The Federal Communications Commission wants to get its grasping hands around the throat of the Internet, the international town hall where Americans have been free to express their opinions without Big Brother's permission or interference.
That makes the FCC unhappy. It seems that this taxpayer-supported, intrusive federal agency simply can't bring itself to allow anything having to do with Americans communicating with each other in public without their lordly oversight or permission.
According to Rasmussen Reports, American voters believe free-market competition will protect Internet users more than any government regulations. Moreover, they rightly fear government regulation will be used to push what is certain to be a leftist political agenda.
A national telephone survey conducted by Rasmussen revealed that only a scant
21 percent of likely U.S. voters want the FCC to regulate the Internet as it already does radio and television. Fifty-four percent are opposed to such regulation, while only
25 percent are not sure. That's a pretty healthy percentage that thinks the government should keep its sticky hands off the World Wide Web.
The compulsive regulators at the agency need to keep in mind that within a few days the U.S. House of Represen-tatives will be under the control of Republicans, and that the House controls the nation's purse strings.
It would be very unwise for the FCC regulators to fail to recognize that at the moment Congress reconvenes in early January their financial future will be in the hands of a party largely composed of glorious skinflints, most of whom view any government regulatory power as inherently dangerous and in need of the most careful oversight.
And that's what they are going to get.
Much of that oversight will focus on the fact that the FCC decision, based on a party-line vote, decided to impose what they termed "net neutrality" regulations on the World Wide Web. This despite the fact that by a whopping 52 percent to 27 percent margin, Americans are convinced that more free-market competition is far better than having more regulations that allegedly protect users of the Internet.
Americans need to keep in mind the fact that government regulators use the time-honored tactic of tightening their grip on the citizenry one small step at a time. It appears that in the case of the FCC's power grab, they would like Americans to believe that they are only seeking to protect us from some unnamed abuse of the freedom of speech and not in imposing government censorship on the Internet.
They should recognize that we are not that stupid, something the new GOP-controlled House hopefully will teach them starting next month.
• Michael Reagan is the son of President Ronald Reagan and a political consultant.