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 JakCrow
join:2001-12-06 Palo Alto, CA | Re: full steam ahead at your cost Well, if you can stop your whining for 5 minutes, maybe we can watch and see what happens. | |
|   BBC4544
join:2002-03-12 Saint Peters, MO
| Re: full steam ahead at your cost "Well, if you can stop your whining for 5 minutes, maybe we can watch and see what happens."
so next time sbc requests a state to not force them to share their broadband equipment so they can deploy to a rural area, this will be my response.
i would also like to note that i posed a question of "can someone show where in the long term the government has done anything efficiently? " and your response is to stop whining. am i to assume you do not have a response due to your lack of knowledge or your inability to debate? do we really want to start the name calling? | |
|  |   JakCrow
join:2001-12-06 Palo Alto, CA
| Re: full steam ahead at your cost said by BBC4544 : "Well, if you can stop your whining for 5 minutes, maybe we can watch and see what happens."
so next time sbc requests a state to not force them to share their broadband equipment so they can deploy to a rural area, this will be my response.
Too bad it wouldn't apply when you used it.
said by BBC4544 :
i would also like to note that i posed a question of "can someone show where in the long term the government has done anything efficiently? " and your response is to stop whining. am i to assume you do not have a response due to your lack of knowledge or your inability to debate?
Local governments seem to be doing pretty well with utility services, and well, gee, it looks like city run broadband is starting to work in the places it's being rolled out in. Of course, I guess everyone should depend on the known dishonest qualities of the existing telcos and cablecos, but you know? I get the feeling a lot of people just aren't going to roll over to them as much as someone like you expects. Damn shame about that. Now here's a question for you: Why is SBC, a company that claims it's bleeding money (while making $2 billion a quarter), spending money on ad campaigns spreading disinformation about a possible city run broadband initiative when that money could be better spent increasing the quality of its service? As it has been pointed out many times already, and of which you have refused to accept, this municipal project would never have been considered if it wasn't for the fact that SBC and Comcast provided poor service.
said by BBC4544 :
do we really want to start the name calling?
What "name calling" is that? I didn't call you a name. I pointed out that you're whining. You owe me an apology. | |
|  |  |   pnh102 Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty Premium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD
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| Re: full steam ahead at your cost said by JakCrow : Local governments seem to be doing pretty well with utility services
You can't make a blanket statement out of this. In Philadelphia for example, PGW (Philadelphia Gas Works), the municipally-owned natural gas provider, continues to have numerous financial problems and mismanagement issues. They charge the country's highest rates for natural gas and the city and state government constantly have to pour millions of dollars each year into it to keep it afloat. Certain suburban municipal governments in my area have had problems managing sewage processing. Given this track record, its a perfectly reasonable assessment to believe that the local government can and will fubar this project as well. -- Pissed off at traitorous, ungrateful musicians? Don't just boycott them! Trade their MP3s and really screw them over! [text was edited by author 2003-03-26 12:57:29] | |
|  |  |  |   JakCrow
join:2001-12-06 Palo Alto, CA
| Re: full steam ahead at your cost said by pnh102 :
You can't make a blanket statement out of this. In Philadelphia for example, PGW (Philadelphia Gas Works), the municipally-owned natural gas provider, continues to have numerous financial problems and mismanagement issues. They charge the country's highest rates for natural gas and the city and state government constantly have to pour millions of dollars each year into it to keep it afloat. Certain suburban municipal governments in my area have had problems managing sewage processing. Given this track record, its a perfectly reasonable assessment to believe that the local government can and will fubar this project as well.
Get back to me when you're paying $200/month in electric bills (even with conservation) to a "private" company that literally wants to jack rates up 400% more. And be careful about those generalizations. You looks like you're applying your local situation to the every municipality regardless. Obviously city run services aren't going to work everywhere, just as company run services won't either, and SBC and Comcast have already established their poor track records. | |
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| Re: full steam ahead at your cost said by JakCrow : Get back to me when you're paying $200/month in electric bills (even with conservation) to a "private" company that literally wants to jack rates up 400% more.
And who created the "deregulated" environment which allowed this to occur, the great state of California of course! Was there accountability? Not exactly, the same people who fubared "deregulation" may or may not still be in office and they haven't fixed it. This is precisely the reason that government shouldn't meddle in these kinds of ventures. We truly deregulated electrical generation here in Penna. as well, and our electric rates have been going down, not up, and you truly do have a choice of providers. said by JakCrow : And be careful about those generalizations. You looks like you're applying your local situation to the every municipality regardless.
In your original post, you said that: said by JakCrow : Local governments seem to be doing pretty well with utility services
which sounds like a generalization to me. said by JakCrow : just as company run services won't either, and SBC and Comcast have already established their poor track records.
There are already ways in which the private sector has dealt with poor service from these companies, many places have rolled their own broadband without government help and without imposing another burden on taxpayers. This is arguably the better route. -- Pissed off at traitorous, ungrateful musicians? Don't just boycott them! Trade their MP3s and really screw them over! | |
|  |  |  |  |  |   JakCrow
join:2001-12-06 Palo Alto, CA
| Re: full steam ahead at your cost said by pnh102 : And who created the "deregulated" environment which allowed this to occur, the great state of California of course! Was there accountability? Not exactly, the same people who fubared "deregulation" may or may not still be in office and they haven't fixed it. This is precisely the reason that government shouldn't meddle in these kinds of ventures. We truly deregulated electrical generation here in Penna. as well, and our electric rates have been going down, not up, and you truly do have a choice of providers.
Do you want the long or short version of the "deregulation" story? You certainly have it wrong, that's for sure. I would be happy to dispell your misconceptions, unless you're a "free market" idealogue. Then there's no point in going any further.
said by JakCrow : And be careful about those generalizations. You looks like you're applying your local situation to the every municipality regardless.
In your original post, you said that: said by JakCrow : Local governments seem to be doing pretty well with utility services
which sounds like a generalization to me. [/QUOTE] And you follow up with what also sounds like a generization. Have some consistancy.
said by JakCrow : just as company run services won't either, and SBC and Comcast have already established their poor track records.
There are already ways in which the private sector has dealt with poor service from these companies, many places have rolled their own broadband without government help and without imposing another burden on taxpayers. This is arguably the better route. [/QUOTE] What are these "many places that have rolled their own broadband without government help"? With the exception of the municipalities that are succeeding, the private sector non-telco/cableco solutions are few and far between. And once again, someone such as yourself also overlooks that user fees can provide coverage for municipal services such as broadband without taxing everyone. | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |   pnh102 Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty Premium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD
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| Re: full steam ahead at your cost said by JakCrow : Do you want the long or short version of the "deregulation" story? You certainly have it wrong, that's for sure.
The short version is that California decided to cap the amount of money paid by subscribers to electric utilities without capping the amount of money that the utilities paid to resellers. Because of California's wacky environmental laws, among which prevented new power plants from being built to meet increasing demand, the supply of electricity in-state remained constant while demand increased, and because no new in-state generation could occur, PG&E and SCE had to buy energy from out of state at very high prices. Sounds like a major government screw up to me. Granted, a bunch of companies did try to exploit the situation, but once again it is the state government's fault for creating the environment in which this kind of exploitation could take place to begin with. said by JakCrow : And you follow up with what also sounds like a generization. Have some consistancy.
A specific example, like the one I cited with PGW is not a generalization. However, a specific example is all that is logically required to disprove your original generalization that municipally run services are inherently better than privately run services. said by JakCrow : What are these "many places that have rolled their own broadband without government help"? With the exception of the municipalities that are succeeding, the private sector non-telco/cableco solutions are few and far between.
Ruby Ranch comes to mind, and then there are also the hundreds of WISPs that are springing up all over the country as well. said by JakCrow : And once again, someone such as yourself also overlooks that user fees can provide coverage for municipal services such as broadband without taxing everyone.
Many municipally run broadband providers rely on some other municipally run service to keep them afloat (e.g., the cable network in Glasgow, KY, relies upon the municipally run power company). If that other service wasn't their to prop up the internet service, where would this money come from? More taxes? On the other side of this coin, how much money could these municipally run services be returning to the ratepayers if they were not involved in subsidizing other non-essential municipal services? -- Pissed off at traitorous, ungrateful musicians? Don't just boycott them! Trade their MP3s and really screw them over! | |
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| Re: full steam ahead at your cost said by morbo : give me a break. see ENRON and other unethical businesses that drove up the price of electricity by conspiring to keep powerplants offline longer than necessary.
This didn't happen in any state other than California. You can't tell me that California's regulatory environment didn't contribute to the exploits by some companies when the same antics did not occur in any other state. -- Pissed off at traitorous, ungrateful musicians? Don't just boycott them! Trade their MP3s and really screw them over! | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   JakCrow
join:2001-12-06 Palo Alto, CA
| said by pnh102 : The short version is that California decided to cap the amount of money paid by subscribers to electric utilities without capping the amount of money that the utilities paid to resellers. Because of California's wacky environmental laws, among which prevented new power plants from being built to meet increasing demand, the supply of electricity in-state remained constant while demand increased, and because no new in-state generation could occur, PG&E and SCE had to buy energy from out of state at very high prices. Sounds like a major government screw up to me. Granted, a bunch of companies did try to exploit the situation, but once again it is the state government's fault for creating the environment in which this kind of exploitation could take place to begin with.
You forgot about how the the instate power companies signed on to the deregulation plan with the future hopes of reaping huge profits -after they fulfilled certain requirements- to become full deregulated and allowed to pass costs on to customers. PG&E and SCE dragged their feet do meet those requirements and were caught with their pants down when the suppliers started gouging. It's also ridiculous to say that the state deregulation process caused power suppliers to become dishonest. Evidence points to the desire to simply gouge California. It didn't matter who was paying the bill.
Now if you want to talk flawed as in deregulation came about because the power companies wanted huge profits and their large corporate customers wanted cheap power while the individual user was barely considered, I'd agree, but something tells me you're one of those black and white "free market" types.
said by pnh102 :
A specific example, like the one I cited with PGW is not a generalization. However, a specific example is all that is logically required to disprove your original generalization that municipally run services are inherently better than privately run services.
It's anecdotal and you imply that's how it will be everywhere, then you go on to say there are private companies for which you can buy power from. Just as you wouldn't buy services from an overpriced, poorly run private company. So what's the problem?
said by pnh102 :
Ruby Ranch comes to mind, and then there are also the hundreds of WISPs that are springing up all over the country as well.
You do remember the hell Ruby Ranch has to go thru to get to the point they're at now, and the length of time and legal hassle they had to go through, right? Imagine how hard it's going to be if they want to go farther than just basic DSL to a small collection of homes. The WISP market isn't as big as you'd like to think it is right now, and the bells are encroaching on the WISP market too. I expect some kind of lobbying effort by them in the next year or so in an attempt to hurt the small providers in that area as well.
said by pnh102 :
Many municipally run broadband providers rely on some other municipally run service to keep them afloat (e.g., the cable network in Glasgow, KY, relies upon the municipally run power company). If that other service wasn't their to prop up the internet service, where would this money come from? More taxes? On the other side of this coin, how much money could these municipally run services be returning to the ratepayers if they were not involved in subsidizing other non-essential municipal services?
And it's because of those other municipal services they're able to offer something extra. There's nothing wrong with that. And since the power services are already there, your scenerio doesn't apply since the power services aren't going to be uprooted tomorrow to have a negative impact on additional services. Your's is a straw man argument since what you're saying can be applied to the telcos and cablecos, except replace "taxes" with "price increases". Speaking of subsidized services, how's your residential phone line working out for ya? | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   pnh102 Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty Premium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD
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| Re: full steam ahead at your cost said by JakCrow : You forgot about how the the instate power companies signed on to the deregulation plan with the future hopes of reaping huge profits -after they fulfilled certain requirements- to become full deregulated and allowed to pass costs on to customers.
So why did the legislators cave into the power companies? The legislators in other states aren't giving into the demands of SBC when it comes to deregulation. As elected officials, the legislators have a moral duty to prevent these kinds of screwups. said by JakCrow : Evidence points to the desire to simply gouge California. It didn't matter who was paying the bill.
But that makes absolutely no sense whatsoever. If this scheme made Enron and other companies so rich, why wasn't it done on a national basis? said by JakCrow : Now if you want to talk flawed as in deregulation came about because the power companies wanted huge profits and their large corporate customers wanted cheap power while the individual user was barely considered, I'd agree, but something tells me you're one of those black and white "free market" types.
Damn right, I am a Yankee-imperialist capitalist pig and damn proud of it. This freedom includes the right for companies to make stupid decisions like was the case with PG&E and SCE. But this begs my original question, why didn't California's legislators think before they passed this law? Certianly legislators in other states see the problems with giving SBC what amounts to a "blank check." California's legislature should have had some foresight. You can't sell something for less than what it costs and you don't need to be brain surgeon to realize that. said by JakCrow : It's anecdotal and you imply that's how it will be everywhere, then you go on to say there are private companies for which you can buy power from. Just as you wouldn't buy services from an overpriced, poorly run private company. So what's the problem?
Its perfectly fine for private companies to take risks like these because they're the ones who will go under as a result, provided that the government doesn't step in to "save the day." However, if a government does this, taxes will go up to pay for it (see my previous posts regarding western Penna. school districts). California created an electric power deathtrap that didn't exist in any other state and now people like you have no choice but to pay. Had deregulation been done right (or not at all), the state would be in a better position. said by JakCrow : You do remember the hell Ruby Ranch has to go thru to get to the point they're at now, and the length of time and legal hassle they had to go through, right?
Nothing worth doing is easy. If they didn't go through all that heck, they wouldn't be doing business. said by JakCrow : the bells are encroaching on the WISP market too.
The bells don't want WISPs to take away their customers, if WISPs encourage the bells/cable companies to expand service then this is a good thing. said by JakCrow : I expect some kind of lobbying effort by them in the next year or so in an attempt to hurt the small providers in that area as well.
As we can see with what's happening in Indiana and Nevada, it not a sure thing that these will pass. said by JakCrow : And it's because of those other municipal services they're able to offer something extra. There's nothing wrong with that.
If I am paying $100 in electric bills and I know that $50 is going to subsidize internet service that I don't use, I would be a bit steamed that my bill couldn't be reduced by $50. -- Pissed off at traitorous, ungrateful musicians? Don't just boycott them! Trade their MP3s and really screw them over! | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   JakCrow
join:2001-12-06 Palo Alto, CA
| Re: full steam ahead at your cost said by pnh102 : So why did the legislators cave into the power companies? The legislators in other states aren't giving into the demands of SBC when it comes to deregulation. As elected officials, the legislators have a moral duty to prevent these kinds of screwups.
Probably for the same black and white free market ideology that doesn't look at the big picture except for PROFIT PROFIT PROFIT. Wouldn't be the first time, won't be the last. If I remember correctly, all the western states were seeing the high prices as well, but were not in the midst of a deregulation process.
said by pnh102 :
But that makes absolutely no sense whatsoever. If this scheme made Enron and other companies so rich, why wasn't it done on a national basis?
Calfornia was a current target? Other states were next? I don't know, do you? I don't think it mattered who paid the bill, customers or power distributors.
said by pnh102 :
Damn right, I am a Yankee-imperialist capitalist pig and damn proud of it. 
You misunderstand: I have no problem with a capitalist society. I have a problem with the die hard free marketeers that want deregulation no matter how many people have to be stepped on get it (usually the individual consumer). I'm also tired of deregulation that comes about because the industry wants to make more money, or large customers of said industry want to spend less, and damn anyone that gets in the way, while yet again, the individual is left out of the equation but has the most to loose.
said by pnh102 :
This freedom includes the right for companies to make stupid decisions like was the case with PG&E and SCE.
I agree
said by pnh102 :
But this begs my original question, why didn't California's legislators think before they passed this law?
Bribery? Blind free market proponents? This kind of thing doesn't just happen in CA either.
said by pnh102 :
Certianly legislators in other states see the problems with giving SBC what amounts to a "blank check." California's legislature should have had some foresight. You can't sell something for less than what it costs and you don't need to be brain surgeon to realize that.
PG&E and SCE signed on to the process, so I assume the hope was for a speedy transition, which obviously didn't happen because of PG&E and SCE. If you want to talk "blank checks" in general, there's the matter of the states that are giving the bells free rides without foresight.
said by pnh102 :
Its perfectly fine for private companies to take risks like these because they're the ones who will go under as a result, provided that the government doesn't step in to "save the day." However, if a government does this, taxes will go up to pay for it (see my previous posts regarding western Penna. school districts). California created an electric power deathtrap that didn't exist in any other state and now people like you have no choice but to pay. Had deregulation been done right (or not at all), the state would be in a better position.
And if a government run program is failing, it's up to the people to vote the ones out responsible. I'm not saying all these city run broadband projects are going to work 100%, but it's obvious WHY they're coming about.
said by pnh102 :
Nothing worth doing is easy. If they didn't go through all that heck, they wouldn't be doing business.
It wouldn't have been a problem if Qwest hadn't tried to kill the project to begin with. Earning its reputation again, after all.
said by pnh102 :
The bells don't want WISPs to take away their customers, if WISPs encourage the bells/cable companies to expand service then this is a good thing.
Would you be happy if the bells killed WISP competition? I know I wouldn't.
said by pnh102 :
As we can see with what's happening in Indiana and Nevada, it not a sure thing that these will pass.
Good, but don't think the bells won't keep trying.
said by pnh102 :
If I am paying $100 in electric bills and I know that $50 is going to subsidize internet service that I don't use, I would be a bit steamed that my bill couldn't be reduced by $50.
Stuff like this is more like pennies on the dollar, not half the bill, and that implies no basic user fees. Bur anyways, we're getting sidetracked on the whole CA power dereg now. [text was edited by author 2003-03-26 16:32:43] | |
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| Re: full steam ahead at your cost said by JakCrow : You misunderstand: I have no problem with a capitalist society.
Sorry about that... That's just my standard honest reply to anyone who asks me that question LOL. said by JakCrow : I have a problem with the die hard free marketeers that want deregulation no matter how many people have to be stepped on get it (usually the individual consumer).
I agree with you 100% on this one, but I also think that what happened in California with regards to the electric companies should not have been called "deregulation" because it clearly wasn't that at all. said by JakCrow : I'm also tired of deregulation that comes about because the industry wants to make more money, or large customers of said industry want to spend less, and damn anyone that gets in the way, while yet again, the individual is left out of the equation but has the most to loose.
I believe there does exist a happy medium with regards to this. As I said before, regulation of electrical generation in Penna. has been successful on both fronts, it not only gives customers more choices with regards to price, but companies have continued to make money. Local governments here can now buy their power from the lowest bidder like they do with any other commodity. Some people I know here however don't use price as the sole criteria for their choice of electrical generation company. A lot of people choose "earth-friendly" power companies even though they cost more than what they paid before. I think its great that people actually have these choices now. said by JakCrow : And if a government run program is failing, it's up to the people to vote the ones out responsible.
Sigh... as long as people benefit from these "failed" programs (most welfare programs imo), they will never go away. said by JakCrow : Would you be happy if the bells killed WISP competition? I know I wouldn't.
Nor would I, but in the areas that WISPs operate there hasn't been too much of a move by the Bells to kill them. said by JakCrow : Stuff like this is more like pennies on the dollar, not half the bill, and that implies no basic user fees.
That's how it all starts. No matter how poorly a municipally run cable system is run, as long as it has a crutch to provide it with funding, it will continue to operate with no incentive to improve. Its very easy for a municipally run utility to jack up rates to subsidize internet access because everyone needs electric power. In Greece for example, the 3 government-run TV networks all get their funding by tacking on surcharges to the electric bill. There's no way to get out of paying for them. -- Pissed off at traitorous, ungrateful musicians? Don't just boycott them! Trade their MP3s and really screw them over! And don't forget, 2 out of 3 human shields agree! Saddam really is evil! | |
|  |  |   BBC4544
join:2002-03-12 Saint Peters, MO
| 1st off I state my opinion and you call it whining. if you disagree with me so be it but it is insulting for you to say it is whining. I accept your apology.
if I understand your point correctly, you are saying that sbc needs to invest in a potentially high risk service that could cost too much money. you base this on the fact that they make 2 billion a quarter. the reason they make 2 billion a quarter is because the do not throw their money at high risk investments.
the main point I am trying to make is that it is not the government's role to get involved with the private market. what is next government gas stations, video stores, food stores, construction companies, clothing stores......... this sounds familiar. some famous men had the same idea...STALIN, LENIN, CASTRO......
lets get this last thing straight. government is government, it does not matter if it is city, local, state, federal. the government has no incentive to ever do anything in an efficient manner. | |
|  |  |  |   pnh102 Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty Premium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD
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| Re: full steam ahead at your cost said by BBC4544 : the government has no incentive to ever do anything in an efficient manner.
Yea... not too long back a bunch of school districts in western Penna., along with Orange County, CA (among other governments) invested tax money in high risk junk bonds as a way to increase their spendable money. The schemes backfired and the result was that Orange County had to go into bankruptcy, and the Penna. school districts all had to raise taxes to pay for the current year's instruction along with the next. It was precisely because of this steady stream of unlimited taxpayer money that they had no incentive to invest in something reliable.
I have a feeling that these municipal network promoters aren't telling the whole story. How does tricitybroadband.com know how much the system will cost when they aren't the people who will be building it? Isn't it going to be the government that sets the final cost? People who want the government to fund their particular pet project routinely understate the true costs because they know governments are reluctant to spend money on something that appears overly expensive. -- Pissed off at traitorous, ungrateful musicians? Don't just boycott them! Trade their MP3s and really screw them over! | |
|  |  |  |   JakCrow
join:2001-12-06 Palo Alto, CA
| said by BBC4544 : 1st off I state my opinion and you call it whining. if you disagree with me so be it but it is insulting for you to say it is whining. I accept your apology.
You're obviously mistaken. I didn't apologize
said by BBC4544 :
if I understand your point correctly, you are saying that sbc needs to invest in a potentially high risk service that could cost too much money.
While wasting cash in an ad campaign against municipal broadband, apparently in an area they don't want to invest much in anyways. What's up with that, hmmm?
said by BBC4544 :
you base this on the fact that they make 2 billion a quarter. the reason they make 2 billion a quarter is because the do not throw their money at high risk investments.
Oh, so then that pesky money bleed SBC claims is just smoke and mirrors. No shock there. Don't forget, part of that $2 billion a quarter is from price increases and fees tacked on to customer bills to pay for future expansion that had never been seen in most places. Tsk tsk...
said by BBC4544 :
the main point I am trying to make is that it is not the government's role to get involved with the private market. what is next government gas stations, video stores, food stores, construction companies, clothing stores......... this sounds familiar. some famous men had the same idea...STALIN, LENIN, CASTRO......
If that's your point, you need to go back to drawing board. Municipal services in this country come about when the "private market" (built by government subsidies) fails to provide the services and support that localities want/need/require. If the participants in the "private market" had their acts together in the first place, we wouldn't even be talking about this. And your hysteria at the bottom there shows you shouldn't be talking about this at all. Here, I'll make it all better: the sky isn't falling because these cities are considering a broadband program. Get a grip.
said by BBC4544 :
lets get this last thing straight. government is government, it does not matter if it is city, local, state, federal. the government has no incentive to ever do anything in an efficient manner.
You realize you can replace "government" with "telcos/cablecos", don't you? | |
|  |  |  |  |   BBC4544
join:2002-03-12 Saint Peters, MO
| Re: full steam ahead at your cost "You're obviously mistaken. I didn't apologize"
i was giving you the benefit of doubt. you have showed i was mistaken about you being an adult.
"Don't forget, part of that $2 billion a quarter is from price increases and fees tacked on to customer bills to pay for future expansion that had never been seen in most places. Tsk tsk..."
check OK. i know you live in the socialist state of CA but in the rest of the country companies exist to make a profit.
"If that's your point, you need to go back to drawing board. Municipal services in this country come about when the "private market" (built by government subsidies) fails to provide the services and support that localities want/need/require. If the participants in the "private market" had their acts together in the first place, we wouldn't even be talking about this. And your hysteria at the bottom there shows you shouldn't be talking about this at all. Here, I'll make it all better: the sky isn't falling because these cities are considering a broadband program. Get a grip."
it is not for you or a government to decide the needs of the private market. the private market determines the needs. if a gas station is needed at elm and main then it is up to the private sector to research and discover this. it is not the governments role to compete with the private sector. as far as who needs to stop talking "mr brownout", you live in a state that is eyeball deep in debt due to getting involved in the private sector.
"You realize you can replace "government" with "telcos/cablecos", don't you?"
ahhh, NO. government has elected officials and collect taxes on an involuntary basis. telcos/cablecos are companies that are there to make a profit and sell stocks on a voluntary basis. if you do not subscribe to their service, they do not collect money. if the government collects a tax that does not mean you are entitled to all services. actually to the contrary, the more taxes you pay the less service you get. | |
|  |  |  |  |  |   JakCrow
join:2001-12-06 Palo Alto, CA
| Re: full steam ahead at your cost said by BBC4544 : "You're obviously mistaken. I didn't apologize"
i was giving you the benefit of doubt. you have showed i was mistaken about you being an adult.
An adult would use a little rational thought regarding this matter. You however.....
said by BBC4544 :
check OK. i know you live in the socialist state of CA but in the rest of the country companies exist to make a profit.
Last I checked, some of the OK legislators were a little pissed off at SBC for not living up to its promises (meanwhile SBC plays fast and loose with interpretations). And guess what state a significant amount of SBC's profit came from bucky?
said by BBC4544 :
it is not for you or a government to decide the needs of the private market. the private market determines the needs.
Uh, yes, it is up to the government, and by extension, the people to decide the "needs" of the private sector, especially when it comes to industries with monopolistic participants that try to manipulate the market. The "private sector" works for the customer, not the other way around, and operates at the "blessings" of the governments involved, local, state, and federal. For example: if a city wanted to legally end a contract with a cableco, there's not a damn thing the cableco could do about it.
said by BBC4544 :
if a gas station is needed at elm and main then it is up to the private sector to research and discover this. it is not the governments role to compete with the private sector.
In this case, the private sector isn't competing at all, which is why this matter exists. Do keep up.
said by BBC4544 :
as far as who needs to stop talking "mr brownout", you live in a state that is eyeball deep in debt due to getting involved in the private sector.
Oh, there's that name calling you were talking about. Good going. And you're telling me to shut up because I disagree with you AND I live in a particular state? You're a conservative, aren't you? I was right. You are whining.
said by BBC4544 :
"You realize you can replace "government" with "telcos/cablecos", don't you?"
ahhh, NO. government has elected officials and collect taxes on an involuntary basis.
Many taxes are approved or denied by the voters in such "backwards" states like, oh, California. Imagine that. We can repeal taxes too. I hope you're able to rise to having such ability if you already do not.
said by BBC4544 :
telcos/cablecos are companies that are there to make a profit and sell stocks on a voluntary basis. if you do not subscribe to their service, they do not collect money.
Except when they're the only game in town. Then they need to be smacked down when they behave badly. You consistently and purposefully ignore the fact that -if SBC and Comcast were providing the services and support the people had wanted in the first place, this wouldn't be happening-. If SBC and Comcast (and their supporters here) weren't going around saying there was no profit in providing broadband in the markets that propose city run broadband projects, then backtrack and blitz people with ad campaigns against the city providing services that they didn't want to provide anyways, then perhaps people would have given them yet ANOTHER chance to redeem themselves, but they blew it. You really have no other argument outside of some ill-conceived ideology.
said by BBC4544 :
if the government collects a tax that does not mean you are entitled to all services. actually to the contrary, the more taxes you pay the less service you get.
That's why we have elections to vote abusers out if we so choose. We also have the right to approve a municipal services if we so choose. Isn't America great -for everyone-? I'm sorry you don't feel the same. | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   JakCrow
join:2001-12-06 Palo Alto, CA
| Re: full steam ahead at your cost It wasn't for my lack of trying. I'm still trying to get Tauscher, Feinstein, and Boxer out of Congress. Snooty cows.
I almost forgot an appropriate comparison here: Just like voting against someone in office doesn't mean they'll lose, not buying service from a something like a telco doesn't mean they'll go out of business or have less an effect on the market.
[text was edited by author 2003-03-26 16:42:34] | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   pnh102 Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty Premium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD
·Comcast
| Re: full steam ahead at your cost said by JakCrow : It wasn't for my lack of trying. I'm still trying to get Tauscher, Feinstein, and Boxer out of Congress. Snooty cows.
I understand and sympathize... I can't bear to imagine the kind of socialist paradise that Feinstein and Boxer help to create. But this goes back to my earlier point. Elected officials will stay in power by basically granting a majority of the constituents freebies from the treasury, no matter how ineptly or inefficiently they are run. This fact alone creates the kind of obstacles you face in throwing these bums out.
My example with PGW exacerbates this point. Every year many people in Philadelphia complain about PGW and say it should be privatized, but because PGW provides jobs for political hacks and cronies, and because it "gives" away so much product to so many people because the agency doesn't enforce billing, it makes it very hard to vote in politicians that will make the push to privatize the utility. Philadelphia has been run by the same flock of politicians for the past 50 years, its very hard to make anything change there. -- Pissed off at traitorous, ungrateful musicians? Don't just boycott them! Trade their MP3s and really screw them over! And don't forget, 2 out of 3 human shields agree! Saddam really is evil! | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   JakCrow
join:2001-12-06 Palo Alto, CA
| Re: full steam ahead at your cost said by pnh102 : I understand and sympathize... I can't bear to imagine the kind of socialist paradise that Feinstein and Boxer help to create. But this goes back to my earlier point. Elected officials will stay in power by basically granting a majority of the constituents freebies from the treasury, no matter how ineptly or inefficiently they are run. This fact alone creates the kind of obstacles you face in throwing these bums out.
See my addition. Much about government can be applied the industries like telcom with only a few powerful players stomping about like giants in a playground. As to Boxer and Feinstein being socialists? I prefer to catagorize them more plainly: elitist bitches that want to have more rights than the average person. Like Feinstein wanting more gun laws that hurt honest people while she has a concealed weapons permit. [text was edited by author 2003-03-26 17:10:23] | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   pnh102 Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty Premium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD
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| Re: full steam ahead at your cost said by morbo : yes and the health care system in cuba is f-ing amazing. wonder why? not because the private sector stepped up to the plate.
LOL! That's only if you have money to pay for the best care available (usually if you're a rich Western tourist). Of course the same thing is true in any country. If you're a poor Cuban though, as most Cubans are, then you get to wait in line at the socialist medical clinic like everyone else. If you're lucky you may get care.
And another thing, what kind of healthcare do you think the refugees fleeing Cuba that are intercepted by the Cubans get? -- Pissed off at traitorous, ungrateful musicians? Don't just boycott them! Trade their MP3s and really screw them over! [text was edited by author 2003-03-26 15:24:15] | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   pnh102 Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty Premium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD
·Comcast
| Re: full steam ahead at your cost said by morbo : straight from the horse's mouth? lol. you might as well say "because i say so". the link you gave me is from an organization dedicated to anti-castro propaganda.
Well if Castro was such a good guy, and if Cuba's healthcare system really was that great, why are so many Cubans trying to leave? -- Pissed off at traitorous, ungrateful musicians? Don't just boycott them! Trade their MP3s and really screw them over! And don't forget, 2 out of 3 human shields agree! Saddam really is evil! | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   BBC4544
join:2002-03-12 Saint Peters, MO
| "yes and the health care system in cuba is f-ing amazing. wonder why? not because the private sector stepped up to the plate."
hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha hahahaha hahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha | |
|  |  |  |  |   BBC4544
join:2002-03-12 Saint Peters, MO | hahahahahahahahahahahaha
it is so amazing people flee the country in homemade rubber rafts!
hahahahahahahahahahahha | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   ib50MbSoon Formerly TwoKDialup Premium join:2002-06-07 Coloma, MI
| said by BBC4544 : i would also like to note that i posed a question of "can someone show where in the long term the government has done anything efficiently? " and your response is to stop whining.
RFP! Leviathan provided an excellent link to a few examples of successful municipal broadband. -- Earthlink/DirecWay SRS | SatMex 5-990 | |
|  |  |   pnh102 Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty Premium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD
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| Re: full steam ahead at your cost said by ib50MbSoon : Leviathan provided an excellent link to a few examples of successful municipal broadband.
In my own state municipal governments continue to raise property taxes to pay for vital services (e.g., schools, police, etc.), and now the governor is proposing a tax hike to bail them out. If my town were to waste its money on a municipal cable network, while continuing to raise taxes (and instigating the need for a general statewide tax hike), I would seriously question my government's priorities.
I suppose I could "vote them out" as is suggested, but when the government robs Peter to pay Paul, they will always have the support of Paul. Hence the government's strategy seems to be to put at least a majority of people into Paul's position. You think anyone who gets taxpayer-subsidized broadband is going to vote it away when things get tight (as they are in many places still)? I doubt it. In these times, governments at various levels must reassess their spending priorities, contrary to what people are saying here, I would say things like the military, counter-terrorism and education funding are a little more important than a toy network.
With this in mind, it still doesn't address the real problem here, the lack of service provided by incumbent cable and telcos. Its very easy for people who are sick of this to start their own privately-run co-op that could provide the service needed. The various governments involved (state and local) could pass laws such as tax breaks and grants of easements, (which is possible given how many have opposed proposals sponsored by the larger companies) that make it easier for such competition to come into the picture. There would be local accountability and the money would remain in the given town, but the government would not be bothered with expense and hassles of running the operation. -- Pissed off at traitorous, ungrateful musicians? Don't just boycott them! Trade their MP3s and really screw them over! | |
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