neutrality can finally bring about the Marxist "revolution."

"At the moment, the battle over network neutrality is not to completely eliminate the telephone and cable companies," McChesney said. "We are not at that point yet. But the ultimate goal is to get rid of the media capitalists in the phone and cable companies and to divest them from control."

He's right: Net neutrality divests control over the Internet from the private sector to the government. And in typical Marxist fashion, innocuous words -- the language of neutralism and liberty -- cloak an agenda that would crush freedom.

That's the agenda President Obama's FCC is pushing.

James G. Lakely is co-director of the Center on the Digital Economy for the Chicago-based Heartland Institute, a free-market think tank. His policy study, "Neutralism: The Strange Philosophy Behind the Movement for Net Neutrality," can be found at www.heartland.org.




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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

jarjar3@gmail.com

Oct 20, 2009

Thanks for the good chuckle. The ISPs are really scraping the bottom of the barrel if this is the best y'all can come up with.

 

Big Jim

Oct 20, 2009

The interesting thing is that a lot of laissez-faire libertarians have real issues with the way Intellectual Property rights are enforced, with all the usual coercion, by the State.

For instance - why does patent protection last 20 years, whereas copyright lasts for the life of the author 70 years? What (libertarian) justification can there be for this disparity?

As for the Free Software movement, one of its main objectives is to prevent corporations patenting (and thus monopolising) the very building blocks of the web (google "problem software patents standards" for more info on this subject)

 

gerbilinheat

Oct 20, 2009

This really tops the limit.
"Creation of the free market".
ARPANET ring any bells?
Hmm?
GOVERNMENT created the internet, 'Free enterprise' had no use for the risk.
So why are they getting ANY reward?
Time and past time for US to recoup from these vampires feeding off our tax money.
Biomed, electronics, commercial aviation, mass media ALL invented by GOVERNMENT. Time for the profits to flow back to WE, THE PEOPLE, who took the risk!

 

TheGreenMiles

Oct 20, 2009

It's amazing to watch the Heartland Institute lurch from one issue to the next as its funding sources switch! Cigarettes! Global warming! Net neutrality! We can be an expert on anything, as long as the check is big enough!

 

John Perry

Oct 20, 2009

What a hopeless crock of corporate propaganda. The Net Neutrality movement simply seeks to preserve the freedom and openness that made the internet what it is: The greatest venue for true innovation the world has ever seen, where anybody with a great idea and the willingness to see it through can be a success. It levels the playing field, which is why the elitist tools don't like it.

 

COMMENTMAN

Oct 21, 2009

Now the government wants to get into the internet. NO. STAY AWAY. They will screw it up, like all else they control.

 

Shanghaied

Oct 21, 2009

Take a look at China's Internet control. If the FCC or other Fed Agency becomes the arbiter of information, the web will be controlled and interlopers punished under a similar model. Just another power grab by Little Nero's Admin. to silence free speech.

 

frog128

Oct 21, 2009

The U.S. should think it has the right to govern the internet? I don't think so.
Voice over IP brought us the problems with the elections in Iran. News from Honduras comes to us over the internet. Since my nephew is out of Iraq, I will tell you a cell from Hawaii can dial straight home. I am sure the wonderful goal of providing government help to everyone in the U.S. will cut off important communcations from the outside of the U.S.

 

RSaunders

Oct 23, 2009

I have to object to "millions of individual consumer choices". In my area there is no choice in broadband providers. We have an Evil Cable Company, or phone-slow. Consumers need protection in a marketplace where there are regulated monopolies (cable TV) seeking to expand into unregulated niches. The ISPs did not invent the Internet any more than Al Gore did. They are seeking to steal the Internet under the guise that it needs "management". How can Libertarian grounds be used to support the appropriation of our public square by mega-corporations? Mr. Lakely needs a few more Internet facts, the people who DID invent the Internet are strongly pro-neutrality, and fewer free-software inflammatory comments.

 

Chris K.

Oct 23, 2009

I'm sorry but corporations signed on to the internet. It was a created system between military and universities. The corps signed on knowing the rules, and now want to change the rules because they are losing money. Thats not right. If they don't care for the structure of the internet (every bit is just as valuable as any other bit) then they need to leave the sphere.

 

Brian Murphy

Oct 28, 2009

I believe this as readily as the other positions supported by Lakely's "Heartland Institute", such as: "A modest amount of global warming, should it occur, would be beneficial to the natural world and to human civilization," or "The threat of secondhand smoke has been greatly exaggerated." Yet another mindless mouthpiece, bought and paid for by anti-free market, anti-innovation, monopolistic business interests.

 


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