the fact is that america's broadband providers, ustelecom members have made an ironclad commitment to maintain net neutrality protections for their customers -- no block, no throttling, transparency. those commitments existed before the imposition of title ii, and the commitments to them are going to exist after the reclassification back to title i. so this debate isn't about net neutrality, it's about whether our companies are very clear about maintaining their commitment to protect the principles of net neutrality and to advance those principles. this debate really is about whether we want as a nation to have our most important technology advance potentially of our lifetimes, maybe of our history, the internet, governed by regulators using 1934 era rules. an era of the outhouse, not of the smart house to guide us forward. using the idea that the internet should be treated as a public utility. i've met many internet users around the country in this woul. some have good things to say, some have bad things to say, but i haven't met a single internet user that wants their internet to lo