brendan: robert, i will jump in real quick, we have onset donald baer, formerly of the clinton white e of the things that seems to get lost in all of this is the question of the economics of it because really at the heart of this is the fact that broadband is not an incident commodity. it cannot do everything we want it to do so someone will have to pay as we go about extending and expanding broadband capability. the real battle line is, whose consumers will have to pay? is it the netflix consumers or the isp consumers because sooner or later it will get passed on to the consumers? this is the case of a hot potato and who wants to end up holding it, and netflix has basically convince the consumer public that it is acting in its best interest. brendan: we have title ii all over europe and it has expanded. brendan:robert: by the way, the clinton-gore and administration got it right, they said do not but silicon valley on this. if you look at europe, our investment in broadband is four times more than theirs is, and is a much better experience. brendan: ok robert mundell formerly of the