ARTICLE

Will Globalists Use New Net Neutrality To Restrict Alternative News Websites

News Image By Michael Snyder/End Of The American Dream December 18, 2017
Share this article:

We have all become quite accustomed to going anywhere on the Internet that we would like, but thanks to this decision the big Internet service providers could start to turn the Internet into another version of cable television.  

Websites that are not part of your "Internet package" would either load much slower or would not be accessible at all.  

Essentially, the big Internet service providers could eventually become "gatekeepers" that would decide what you would and would not be able to see on the Internet.  

So if they didn't like the views of a particular website (such as this one), they could simply block access to it and their subscribers would no longer be able to get to it.


A free and open Internet is one of the key tools that we are using to wake people up all over the world, and the globalists have been desperate to find a way to clamp down on us.  That is why the FCC's decision today is so chilling...

In a partisan vote repealing net-neutrality protections, the FCC has lifted restrictions that prevented internet service providers (ISPs) from blocking certain websites or from charging companies and customers more for internet "fast lanes."

Those so-called fast lanes could mean the difference between a smooth, TV-like experience watching online videos or a frustrating frozen screen -- a vital distinction as services like entertainment, news, and education shift to online platforms.

As long as the Internet has existed, Internet service providers have generally treated all websites equally.  But now these new rules will give large ISPs unprecedented control over Internet activity.  The following comes from Rolling Stone...

The existing regulations, put into place by Pai's predecessor Tom Wheeler in 2015, codified longstanding Internet practice by explicitly requiring ISPs to treat all Internet traffic equally. In contrast to a cable provider, which can decide exactly what networks or services customers get for their monthly fee, ISPs are forbidden from discriminating among their customers. 

When you pay your fee to get online, you get everything. But under the new regime, a handful of the most powerful telecommunication companies in the U.S. - Comcast, Verizon, AT&T - will have unlimited freedom to slice and dice the Internet ecology as they please.


Today, nearly 50 million homes in the United States only have access to one high speed Internet provider.

Now those high speed providers will be able to pick winners and losers, and you will not have any control over the decisions that they make.  You could choose to go with another provider, but they will probably be engaged in the exact same type of activity as well.

So much of this debate is centered on Internet speed, but to me the greatest danger is the fact that Internet service providers will now be able to block any website that they want...

Under the new rules, called the Restoring Internet Freedom order, ISPs also must disclose any cases in which they prioritize some content, whether its their own or that of a paying partner, over other content. The new order also eliminates an Internet conduct standard meant to prevent ISPs from unreasonable interference with consumer's access to destinations on the Net.

The big Internet service providers are owned by the globalists.

Could the globalists try to destroy the alternative media by simply blocking their users from ever going to alternative news websites?

I hope that it doesn't happen, but these new rules open that door.


If you don't think that this is serious, I would like for you to consider what a Rolling Stone article is saying on the matter...

It gets worse. Because under the new rules (or really, lack of any rules whatsoever), ISPs won't just be free to charge more for better tiers of access, they will also be free to block access to whatever part of the Internet they feel serves their financial interests. 

AT&T could cut a deal making Microsoft Bing its default search engine, and block Google entirely. Comcast might decide that it makes no sense to allow Netflix to compete with its own streaming services, and strangle off access to the site. Verizon could decide that Fox News' reporting is more in line with its corporate interests than CNN or The New York Times.

We should all fight as hard as we can to keep the Internet free and open.

If we don't, someday we may only be able to access a few thousand websites that have been "pre-approved" by the big Internet service providers.

If I was a company such as Netflix that depends entirely on the large ISPs to deliver their content, I would be scared to death by this decision.

But if we lose Netflix, our society would still be okay.

However, if we lose our ability to communicate with one another over a free and open Internet, the loss to our society would be incalculable.




Other News

November 08, 2025The Next Generation Of Christian Women Are Being Radicalized Into Leftists

The exit polls speak for themselves: over 80% of young female voters supported leftist candidates in several different elections, includin...

November 08, 2025University Places 'Trigger Warning' On The Bible

The University of Sheffield in the United Kingdom is facing backlash after the school warned students that studying events in Scripture, i...

November 05, 2025When Politicians Talk About Demons: The Rising Debate Over UFOs

In recent months, public fascination with UFOs and extraterrestrials has taken an unexpected turn--from late-night talk shows to the halls...

November 05, 2025A Welcome Correction: Vatican Backs Away From Mary’s Role In Salvation

In a new doctrinal decree approved by Pope Leo, the Vatican officially instructed Catholics not to refer to Mary as the "co-redeemer" of h...

November 05, 2025If This Canadian Liberal MP Gets The Chance, He's Coming For Your Bibles

Liberal Member of Parliament Marc Miller is the chair of the House Justice Committee, and last week he wondered whether Canada's Criminal ...

November 05, 2025Hezbollah Seeks To Take Over Lebanon Politically As It Rearms Against Israel

Hezbollah is pursuing a political strategy to take over the Lebanese parliament, and the Lebanese state is largely helpless in stopping it...

November 04, 2025America's Economic Fault Line - The Five Cracks That Could Reshape Everything

While everyone’s attention is fixed on the government impasse over the budget and food stamp funding, there’s a much deeper issue brewing ...

Get Breaking News