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by quadrangle
3344 days ago
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I think the argument is this: "The best possible service for customers always necessarily comes from unregulated free-market competition. Therefore, we should remove all regulations, even if they are removed one-by-one with potential imbalances occurring in the regulatory ecosystem. Removal of any regulation is at least closer to true free market. So, we'll start with removing the regulations that my lobbyist friends identify as the ones they most want removed. It's a step in the right direction. Since fewer regulations equals more market freedom, whatever happens will necessarily be an improvement overall compared with whatever would have happened with the regulation in place." In short: "free markets are the best because whatever result we get from whatever we choose to call free markets is, by definition, the best result." |
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Ironically, the ideology that is appealed to is the best argument for net neutrality.