Share this on:
 E-mail
18
VIEWS
 
RECOMMENDS
3
SHARES
About this iReport
  • Not vetted for CNN

  • Click to view LenGrace's profile
    Posted May 9, 2012 by
    LenGrace
    Location
    Tupelo, Mississippi

    More from LenGrace

    Pompous Rhetoric on Broadband, Mobile Woes: An Editorial

     

    After reading the recent article “How We’re Holding Back Broadband”, by Holman W. Jenkins Jr., via The Wall Street Journal, it was evident that pompous rhetoric on the subject of broadband and mobile limitations can be stifling, if not self-serving by theauthor. As Jenkins points out, the problems with broadband and mobile in not being the idealized services which offer impeccable speed, connectivity, and coverage points directly at the FCC and legislators in being virtual czars of spectrum and broadband rules, which he extols is the menace of free enterprise.

     

    Competition

    The last time I checked, our economic system is based on the basic principle that competition should rule the marketplace, no matter the industry size or type, realizing that such competitive forces will weed out the underperforming and reward the best of class. For this principle to work there must be limited external forces which manipulate competition.

     

    However, left to lobbyist and big business spending, this economic force can be up-ended creating huge dominate players, who then can raise prices at will while destroying the competitive concept intended. Unfortunately, this is what we have today; a few dominate companies wanting complete control of the market. As in previous posts on this subject, my theory is that a balance of competition and regulation must co-exist in order to support a healthy and robust competitive model.

     

    We have created such an unregulated market policy over the last 10 – 15 years, that market competition, jobs, and rising prices have virtually destroyed the middle-class of America. Yet, there are those who continue to make assumptions that complete deregulation is the utopia in which we should live.

     

    Unbridled Mergers

    Mr. Jenkins lives in a world devoted to extoling the virtues of big business, knowing that supporting market dominate  companies to deliver the perfect broadband, and mobile services at reasonable prices is as unrealistic as telling the FCC and legislators to lay down their regulatory powers. The editorial backing of anti-consumer policies such as the elimination of competition, (AT&T / T-Mobile), and touting it as good for the public is ridiculous. Spectrum deals that transfer valuable frequencies from one dominate player to another in hopes of more market control is another ridiculous assumption, which builds entrenchments rather than competitive forces.

     

    Stop the Rhetoric

    Let’s stop the pompous, self-serving rhetoric of doom and gloom if large and profitable companies do not always get their way. Broadband and Mobile services will survive without huge mergers, as in Sprint’s mobile resurgence in the light of daunting market metrics. If companies are encouraged and given the incentive to compete, that is exactly what they will do. They will create a competitive market with a high standard of service and innovation with competitive prices. Let us not forget what made this country great, unimpeded market competition.



    What do you think of this story?

    Select one of the options below. Your feedback will help tell CNN producers what to do with this iReport. If you'd like, you can explain your choice in the comments below.
    Be and editor! Choose an option below:
      Awesome! Put this on TV! Almost! Needs work. This submission violates iReport's community guidelines.

    Comments

    Log in to comment

    iReport welcomes a lively discussion, so comments on iReports are not pre-screened before they post. See the iReport community guidelines for details about content that is not welcome on iReport.

    Add your Story Add your Story