Sent from MoveOn:
Dear
MoveOn member,
It's
time to jump for joy! We just made history. Together, we
literally just saved the Internet from a corporate takeover.
The
Federal Communications Commission just stood up to Comcast and
Verizon and voted for real Net Neutrality—no fast lanes for the
rich and slow lanes for the poor.1
This
unlikely victory has been ten years in the making, at least. How
did we get here? In a word (okay, in two words)—people power.
MoveOn
members joined a remarkable array of allies to do what many
considered politically impossible. We took on one of the most
powerful lobbies in Washington—the cable industry—and through
organizing, creativity, and persistence, we won.
We
made a thank-you card for the FCC commissioners who stood with
Internet users everywhere and voted for real Net Neutrality today.
This
card is for you, too—the MoveOn community that for a decade has
fought for common sense and equality on the Internet.
So
here's what just happened: In a party-line vote, the FCC voted to use
the simplest, clearest, most legally sound tool to preserve Net
Neutrality. It's called Title II, and it allows the FCC to treat the
Internet like a public utility, protecting it for all users.
Experts
have long agreed that Title II reclassification is the commonsense
way to go, but the extreme opposition of the wealthy telecom
industry—who hoped to profit from charging for fast lanes—made
the clear solution seem politically impossible to many even a year
ago.
But
grassroots leaders raised their voices for the commonsense solution
and built a movement that brought together millions of Americans of
all political stripes and proved too powerful for even the seemingly
all-powerful telecom lobby.
In
2005, President Bush's FCC unsurprisingly sided with the big cable
companies to begin unraveling one of the founding principles of the
Internet—that all content would be treated equally. When Congress
tried to permanently change the rules to favor the telecom industry,
the Save the Internet Coalition formed, bringing together unlikely
allies such as MoveOn.org and the Christian Coalition.2 (For
a bit of history, check out this
2006 MoveOn petition—MoveOn's
first on the issue.) Together we stopped Congress from doing
permanent damage then.
As
a presidential candidate, Barack Obama supported net neutrality.
After he was elected, the FCC commissioners he appointed passed new
open Internet rules meant to protect Net Neutrality—but they failed
to reclassify the Internet as a public good, and in 2010, the order
was struck down in court (in a case called, not surprisingly, Comcast
v. FCC).3 In January 2014, an appeals court
confirmed that ruling. We were back to square one, with Verizon and
Comcast on offense.
When
President Obama's next FCC chair, Tom Wheeler, introduced new rules
in April 2014 that would have made things even worse, we were ready.
Over
the past year, Americans like you submitted four million comments to
the FCC and made tens of thousands of phone calls to Congress and to
individual phone lines at the FCC. Allies occupied the FCC's front
lawn and blocked the FCC chairman's driveway. Civil rights organizers
shaped public opinion by telling personal stories, not relying on
corporate media.
We
rallied outside FCC field offices that never hear from the public. We
shared our stories—of
artists, entrepreneurs, teachers, parents who rely on an equal
playing field online for our livelihoods and to make a difference in
the world. We called
on President Obama to
fulfill his promise to protect Net Neutrality—and he did.
President
Obama sided with us for reclassification. Now the FCC is siding with
us. We've won.
Net
Neutrality is fundamental to the ability of grassroots activists to
create their own media when mainstream corporate media ignores our
stories. When our community wins something like this, it's important
to take a moment to celebrate. And when government agencies and
politicians stand with us, it's important to thank them.
Click
here to add your name to the thank-you card to the FCC, and share the
victory with your friends online—on the open Internet.
1.
"In Net Neutrality Victory, F.C.C. Classifies Broadband Internet
Service as a Public Utility," The
New York Times,
February 26,
2015 http://www.moveon.org/r/?r=303188&id=109060-19434813-wW9ZiKx&t=7
2.
"How the Christian Coalition and MoveOn Helped Save Net
Neutrality: A Buried Story of a Powerful Coalition," The
Huffington Post, February 25,
2015 http://www.moveon.org/r/?r=303182&id=109060-19434813-wW9ZiKx&t=8
3.
"The Net Neutrality Battle Has Been Lost. But now we can finally
win the war," Slate, January 14,
2014
http://www.moveon.org/r/?r=303183&id=109060-19434813-wW9ZiKx&t=10
http://www.moveon.org/r/?r=303183&id=109060-19434813-wW9ZiKx&t=10
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