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Tuesday, September 18, 2007
David Strom :: Townhall.com Columnist
Freedom is lost one bit at a time
by David Strom
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Imagine this: in 1776, the Founders of our country concluded that the most important means of communication—at that time the printing press—was so vital to the economic and political development of America that they decided to issue, along with the Declaration of Independence, a national office of printing presses that would supplant the existing free presses of the day.

Any free rational individual at the time would have risen up in opposition, justifiably accusing the founders of hypocrisy, and of setting up the conditions of tyranny by using a government-subsidized press to squeeze out the free and open media of the day. The revolutionaries would have first turned on their leaders, before taking on the British Redcoats.

Well, what was impossible then is becoming increasingly the reality today.

Not possible, you say, in America? Think again.

Municipalities across the country are setting up municipal wireless, cable, internet, and telephone systems to directly compete with those operating in the free market today. Already most cities “franchise” cable companies to provide exclusive cable access to homes within their jurisdictions, and were it not for off-air and satellite companies there would be no competition for your cable TV already. And in exchange for those franchises, municipalities routinely demand concessions such as cable-access channels, broadcast of municipal TV shows, and even sometimes outright bribes such as upgrading city streetscapes or other such nonsense.

In short, governments already have too much control over the means of communication.

The new trend, though, is to get into the business of communications services themselves. Several cities have set up municipal wireless systems—which have been largely huge financial failures—and now some are getting into the “fiber optic to the home” business.

These government-run, government-owned, or even government-licensed services are not just financially stupid, but in fact a direct threat to our liberties. Just as government-owned, government-subsidized, or government chartered newspapers would have appalled our founding fathers, the idea of giving over control to the government the most important means of communication in present-day America—telephones and internet access especially—should be repugnant to all who cherish liberty.

Imagine your email residing on government-controlled servers. Your purchase records, your phone records, your television watching habits—in fact, pretty much the most private and intimate information about you—being held directly in the hands of your local government officials.

That is what is being proposed, whatever the advocates of “reduced price” (government subsidized) telephone, television, and internet access say they want to provide. In exchange for a bribe (using YOUR tax dollars), they will soon be asking you to surrender your privacy and eventually your liberty to their tender mercies. Continued...

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About The Author

David Strom is the President of the Minnesota Free Market Institute. He hosts a weekly radio show on AM-1280 "The Patriot" in Minneapolis-St. Paul, available on podcast at Townhall.com.

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nomodo
True I know they don’t store like your computer does, except outlook is and was stored on brighthouse until I open it, and then it's on my computer And they still need a warrant to look at them. If locals take over would it not be the same for outlook? And i hear you about small cities i lived in one that when a cable co got its franchise, we had like 22 channels. It was that or over the air waves.

But Doc
I am thinking you don't quite grasp internet access. Providing access does not mean they have a copy of your stuff on their server.

Now the fed gov doesn't need to provide internet access to be able to read your emails or know what you have been surfing. In fact, it is not that difficult for anyone to see what others are doing on the internet. The general rule of thumb is not to say anything on the phone you wouldn't want to say publicly and never put anything in writing that you wouldn't want the world to know (especially on the net).

As for stifiling competition... there is generally little or no competition in smaller cities throughout the country. Where I live, high speed access has only been around for about 2 years and dsl has not been a reasonable alternative around here so far. At one of my businesses, I tried for three years to get the cable company to come a half mile down the road to me and they refused. Our best choice is still dial up.

Wireless for entire cities will be the choice of the near future...just wait.
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