US Regulatory Czar Nominee
Wants Net Fairness Doctrine
Cass
Sunstein sees Web as anti-democratic, proposed
24-hour delay on sending e-mail
Posted: April 27, 2009
8:41 pm Eastern
© 2009 WorldNetDaily
It appears
that the liberals are trying to head off conservative talk show hosts that
would go to Web-Casting and Satellite
broadcasting if the Fairness Doctrine was forced around their necks on radio.
This would also be a second potential law that could well be used to silence all
Christian and Conservative private websites and blogs
as well. The aggressive nature of the Obama Administration and the
liberal stranglehold on the house and the Senate against conservatives, against
Christians, and against conservative households with all government checks and
balances removed is beyond even the most dire
predictions of conservative talk show hosts.
There is roughly 500 days left of this administration’s free
reign that needs desperately to be hemmed in by all people that love God and this
nation. If the house were to be
overturned and or if in the Senate the Republicans were to gain a majority this
would affectively end of Obama’s reign of terror and war against the American
people.
WASHINGTON – Barack Obama's nominee for "regulatory czar" has
advocated a "Fairness Doctrine" for the Internet that would require
opposing opinions be linked and also has suggested angry e-mails should be
prevented from being sent by technology that would require a 24-hour cooling
off period.
The
revelations about Cass Sunstein, Obama's friend from
the University of Chicago Law School and nominee to head the White House Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, come in a new book by Brad O'Leary, "Shut Up, America! The End of Free
Speech." OIRA will
oversee regulation throughout the
Sunstein also has argued in his prolific literary works
that the Internet is anti-democratic because of the way users can filter out
information of their own choosing.
"A
system of limitless individual choices, with respect to communications, is not
necessarily in the interest of citizenship and self-government," he wrote.
"Democratic efforts to reduce the resulting problems ought not be rejected in freedom's name."
Sunstein first proposed the notion of imposing
mandatory "electronic sidewalks" for the Net. These
"sidewalks" would display links to opposing viewpoints. Adam Thierer, senior fellow and director of the Center for
Digital Media Freedom at the Progress and
WASHINGTON – Barack Obama's nominee for
"regulatory czar" has advocated a "Fairness Doctrine" for
the Internet that would require opposing opinions be linked and also has
suggested angry e-mails should be prevented from being sent by technology that
would require a 24-hour cooling off period.
The revelations about Cass Sunstein, Obama's
friend from the University of Chicago Law School and nominee to head the White
House Office of Information
and Regulatory Affairs, come in a new book by Brad O'Leary, "Shut
Up, America! The End of Free Speech." OIRA
will oversee regulation throughout the
Sunstein also has argued in his prolific literary
works that the Internet is anti-democratic because of the way users can filter
out information of their own choosing.
"A system of limitless individual choices, with respect to
communications, is not necessarily in the interest of citizenship and
self-government," he wrote. "Democratic efforts to reduce the
resulting problems ought not be rejected in freedom's
name."
Sunstein first proposed the notion of imposing
mandatory "electronic sidewalks" for the Net. These
"sidewalks" would display links to opposing viewpoints. Adam Thierer, senior fellow and director of the Center for
Digital Media Freedom at the Progress and